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Did you think I was going to miss this month? No, no.



Title: Game Day
Published
: Penguin Books, 1994
# Pages
: 296
Availability: seems to be out of print, but Amazon has a few used for cheap

Author: Martin and Sean O’Malley
Who Are
: a father-son team of journalists (not specifically sportswriters)

What It's About: It’s a behind-the-scenes look at baseball at the SkyDome. The O’Malleys talk to the groundskeepers, the Jays’ executives, the sound guys, the roof guys, B.J. Birdy… everyone. Then they sum it all up with a look at Game 6 of the ’93 Series, including the contributions of all the different people involved in bringing baseball to the people.

Secret Hero: Well, the whole book is kind of a collection of secret heroes. That’s sort of the point of it. Then again, maybe the authors themselves are secret heroes: they fail to completely remove their personalities from the goings-on, and sometimes indulge in a little name-dropping. Or, if you want a player’s name, John Olerud.

How's The Writing? Quite good. Engaging. All sorts of stuff you never thought you cared two pins about seems interesting once the O’Malleys show it to us.

It’s a good book. If I was to rank all the books on the Blue Jays, which I’m not, I’d put this one in the top ten, no question. I’ve only read this book, what, three times now, but I know I’m going to be picking it up again eventually.

Sabremetric Corner: Not much worth mentioning, really; some stats are mentioned for trivia or for shorthand on a player’s performance, but this book is more about sharing glory than about analysis.

Anecdote: Oh, there are all kinds. The one about how nasty the fans are in Philly and Pittsburgh, for instance. Jesse Barfield displaying his historical perspective. The visiting Russian engineer insisting on a firsthand look at the roof. Pat Gillick’s eidetic memory. The Jumbotron guy, talking about getting people on camera who have something to hide: “Once we shot a guy talking into his cell phone and he ducked for cover the second he saw himself. We’ll never know what he was up to.”

06/08 Blue Jays Library In a Box: Game Day | 6 comments | Create New Account
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Mylegacy - Sunday, June 29 2008 @ 05:19 PM EDT (#188149) #

About Pat Gillick's eidetic memory, or more correctly just about eidetic memory in general, Wikipedia says:

Eidetic memory, photographic memory, or total recall is the ability to recall images, sounds, or objects in memory with extreme accuracy and in abundant volume. The word eidetic (pronounced /aɪˈdɛtɨk/) means related to extraordinarily detailed and vivid recall of visual images, and comes from the Greek word åßäïò (eidos), which means "form".[1] Eidetic memory can have a very different meaning for memory experts who use the picture elicitation method to detect it. Eidetic memory as observed in children is typified by the ability of an individual to study an image for approximately 30 seconds, and maintain a nearly perfect photographic memory of that image for a short time once it has been removed--indeed such eidetikers claim to "see" the image on the blank canvas as vividly and in as perfect detail as if it were still there.

Although many adults have demonstrated extraordinary memory abilities, before this finding, it was previously unknown whether true eidetic memory can persist into adulthood.[2][3][4][5] While many artists and composers such as Claude Monet and Mozart are commonly thought to have had eidetic memory, it is possible that their memories simply became highly trained in their respective fields of art, as they each devoted large portions of their waking hours towards the improvement of their abilities.[6] Such a focus on their individual arts most likely improved the relevant parts of their memory, which may account for their surprising abilities.[citation needed]

ryan_the_canuck - Monday, June 30 2008 @ 10:51 PM EDT (#188195) #

Just in case you're worried by the lack of feedback - I'm one person who reads all these Libraries, mainly because I've read most of the books.  Game Day is one of my favourites - probably behind Diamond Dreams and the 25th anniversary book (which doesn't have much depth, but great nostalgia).  Maybe if I were old enough to remember the 80s teams, Cheek's book or Jays! A Fan's Diary would be higher, but alas, such is life.

Magpie - Tuesday, July 01 2008 @ 01:23 PM EDT (#188212) #
I remember this one somewhat fondly, possibly because a couple of chapters were on people I've had some acquaintance with: the old press box gang, especially Larry Millson of the Globe, and Nick, who used to provide all the sound effects and striding-to-the-plate music. (I was in a fantasy league with him, back when I used to play in fantasy leagues.)
Dewey - Tuesday, July 01 2008 @ 01:57 PM EDT (#188214) #
Just in case you're worried by the lack of feedback - I'm one person who reads all these Libraries, mainly because I've read most of the books.

Yes, me too, Matthew.  I enjoy the reviews.  I remember Martin O'Malley as a good writer.  Period.  But I especially appreciated his pieces on baseball, as he understood and savoured the game.  He wrote for Macleans, as I recall, and was a regular columnist for the Globe for a while.  (I think; or was it The Star?)  Roughly a contemporary of Alison Gordon; and enjoyable for many of the same reasons.
Matthew E - Tuesday, July 01 2008 @ 09:22 PM EDT (#188227) #
Thanks, all.

Actually, Alison Gordon mentions Martin O'Malley in Foul Balls as one of the other players in her APBA league.

Mike Green - Tuesday, July 01 2008 @ 09:28 PM EDT (#188228) #
He was.  Gordon and O'Malley played an AL League; I played in a NL league which had a APBA World Series against their league.  One year, I lost to O'Malley's team in Game 7 on a walk-off homer by George Wright. 
06/08 Blue Jays Library In a Box: Game Day | 6 comments | Create New Account
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