And the Skipper Bats Cleanup
A History of the Baseball Player-Manager, with 42 Biographies of Men Who Filled the Dual Role
Format:Paperback
Publisher:McFarland & Co Inc
Published:22nd Apr '02
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

At least as far back as 1842 through about the late 1930s and mid-1940s, before baseball became commercialized and teams were able to hire one man to manage the entire team, it was not uncommon for one person to fill the roles of player and manager simultaneously. Often, the strongest, brightest, or best player--or sometimes the person who owned the playing equipment--directed his teammates.
Forty-two of those men who were both players and managers at the same time are profiled in this work. The book leads off with chapters describing what it was like to fill the dual role and how it came about. Then, chapters are devoted to such men as Cap Anson, Connie Mack, Charles Comiskey, John McGraw, Mickey Cochrane, Dave Bancroft, Ty Cobb, Mel Ott, Joe Cronin, and Pete Rose, just to name a few.
“[an] informed, insightful study”—Library Journal; “engagingly written...valuable...recommended”—Choice; “a nice job of blending anecdotes with a smattering of statistics to tell the story of a near-forgotten piece of baseball lore”—Baseball America.
ISBN: 9780786412280
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 13mm
Weight: 367g
264 pages