“A fascinating tale of one of baseball’s greatest moments—the emergence in 1923 of Babe Ruth and the Yankees . . . You’re in for a rollicking good ride.” —Johnathan Eig, Pulitzer Prize–winning author
In 1923, the floundering Yankees didn’t have to rent the Polo Grounds from their cross-town rivals, the New York Giants, anymore. They finally got their own field. The newly-built, state-of-the art baseball palace in the Bronx was called “the Yankee Stadium,” and its outerborough location was a gamble. Babe Ruth was coming off the most disappointing season of his career, a season that saw his struggles on and off the field threaten his standing as a bona fide superstar.
It only took Ruth two at-bats to signal a new era. He stepped up to the plate in the 1923 season opener and cracked a home run to deep right field, the first homer in his park, and a sign of what lay ahead. It was the initial blow in a season that saw the new stadium christened “The House That Ruth Built,” signaled the triumph of the power game, and established the Yankees as New York's—and the sport's—team to beat.
From that first home run of 1923 to the storybook World Series matchup that pitted the Yankees against their nemesis from across the Harlem River—one so acrimonious that John McGraw forced his Giants to get to the Bronx in uniform rather than suit up at the Stadium—Robert Weintraub vividly illuminates the singular year that built a classic stadium, catalyzed a franchise, cemented Ruth's legend, and forever changed the sport of baseball.
“May be the best book of baseball history I have ever read.” —New York Post
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