From the best-selling author of Baseball 100Posnanski offers an eloquent reminder that the great Cincinnati Reds teamsespecially the 75 Redsdeserve a place of prominence in our memory, same as this book demands a place of prominence on your shelf. New York
From the best-selling author of Baseball 100
Posnanski offers an eloquent reminder that the great Cincinnati Reds teamsespecially the 75 Redsdeserve a place of prominence in our memory, same as this book demands a place of prominence on your shelf. New York Post
There are great teams in baseballand then there are classic teams like the 1975 Cincinnati Reds. From 1972 to 1976, the franchise known as the Big Red Machine dominated the National League, and their 1975 season has become the stuff of sports legend.
In The Machine, award-winning sports columnist Joe Posnanski captures all of the passion and tension, drama and glory of this extraordinary championship team considered to be one of the greatest of all time. Helmed by Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson, the lineup for the 75 Reds is a Whos Who of baseball greats, including Pete Rose, Ken Griffey Sr., and Joe Morgan.
But that remarkable year was not without controversy: feuds, fights, insults, and run-ins with fans were as much a part of the season as hits, runs, steals, and strikeouts. Capturing this rollicking thrill-ride of a story, Posnanski brings to life the excitement, hope, and high-expectations that surrounded the players from the beginning of spring training through the long summer and into a nailbiting World Series, where, in the ninth inning of the seventh game, the Big Red Machine fulfilled its destiny, defeating the Boston Red Sox 4-3.
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