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So Young, So Great - by Jim Ingraham (Hardcover)
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About this item
Highlights
- When Bob Feller hit the Major League Baseball scene, he instantly became one of the most famous athletes in the country.
- About the Author: Jim Ingraham is an award-winning sports columnist for the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram in Ohio.
- 288 Pages
- Sports + Recreation, Baseball
Description
About the Book
So Young, So Great covers the first six years of Bob "Rapid Robert" Feller's Major League pitching career, when he burst onto the scene with Cleveland in 1936 at the age of seventeen.
Book Synopsis
When Bob Feller hit the Major League Baseball scene, he instantly became one of the most famous athletes in the country. Everything Feller did made headlines, primarily because anything he did had never been done before, especially by someone his age. To this day, Feller is still the first pitcher to have signed his first professional contract and played in the Major League while still in high school. By the age of seventeen he had set an American League record for most strikeouts in a game, and by nineteen, he had broken his own Major League strikeout record.
So Young, So Great covers the first six years of Feller's career, from 1936 to 1941, from his discovery in the small town of Van Meter, Iowa, as a high school junior, to his immediate entry into the Major Leagues with no minor league detours, the extensive media coverage of his every move and his box office appeal to fans, and his record-breaking feats up to his enlistment into World War II at age twenty-two.
Before signing a contract with the Cleveland Indians, Feller was a prospect of such magnitude that Major League scouts were fighting in hotel lobbies to get to Feller, still a minor, to sign a Major League contract. His high school graduation was broadcast nationally on radio. And when he had to have his wisdom teeth removed, a photographer and reporter were in the room to document it.
By focusing on the first six years of Feller's career, So Young, So Great captures in revelatory detail Feller's unprecedented arrival, as a high school teenager, on the Big League stage, and his rapid ascension into one of the game's all-time greats.
Review Quotes
"A teenager pitching regularly in the Major Leagues while still in high school? Only one player has ever done it: Bob Feller, ninety years ago. They don't make 'em like that anymore, as you will learn in Jim Ingraham's new book So Young, So Great."--Mike Hargrove, manager of the Cleveland Indians, 1991-99
"The year is 1936, and Bob Feller enters the world of Major League Baseball one year after Babe Ruth, who at age forty, walks away from the game as a player. At age seventeen Feller comes off the family farm and stuns the baseball establishment with his record-breaking debut, just as the game is looking for a new idol. He was the American boy in the American game. Kudos to Jim Ingraham for identifying the period of 1936-41 in Feller's long and remarkable life to share with us. This period of Feller's life, filled with incredible stories of a teenage boy thrust into the national spotlight, would be the foundation of his baseball career, which would result in induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame."--Bob DiBiasio, senior vice president of public affairs for the Cleveland Guardians
About the Author
Jim Ingraham is an award-winning sports columnist for the Elyria Chronicle-Telegram in Ohio. He is the author of Mike Hargrove and the Cleveland Indians: A Baseball Life.