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Stars and Strikes - Baseball and America in the Bicentennial Summer of '76 - cover

Stars and Strikes - Baseball and America in the Bicentennial Summer of '76

Dan Epstein

Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books

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Summary

The author of Big Hair and Plastic Grass returns with “a knuckleball ride through the wonderful and wacky year . . . the national pastime changed forever” (Kirkus Reviews). 
 
America, 1976: colorful, complex, and combustible. It was a year of Bicentennial celebrations and presidential primaries, of Olympic glory and busing riots, of “killer bees” hysteria and Pong fever. On the baseball diamond, Thurman Munson led the New York Yankees to their first World Series in a dozen years, but it was Joe Morgan and Cincinnati’s “Big Red Machine” who cemented a dynasty with their second consecutive World Championship. 
 
The season was defined by the outrageous antics of team owners Bill Veeck, Ted Turner, George Steinbrenner, and Charlie Finley, as well as by several memorable bench-clearing brawls, and a batting title race that became just as contentious as the presidential race. Meanwhile, as the nation celebrated its two-hundredth year of independence, Major League Baseball players waged a war for their own liberties by demanding free agency. 
 
From the road to the White House to the shorts-wearing White Sox, Stars and Strikes tracks the tumultuous year after which the sport—and the nation—would never be the same.
Available since: 04/29/2014.
Print length: 401 pages.

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