Foul Ball: My Life and Hard Times Trying to Save an Old Ballpark

Foul Ball: My Life and Hard Times Trying to Save an Old Ballpark

by Jim Bouton
Foul Ball: My Life and Hard Times Trying to Save an Old Ballpark

Foul Ball: My Life and Hard Times Trying to Save an Old Ballpark

by Jim Bouton

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Overview

A rollicking and “compelling” true story of baseball, big money, and small-town politics by the author of the classic Ball Four (Publishers Weekly).
 
Host to organized baseball since 1892, Pittsfield, Massachusetts’s Wahconah Park was soon to be abandoned by the owner of the Pittsfield Mets, who would move his team to a new stadium in another town—an all too familiar story. Enter former Yankee pitcher Jim Bouton and his partner with the best deal ever offered to a community: a locally owned professional baseball team and a privately restored city-owned ballpark at no cost to the taxpayers.

The only people who didn’t like Bouton's plan were the mayor, the mayor's hand-picked Parks Commissioners, a majority of the City Council, the only daily newspaper, the city’s largest bank, its most powerful law firm, and a guy from General Electric. Everyone else—or approximately 98% of the citizens of Pittsfield—loved it. But the “good old boys” hated Bouton’s plan because it would put a stake in the heart of a proposed $18.5 million baseball stadium—a new stadium that the citizens of Pittsfield had voted against three different times. In this riveting account, Bouton unmasks a mayor who brags that “the fix is in,” a newspaper that lies to its readers, and a government that operates out of a bar.

But maybe the most incredible story is what happened after Foul Ball was published—a story in itself. Invited back by a new mayor, Bouton and his partner raise $1.2 million, help discover a document dating Pittsfield’s baseball origins to 1791, and stage a vintage game that’s broadcast live by ESPN-TV.

Who could have guessed what would happen next? And that this time it would involve the Massachusetts Attorney General?
 
“An irresistible story whose outcome remains in doubt until the very end. Not just a funny book, but a patriotic one.”—San Francisco Chronicle
 
“Bouton proves that a badly run city government can be just as dangerous—and just as hilarious—as a badly run baseball team.”—Keith Olbermann

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780795323218
Publisher: RosettaBooks
Publication date: 05/21/2020
Series: RosettaBooks Sports Classics
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 512
Sales rank: 367,291
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Jim Bouton was born in Newark, NJ, in 1939. He grew up in Rochelle Park, a blue-collar town that was too small for Little League. The result was that kids learned to play baseball without uniforms, parents, coaches, or umpires.

In high school, his nickname was "warm up Bouton" because he never got into the games. Advised that becoming a major league pitcher was "unrealistic," Bouton wrote his Careers Week report on the life of a forest ranger. He got a C on his report and an A on the cover--a nice drawing of a squirrel in a tree.

Bouton was an All-Star pitcher and won 20 games for the Yankees in 1963. The next year he won 18 games and beat the Cardinals twice in the World Series. Eventually a sore arm got him sold to the Seattle Pilots--for a bag of batting practice balls. That’s when he began taking notes for his diary Ball Four, published in 1970.

In the 1970s he was a top-rated TV sportscaster in New York City, acted in a Robert Altman film called The Long Goodbye, and made a brief comeback with the Atlanta Braves.

In 2003 Bouton wrote and self-published Foul Ball, a diary of his battle to save a historic ballpark in Pittsfied, MA. Bouton says he only writes when he’s bursting to say something. “Ball Four was a book I wanted to write,” he says. “Foul Ball was a book I had to write.

Today Bouton lives in a forest in western Massachusetts.


Jim Bouton was born in Newark, NJ, in 1939. He grew up in Rochelle Park, a blue-collar town that was too small for Little League. The result was that kids learned to play baseball without uniforms, parents, coaches, or umpires.

In high school, his nickname was "warm up Bouton" because he never got into the games. Advised that becoming a major league pitcher was "unrealistic," Bouton wrote his Careers Week report on the life of a forest ranger. He got a C on his report and an A on the cover--a nice drawing of a squirrel in a tree.

Bouton was an All-Star pitcher and won 20 games for the Yankees in 1963. The next year he won 18 games and beat the Cardinals twice in the World Series. Eventually a sore arm got him sold to the Seattle Pilots--for a bag of batting practice balls. That's when he began taking notes for his diary Ball Four, published in 1970.

In the 1970s he was a top-rated TV sportscaster in New York City, acted in a Robert Altman film called The Long Goodbye, and made a brief comeback with the Atlanta Braves.

In 2003 Bouton wrote and self-published Foul Ball, a diary of his battle to save a historic ballpark in Pittsfied, MA. Bouton says he only writes when he's bursting to say something. "Ball Four was a book I wanted to write," he says. "Foul Ball was a book I had to write.

Today Bouton lives in a forest in western Massachusetts.

Table of Contents

Foreword, 2020

Introduction 1

Part I In which our heroes attempt to save an old ballpark and do something good for the city of Pittsfield, Massachusetts 27

A Year Later 317

Part II In which our heroes are invited back for a second chance and the story gets even more bizarre 345

Postscript In which what happens next could easily have been predicted by the reader 453

Cast of Characters 457

Author's Note 461

Acknowledgments 463

Documents 465

Index 487

What People are Saying About This

Kurt Vonnegut

"Jim Bouton had to self-publish this triumphant and exhilarating book [in hardcover]. Why? Certain politicians and corporation big shots do not want some facts to be known, so they did their best to kill it. Bouton himself has never been more full of life."
novelist

Bill Moyers

"Another truth teller that deserves to be a bestseller."

Frank Deford

"It is the things that Jim Bouton loves that he perceives so well, but that sometimes disappoint him so. Like, say, baseball and democracy. FOUL BALL is the wonderfully wrenching tale about both."

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