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Baseball's Endangered Species
Lee Lowenfish
其他書名
Inside the Craft of Scouting by Those Who Lived It
出版
U of Nebraska Press
, 2023-04
主題
Sports & Recreation / General
Sports & Recreation / Baseball / History
ISBN
1496214811
9781496214812
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=iM-vEAAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Named a Best Baseball Book of 2023 by
Sports Collectors Digest
Scouting has been called pro baseball’s personalized way of renewing itself from year to year and a pathway to the game’s past. It takes a very special person to be a baseball scout: normal family life is out of the question because travel is a constant companion. Yet for those with the genuine calling for it, there could be no other life. Hearing the special
thwack
off the bat that indicates a raw prospect may be the real deal is the dream that keeps true scouts going. Scouts have the difficult task of not only discovering and signing new players but envisioning the trajectory of raw talent into the future. But the place of the traditional scout has become increasingly dire.
In 2016 Major League Baseball eliminated the MLB Scouting Bureau that had been created in the 1970s to augment the regular scouting staffs of individual teams. On the eve of the 2017 playoffs that saw the Houston Astros crowned as World Series champions, the team dismissed ten professional scouts and by 2019 halved the number of all their scouts to less than twenty. More and more teams are replacing their experienced talent hunters with people versed in digital video and analytics but who have limited field knowledge of the game, driven by the
Moneyball
-inspired trend to favor analytics, data, and algorithms over instinct and observation.
In
Baseball’s Endangered Species
Lee Lowenfish explores in-depth how scouting has been affected by the surging use of metrics along with other changes in modern baseball business history: expansion of the Major Leagues in 1961 and 1962, the introduction of the amateur free agent draft in 1965, and the coming of Major League free agency after the 1976 season. With an approach that is part historical, biographical, and oral history,
Baseball’s Endangered Species
is a comprehensive look at the scouting profession and the tradition of hands-on evaluation. At a time when baseball is drenched with statistics, many of them redundant or of questionable value, Lowenfish explores through the eyes and ears of scouts the vital question of “makeup”: how a player copes with failure, baseball’s essential, painful truth.