This Week in SABR: August 26, 2016
Welcome to “This Week in SABR!” Click here to view this week’s newsletter on the web. Here’s what we’ve been up to as of August 26, 2016:
Students: One week left to apply for a Fall 2016 internship with SABR
The Society for American Baseball Research is seeking Fall 2016 interns to work in our office in Phoenix, Arizona.
An internship with SABR will involve responsibilities across a variety of disciplines, possibly including:
- Working on-site at a local SABR conference, such as the SABR Arizona Fall League Experience
- Working with our Membership Director or Director of Operations on organizational duties, membership renewal drives, customer service
- Working with our Director of Editorial Content to help publish and/or produce content for our website at SABR.org
Interested candidates should be able to demonstrate basic office-related computer skills. HTML knowledge is a plus.
A working knowledge of baseball — and an awareness of the game’s general history and basic statistics — is required.
The internship is an educational opportunity that may count toward college credit, covering 15-20 hours per week (flexible schedule), at the SABR office in Phoenix, Arizona. The internship will be for a fixed period of time and is designed to provide the intern with skills and training that may be applicable to working in a nonprofit research environment or in other research-based organizations. No housing assistance will be provided.
Please send a resume and cover letter in PDF form to mappleman@sabr.org or jpomrenke@sabr.org by 5:00 p.m. MST Friday, September 2, 2016.
SABR 46: Listen to highlights from select research presentations
At SABR 46 in Miami, we heard 32 informative and interesting research presentations on topics ranging from Bill Veeck’s Miami Marlins and the nuances of free agency to the Havana Sugar Kings and Josh Gibson’s hypothetical salary in the Negro Leagues.
Click here to listen to audio highlights from select SABR 46 research presentations. You can also find full research abstracts and complete presenter bios on that page, as well.
For more coverage of the 2016 SABR convention, visit SABR.org/convention.
SABR 46: More highlights from Miami
Couldn’t make it to Miami for SABR 46? Check out stories, photos, and multimedia clips from the SABR 46 convention in Miami below:
- Stew Thornley announced as winner of the 2016 Bob Davids Award
- Watch/listen to the SABR 46 ballpark session with Barry Bonds, Don Mattingly, Andre Dawson, Tony Perez, and Eduardo Perez (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to Marlins President Michael Hill’s opening remarks at SABR 46 (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to the 2003 Marlins Championship Panel with Jack McKeon, Juan Pierre, Jeff Conine, and Dave Van Horne (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to the Perspectivas del Béisbol Panel with Ozzie Guillen, Ernesto Jerez, Enrique Rojas, and Leonte Landino (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to the Media Panel with Jorge Ebro, Reynaldo Cruz, and Chuck Hildebrandt (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to the Latino Baseball Authors Panel with Adrian Burgos Jr., Cesar Brioso, Peter C. Bjarkman, and Anthony Salazar (video/audio)
- Watch/listen to the How to Do Baseball Research Panel with Sean Forman, Bill Nowlin, Jacob Pomrenke, and Leslie Heaphy (video/audio)
- Listen to the Cuban Players Panel with Jackie Hernandez, Miguel “Mike” de la Hoz, Gonzalo “Cholly” Naranjo, Leo Posada, and Jose Campos (audio)
- View photo galleries from each day of SABR 46
- A chance to see history at SABR 46 as Ichiro chases 3,000 hits
- Rob Rafal repeats as SABR Trivia Contest champion, wins rare double
- Jack Glasscock selected as SABR’s Overlooked 19th Century Baseball Legend for 2016
- David W. Smith, Francis Kinlaw win 2016 SABR presentation awards
- Save the date! SABR 47 will be in New York City in 2017
Around the Web
- Barry Bloom: Bonds eyes encore as Marlins’ hitting coach (MLB.com)
- Barry Bloom: 2003 Marlins recall Steve Bartman incident (MLB.com)
- Bernie Pleskoff: 2003 Marlins re-live World Series run (Today’s Knuckleball)
- Bernie Pleskoff: An interview with Barry Bonds (Today’s Knuckleball)
- Bernie Pleskoff: An interview with Hall of Famer Tony Perez (Today’s Knuckleball)
- Bernie Pleskoff: An interview with Hall of Famer Andre Dawson (Today’s Knuckleball)
- David Laurila: Sunday notes from SABR 46 in Miami (FanGraphs)
- Isabelle Minasian: A Yoseloff Scholar recaps her experience at SABR 46 (Lookout Landing)
- Max Mannis: Talking Cuban baseball at SABR 46 (Sports Illustrated For Kids)
- Ronnie Socash: The value of competitive-balance draft picks (Beyond the Box Score)
- Dan D’Addona: Watching Ichiro’s 3,000-hit milestone a what-if (Holland Sentinel)
- Maxwell Kates: A first-hand report from the SABR convention in Miami (Pecan Park Eagle)
- Mike Webber: Recap of SABR 46 in Miami (Baseball Think Factory)
Check out more coverage from the 2016 convention by visiting SABR.org/convention.
Tom Shieber wins 2016 George Michael SABR Pictorial History Award
The 2016 George Michael SABR Pictorial History Award, which was established by SABR’s Pictorial History Research Committee to honor significant contributions to the knowledge and understanding of historical baseball imagery, has been awarded to Tom Shieber, the Senior Curator for the National Baseball Hall of Fame Library in Cooperstown, New York.
As Pictorial History Committee chair Mark Fimoff writes, “It’s been some time since Tom Shieber left Mt. Wilson for Cooperstown, where he now researches stars of a more terrestrial nature. In our view, the Hall of Fame is very fortunate to have Tom on its team. The fact is, there are very few people around who have world-class level skills when it comes to researching and identifying old baseball imagery, and the Senior Curator at the National Baseball Hall of Fame Museum and Library is one of the best.”
Click here to read the full statement released by the Pictorial History Committee.
To view a list of previous award winners, click here.
Learn more about new SABR Diversity and Inclusion Committee
SABR is pleased to announce the formation of a Diversity and Inclusion Committee, which was established during the SABR 46 convention in Miami.
Our new D&I committee will be dedicated to promoting outreach into traditionally underrepresented communities in SABR’s membership base, and ensuring that SABR events provide a welcoming environment to individuals of all backgrounds. The strategy and vision for the SABR D&I Committee will be led by a steering committee, comprised of SABR Director Emily Hawks, D&I committee chair; SABR Vice President Leslie Heaphy, chair of the Women in Baseball Research Committee; Anthony Salazar, chair of the Latino Baseball Research Committee; and Larry Lester, chair of the Negro Leagues Research Committee.
The SABR D&I Committee will also have several affiliate members, who will be crucial in our community outreach and inclusion efforts. If you are interested in joining the committee as an affiliate member, please contact Emily Hawks at emilyhawks@gmail.com.
Educators, sign up your class for a discounted SABR Student Group Affiliate Membership
A Student Group Affiliate Membership will provide students with access to many of the electronic benefits that SABR members enjoy, including “This Week in SABR,” e-book editions of the Baseball Research Journal and The National Pastime, free SABR e-books, and access to the members-only section of SABR.org. This membership will not include any printed publications or voting rights.
In order to make the Student Group Affiliate Membership affordable for groups to join, here are the options we offer:
- College/University groups/classes: For an annual fee of $250, a group of up to 25 students can receive a one-year electronic SABR affiliate membership.
- High School/Middle School groups/classes: For an annual fee of $100, a group of up to 20 students can receive a one-year electronic SABR affiliate membership.
Any educational class or student group at the middle school, high school or college/university level is eligible for a SABR affiliate membership, as long as a faculty member, teacher, or advisor is an active SABR member (or registers to join.) The teacher/advisor will be listed as the group contact on the SABR website.
The teacher/advisor will be asked to collect the money, names and e-mail addresses for all students wishing to join, and submit those to the SABR office at one time. In addition, the advisor/instructor must be an active SABR member or sign up for a regular SABR membership; annual dues are $65, with discounts available for adults under the age of 30 or over 65.
To sign up for a Student Group Affiliate Membership, or if you have any questions about how it might work for your group or class, please contact SABR Vice President Dr. Leslie Heaphy at Lheaphy@kent.edu or (330) 244-3304.
Download your free e-book copy of The National Pastime: Baseball in the Sunshine State
Since 2009, The National Pastime has served as SABR’s convention-focused publication. Published annually, this research journal provides in-depth articles focused on the respective geographic region where the national convention is taking place in a given year.
The SABR 46 convention is set to begin this week in Miami, and we have dedicated the theme of The National Pastime to baseball in the Sunshine State. All SABR members receive a free e-book copy of The National Pastime as part of their membership benefits, while attendees of the national convention will also receive a souvenir print edition in their goody bags.
- Download the e-book: Click here to download your free e-book copy of the 2016 convention journal, The National Pastime: Baseball in the Sunshine State (PDF, EPUB, or MOBI/Kindle formats)
Having trouble downloading our e-books? To view PDF files on your computer, click here to download the free Adobe Reader software. Having trouble downloading e-books to your Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader or iPad? Click here for additional help.
If you aren’t able to attend the convention in Miami, please enjoy this issue of The National Pastime as your virtual trip to South Florida. Happy reading!
To learn more about contributing to a future SABR publication, click here.
— Cecilia M. Tan, editor
- Read it online: Click here to read all articles from The National Pastime: Baseball in the Sunshine State online at SABR.org.
- Buy the magazine: Click here to purchase a print edition of The National Pastime: Baseball in the Sunshine State from the SABR Bookstore.
Call for reviewers: Fall 2016 Baseball Research Journal
If you are interested in helping out with peer review for the upcoming Fall 2016 Baseball Research Journal, please contact Publications Editor Cecilia Tan.
Peer review is a crucial part of the quality control of the Baseball Research Journal. Your esteemed editors are not experts on every conceivable baseball topic and we augment our knowledge base with the best knowledge base ever: SABR members. To serve as a peer reviewer, you must have been previously published in a SABR publication (i.e. the Baseball Research Journal, The National Pastime, BioProject) or any accredited peer-reviewed journal in your field of specialty. Each reviewer is provided with a rubric for evaluation and your feedback is often extremely helpful in improving the end quality of the publications. All papers and reviewers are anonymous.
Please contact Cecilia Tan with your interest and any subject(s) of expertise, if any.
To learn more about SABR publications, click here.
SABR Digital Library: Cuban Baseball Legends: Baseball’s Alternative Universe
The newest (and first bilingual!) publication from the SABR Digital Library focuses on legendary ballplayers from Cuba’s rich baseball history:
Cuban Baseball Legends: Baseball’s Alternative Universe
Edited by Peter C. Bjarkman and Bill Nowlin
Spanish translations: Reynaldo Cruz
432 pages, 8.5″ x 11″
ISBN (ebook): 978-1-9438-1625-5, $9.99
ISBN (paperback): 978-1-9438-1624-8, $21.95
Minnie Minoso. Martin Dihigo. Luis Tiant Sr. and Jr. Orlando “El Duque” and Livan Hernandez. These are only a few of the leading lights profiled in Cuban Baseball Legends: Baseball’s Alternative Universe. The 47 individuals profiled here represent only a small handful of the legions of memorable and sometimes even legendary figures produced over nearly a century and a half by an island nation where the bat-and-ball sport known as baseball is more than a national pastime, it is the national passion. The book presents 47 biographies in all, plus essays on Cuban baseball.
These biographies were researched and written by a team of members of the Society for American Baseball Research. SABR’s BioBroject has produced bios of over 3,800 players since 2002. A Spanish-language edition of the book is also available, a new first for SABR. Haga clic aquí para obtener más información sobre las “Leyendas del Béisbol Cubano.”
Contributors include: Mark Armour, Thomas Ayers, Ray Birch, Peter C. Bjarkman, Ron Briley, Phil Cola, Rory Costello, Reynaldo Cruz, Eric Enders, Joseph Gerard, Peter M. Gordon, Tom Hawthorn, Lou Hernandez, Douglas Hill, Joanne Hulbert, Len Levin, Brian McKenna, Zachary Moser, Bill Nowlin, Jose I. Ramirez, Rick Schabowski, Mark Stewart, John Struth, and Adam J. Ulrey.
SABR members, get this e-book for FREE!
- E-book: Click here to download the e-book version of Cuban Baseball Legends: Baseball’s Alternative Universe for FREE from the SABR Store. Available in PDF, Kindle/MOBI and EPUB formats.
- Paperback: Get a 50% discount on Cuban Baseball Legends: Baseball’s Alternative Universe paperback edition for $10.98 (plus shipping) from CreateSpace.
Más información acerca de leyendas del béisbol cubano mediante la descarga más reciente libro electrónico de SABR:
- Libro electrónico: Haga clic aquí para descargar Leyendas del Béisbol Cubano: El Universo Alternativo del Béisbol en español de forma gratuita desde la tienda SABR.
- Libro en rústica: Obtener un descuento del 50% en Leyendas del Béisbol Cubano: El Universo Alternativo del Béisbol por $10.98 (más gastos de envío) a partir de CreateSpace.
Having trouble downloading our e-books? To view PDF files on your computer, click here to download the free Adobe Reader software. Having trouble downloading e-books to your Kindle, Nook, Sony Reader or iPad? Click here for additional help.
SABR members will get discounted rates for all Digital Library publications, including many for free. To find more SABR Digital Library books, visit SABR.org/ebooks.
Call for papers: 2017 SABR Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Base Ball Conference
All SABR members are invited and encouraged to submit a Research Presentation Proposal Abstract on any topic of 19th-century baseball for the 2017 Frederick Ivor-Campbell 19th Century Base Ball Conference at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. The ninth annual Ivor-Campbell Conference is scheduled for April 21-22, 2017.
The deadline for proposal Abstracts is October 31, 2016. Your abstract must be between 200-500 words for a 20- to 25-minute presentation. Please include name, title, and contact information and send your proposal as a Microsoft Word or PDF attachment to Peter Mancuso at peterplus4@earthlink.net.
This deadline enables us to publish the complete program and schedule in time for the release of our 2017 Winter Issue of our quarterly newsletter, “Nineteenth Century Notes,” in early January, when registration for “The Fred” begins.
For any questions, please contact Peter Mancuso at peterplus4@earthlink.net.
New research resource: Gene Carney Black Sox “Notes” index and archive
For more than 15 years, beginning in 1993, SABR member Gene Carney wrote a semi-regular column called “Notes From The Shadows of Cooperstown” from his home in Utica, New York. At first, Carney’s self-published “Notes” was an eclectic blend of essays, poetry, book reviews, and a little baseball history. Then, in September 2002 until his untimely death in 2009, it took on a singular focus: the Black Sox Scandal.
Carney’s growing interest and fascination with “baseball’s darkest hour” led him to author a groundbreaking book, Burying the Black Sox: How Baseball’s Cover-up of the 1919 World Series Fix Almost Succeeded (Potomac Books, 2006), and he later became the founder and chairman of SABR’s Black Sox Scandal Research Committee.
Even more than a decade after Carney’s book was published, his “Notes” columns are still chock-full of intriguing discoveries, nagging questions about the scandal, and other meanderings down the “Black Sox Trail.” Carney’s relentless energy and generous spirit were the driving force behind so much of the important research in recent years that has shed new light on the 1919 World Series and the scandal that followed, including the Black Sox Committee’s 2015 book, Scandal on the South Side: The 1919 Chicago White Sox.
It is in this same spirit that we now share the entire collection of Gene Carney’s “Notes” columns related to the Black Sox Scandal, along with a Chronological Index and a Subject-Matter Index for those who are interested in digging deeper. Only a handful of Carney’s original “Notes” columns can still be found online, so we have restored all of the 225 columns focusing on the Black Sox Scandal and made them available for download at SABR.org. As we approach the 100th anniversary of the 1919 World Series, we hope future researchers will find these files useful and help us continue to learn more about the Black Sox Scandal.
— Jacob Pomrenke
4 new SABR biographies published
Four new biographies were posted this week as part of the SABR Baseball Biography Project, which brings us to a total of 3,838 published biographies. Here are the new bios published this week:
- Chuck Essegian, by Joseph Wancho
- Horace Fogel, by Phil Williams
- Billy Grabarkewitz, by David E. Skelton
- Chet Laabs, by David E. Skelton
All new biographies can be found here: http://sabr.org/bioproj/recent
- Search for any SABR biography: You can now visit sabr.org/bioproj_search to search for any player — or manager, executive, scout, spouse, broadcaster, or umpire — who appears in the SABR BioProject. You can also browse all of these BioProject categories and a lot more, including 300-game winners, Hall of Famers, 1960s All-Stars, or Negro Leaguers, at our Browse page: sabr.org/bioproj/browse.
World War II replacement players’ biographies now posted online
In SABR’s Who’s on First: Replacement Players in World War II, edited by Marc Z. Aaron and Bill Nowlin and published in 2015, we examined baseball’s true “replacement players” — the players who made their major-league debuts during the four seasons the U.S. was at war in World War II (1942-45).
The war years featured firsts and lasts. The St. Louis Browns won their first (and last) pennant in 1944 — a feat made more amazing by the fact that they had not finished in the first division since 1929. The 1944 team featured 13 players classified as 4-F. The Chicago Cubs appeared in the 1945 World Series but have not made it back since.
The owners brought in not only first-timers but also many oldsters. Chuck Hostetler was called up to the Detroit Tigers at age 40 and then blundered into one of the most notorious bloopers in World Series history. Chet Covington was a talented left-handed pitcher who won more than 200 games in the minor leagues but spent part of just one season in the majors. One-armed outfielder Pete Gray played for the St. Louis Browns.
The SABR BioProject biographies that appeared in Who’s On First can now be read online at: http://sabr.org/category/completed-book-projects/world-war-ii-replacement-players.
You can also purchase the book or download the e-book by clicking here. SABR members can download all SABR Digital Library e-books for free at SABR.org/ebooks.
4 new stories published by the SABR Games Project
Four new game stories were posted this week as part of the SABR Games Project. Here are the new game stories:
- May 12, 1909: Reds lefty Ed Karger is wild and unhittable, by Stephen V. Rice
- September 16, 1915: Ty Cobb faces beanballs and a riotous mob in Boston, by Stephen V. Rice
- May 7, 1921: Detroit Stars and Bacharach Giants hit the long ball, by Stephen V. Rice
- August 25, 1922: Cubs and Phillies combine for 49 runs on 51 hits, by Mike Huber
All new Games Project stories can be found here: http://sabr.org/gamesproject/recent
- Get involved: Writing for the Games Project is an easy way to get involved as a SABR member. Find out how by reading the Games Project FAQs section or checking out the Authors’ Guidelines.
- Seeking a new Chief Editor: Would you like to help contribute to the SABR Games Project? We’re seeking a new Chief Editor (or editors) to help coordinate the editing for all Games Project stories. This is a crucial role, but unglamorous and thankless — though we do try to thank editors as much as we can. If you have any experience editing and would like to help, please contact Greg Erion or Bruce Slutsky. Fact-checkers are also wanted; you could volunteer, for example, to read all game essays from the early 1950s for accuracy. Please contact the Games Project officers above for more details.
Listen to Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM on Sunday nights
Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM, a radio show hosted by SABR President Vince Gennaro, will air this weekend at its regular time, 7:00-8:00 p.m. ET on Sundays, on MLB Network Radio.
This week’s guests are Mike Petriello of MLB.com and August Fagerstrom of FanGraphs.
Now, you can also watch video highlights of Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM on MLB.com and you can also listen to all recent episodes on-demand on the SiriusXM Internet Radio App.
- Video preview: Ben Jedlovec of Baseball Info Solutions discusses shifting in baseball (MLB.com)
Click here to watch more video highlights of Baseball SABR Style from MLB.com.
Behind the Numbers: Baseball SABR Style on SiriusXM focuses on examining and interpreting the statistical analysis that plays a critical role in baseball today. It airs weekly throughout the year on MLB Network Radio, available to subscribers nationwide on XM channel 89, Sirius channel 209, and on the SiriusXM Internet Radio App.
ICYMI: Highlights from last week’s This Week in SABR
We’ve heard your feedback: Some of you have said you look forward to “This Week in SABR” every Friday, but sometimes there are just too many compelling articles and announcements to read every week. We’re not complaining — hey, keep up the great work! — but we know the feeling. So in an effort to make the length of this newsletter more manageable to read, we’ll summarize some of the repeating/recurring announcements in a special “In Case You Missed It (ICYMI)” section of “This Week in SABR”.
Here are some major headlines from recent weeks that we don’t want you to miss:
- Stew Thornley is the 2016 recipient of the Bob Davids Award
- SABR Defensive Index rankings released through games of August 7
- SABR 46: David W. Smith, Francis Kinlaw win 2016 presentation awards
- Save the date! SABR 47 will be in New York City in 2017, contingent on Yankees or Mets homestand
- View highlights and photos from 2016 SABR Jerry Malloy Negro League Conference in Kansas City
- Watch SABR panels from the 2016 MLB All-Star FanFest in San Diego
- 2016 Women on the Diamond art competition winners announced
- Reserve your spot on the 2016 Cubaball tour, led by SABR member Kit Krieger
- Jack Glasscock selected as Overlooked 19th Century Baseball Legend for 2016
- In Memoriam: Bill Gustafson, SABR founding member
- 2016 SABR Annual Report has been posted online
- Register now for 2016 SABR Philadelphia 19th Century Baseball Interdisciplinary Symposium
- Seamheads.com updates Negro Leagues Database with 1941 stats
- SABR BioProject reaches 3,800 published biographies
- Read articles from the Spring 2016 Baseball Research Journal online at SABR.org
- Leslie Heaphy elected as SABR Vice-President; Chris Dial, Bill Nowlin as Directors
- Virginia student wins 2016 Lee Allen History of Baseball Award
- Check out complete highlights from the 2016 SABR Analytics Conference
- SABR Digital Library: From the Braves to the Brewers: Great Games and Exciting History at Milwaukee’s County Stadium
- ESPN launches “1927: The Diary of Myles Thomas” historical fiction project; SABR members can help contribute
- Help support SABR’s 19th Century Baseball Grave Marker Project
- All e-books in SABR Digital Library available for free to members
All previous editions of This Week in SABR can be found here: http://sabr.org/content/this-week-in-sabr-archives.
For more information, click here.
Welcome, new members!
We’d like to welcome all of our new SABR members who have joined this week. You can find all Members-Only resources at members.sabr.org and the Membership Handbook can be downloaded here.
Please give these new members a warm welcome and help them make the most of their membership by giving them the opportunity to get involved in their local chapter or a research committee.
You can find contact information for any SABR member in the online membership directory (SABR.org/directory).
Name | Hometown | Name | Hometown | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anthony Argenziano | Closter, NJ | Neil Merkl | New York, NY | ||
Robert Berardino | Cuyahoga Falls, OH | Nelson Morales | Caracas, VEN | ||
John Erardi | Crescent Springs, KY | Dennis Ricci | Walpole, MA | ||
Charles Kapp | Arlington, VA | Paul Stutzman | Seattle, WA | ||
Harry Lang | Honeoye Falls, NY | Brett Thomas | Columbus, OH | ||
John LaRue | Chevy Chase, MD | Peter Xenopoulos | Claremont, CA |
Research Committee news
Here are the new SABR research committee updates this week:
- Black Sox Scandal: Click here to learn more about the Gene Carney Black Sox “Notes” Index and archive
- Games Project: Would you like to help contribute to the SABR Games Project? We’re seeking a new Chief Editor (or editors) to help coordinate the editing for all Games Project stories. This is a crucial role, but unglamorous and thankless — though we do try to thank editors as much as we can. If you have any experience editing and would like to help, please contact Greg Erion or Bruce Slutsky. Fact-checkers are also wanted; you could volunteer, for example, to read all game essays from the early 1950s for accuracy. Please contact the Games Project officers above for more details.
- Pictorial History: August 2016 newsletter
Find all SABR research committee newsletters at SABR.org/research.
Regional Chapter news
Here are the new regional chapter updates this week:
- Bob Davids Chapter minor-league game/meeting recap (August 20; Woodbridge, VA)
- Rocky Mountain Chapter “State of the Rockies” meeting recap (August 20; Denver, CO)
- Rogers Hornsby Chapter monthly meeting recap (August 20; Austin, TX)
- Best Practices handbook: Chapter leaders, download the new Chapter Leaders Best Practices Handbook on the Admin Tools page at admin.sabr.org. The handbook offers suggestions and guidelines for meetings, speakers, revitalizing a chapter, and getting publicity for SABR and chapter events.
Visit SABR.org/chapters for more information on SABR regional chapters.
SABR Events Calendar
Here is a list of upcoming SABR events:
- August 27: Hank Gowdy Chapter book club meeting (Columbus, OH)
- August 27: Larry Dierker Chapter Astros ballgame/meeting (Houston, TX)
- August 27: Sacramento Chapter summer luncheon (Sacramento, CA)
- August 27: Emil Rothe Chicago Chapter meeting (Lisle, IL)
- August 27: Rio Grande Chapter meeting (Albuquerque, NM)
- August 30: Juan Marichal Chapter meeting (Santo Domingo, DOM)
- September 3: International Women’s Baseball Center dedication ceremony (Rockford, IL)
- September 10: Halsey Hall Chapter Hot Stove Saturday Morning (Minneapolis, MN)
- September 10: Forbes Field Chapter meeting (Pittsburgh, PA)
- September 12: Philip Ross: “Negro Leagues Baseball .311” (Queens, NY)
- September 14: Bob Davids Monthly Hot Stove Dinner (Arlington, VA)
- September 15: Magnolia Chapter “Third Thursday” meeting (Sandy Springs, GA)
- September 17: Jack Graney Chapter meeting (Cleveland, OH)
- September 17: Brian Kenny: “Ahead of the Curve” book signing (Montclair, NJ)
All SABR meetings and events are open to the public. Feel free to bring a baseball-loving friend … and make many new ones! Check out the SABR Events Calendar at SABR.org/events.
Around the Web
Here are some recent articles published by and about SABR members:
- Albert Chen: How MLB’s Statcast is creating baseball’s new arms race (Sports Illustrated)
- Chuck Hildebrandt: The Cleveland BBWAA’s annual ‘Ribs and Roasts’ shows (SABRMedia.org)
- John Thorn: Why were the 1927 Yankees called ‘Murderers’ Row’? (The Diary of Myles Thomas)
- Jim Caple: Seattle Pilots barely remembered except through ‘Ball Four’ (ESPN.com)
- Steve Wulf: Remembering the long-ago history of major-league baseball in Troy, N.Y. (ESPN.com)
- Thomas Neumann: Baseball’s Browns were first franchise to leave St. Louis behind (ESPN.com)
- Stanley Kay: How a ‘Peanuts’ character became a fierce advocate for women’s sports (Sports Illustrated)
- Cee Angi: The saga of Marge Schott (The National Pastime Museum)
- Bob Elliott: Scout Walt Burrows saw Mantle in a young Mike Trout (Canadian Baseball Network)
- Aaron Gleeman: Twins’ banjo hitter is baseball’s unlikeliest slugger (Baseball Prospectus)
- Michael Baumann: José Altuve, baseball’s shortest superstar (The Ringer)
- Bill Livingston: The Indians’ Tyler Naquin and timelessness (Cleveland Plain Dealer)
- Bill Francis: Ted Williams’ pursuit of .400 took the world by storm in 1941 (BaseballHall.org)
- Charles Conlon photo archive going up for auction Saturday (New York Times)
- Cara Giaimo: The surprising Massachusetts origins of nearly every American sport (Atlas Obscura)
- Eric Nusbaum: Twisted blister: Baseball’s biggest little injury (VICE Sports)
- David Laurila: Q&A with Tyler Clippard on beating BABIP and the limits of FIP (FanGraphs)
- Ryan Swanson: Ballparks we miss (at least in theory): Los Angeles Wrigley Field (The National Pastime Museum)
- Paul Swydan: Rob Manfred and the dangers of unintended consequences (FanGraphs)
- Meg Rowley: What might get lost in pace-of-play changes (Baseball Prospectus)
- Hillel Kuttler: 3 baseball books from veteran Jewish observers of the game (JTA.org)
- Mark Miazga: Tracing the roots of Baltimore baseball legend Leon Day (Epiphany in Baltimore)
- Paul Ringel: Babe Ruth, Ring Lardner, and baseball on the verge in 1916 (The Hardball Times)
- Steven Goldman: Forgiving Bob Lemon (and everybody else) (The National Pastime Museum)
Read these articles and more at SABR.org/latest.
This Week in SABR is compiled by Jacob Pomrenke. If you would like us to include an upcoming event, article or any other information in “This Week in SABR,” e-mail jpomrenke@sabr.org.
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Originally published: August 26, 2016. Last Updated: April 3, 2020.