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Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball's Longest Game

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Beschreibung

On April 18, 1981, a ball game sprang eternal. What began as a modestly attended minor-league game between the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings became not only the longest ever played in baseball history, but something else entirely. The first pitch was thrown after dusk on Holy Saturday, and for the next eight hours the night seemed to suspend its participants between their collective pasts and futures, between their collective sorrows and joys—the ballplayers; the umpires; Pawtucket's ejected manager, peering through a hole in the backstop; the sportswriters and broadcasters; a few stalwart fans shivering in the cold.

With Bottom of the 33rd, celebrated New York Times journalist Dan Barry has written a lyrical meditation on small-town lives, minor-league dreams, and the elements of time and community that conspired one fateful night to produce a baseball game seemingly without end. Bottom of the 33rd captures the sport's essence: the purity of purpose, the crazy adherence to rules, the commitment of both players and fans. This genre-bending book, a reportorial triumph, portrays the myriad lives held in the night's unrelenting grip. Consider, for instance, the team owner determined to revivify a decrepit stadium, built atop a swampy bog, or the batboy approaching manhood, nervous and earnest, or the umpire with a new family and a new home, or the wives watching or waiting up, listening to a radio broadcast slip into giddy exhaustion. Consider the small city of Pawtucket itself, its ghosts and relics, and the players, two destined for the Hall of Fame (Cal Ripken and Wade Boggs), a few to play only briefly or forgettably in the big leagues, and the many stuck in minor-league purgatory, duty bound and loyal to the game.

An unforgettable portrait of ambition and endurance, Bottom of the 33rd is the rare sports book that changes the way we perceive America's pastime, and America's past.

Rezensionen von Lesern

David (Goodreads)

Review: Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball's Longest Game

Concerns the longest game in pro baseball history, Pawtucket vs Rochester AAA 1981 game that played out over 8 hours on a chilly Holy Saturday-into-Easter night, then was suspended after 32 innings ...


Jamie Bradway (Goodreads)

Review: Bottom of the 33rd: Hope and Redemption in Baseball's Longest Game

This is my favorite book so far this year, which is surprising only because most of the people I've told about it think it sounds a bit like torture. I love minor league ball, for starters, but don't ...


James (Goodreads)

Review: Bottom of the 33rd: Hope, Redemption, and Baseball's Longest Game

In the 30 years since Rochester's Red Wings and Pawtucket's Red Sox battled into the wee hours of a frigid Easter morning, the fascination with baseball's longest game hasn't waned. If anything, the ...


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About the Author

Dan Barry is a national columnist for the New York Times. He lives with his wife and daughters in Maplewood, New Jersey.