The Tigers of '68: Baseball's Last Real Champions

The Tigers of '68: Baseball's Last Real Champions

by George Cantor
The Tigers of '68: Baseball's Last Real Champions

The Tigers of '68: Baseball's Last Real Champions

by George Cantor

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

They had two future Hall of Famers, the last pitcher to win thirty games, and a supporting cast of some of the most peculiar individuals ever to play in the majors. But more than that, the 1968 Detroit Tigers symbolize a lost era in baseball.

It was a time before runaway salaries and designated hitters. Before divisional playoffs and drug suspensions. Before teams measured their well-being by the number of corporate boxes in their ballpark and the cable contract in their pocket. It was the last season of baseball’s most colorful and nostalgic period.

It was surely not a more innocent time. The 1968 Tigers were a team of hell-raisers, the second coming of the Gas House Gang. They brawled on the field and partied hard afterward. They bickered with each other and ignored their manager. They won game after game with improbable rallies on their last at-bat and grabbed the World Championship by coming back from a three games to one deficit to beat the most dominant pitcher in the World Series history in the deciding seventh game.

Their ultimate hero, Mickey Lolich, was a man who threw left-handed, thought “upside down,” and rode motorcycles to the ballpark. Their thirty-game winner, Denny McLain, played the organ in various night spots, placed bets over the clubhouse phone, and incidentally, overpowered the American League. Their prize pinch-hitter, Gates Brown, had done hard time in the Ohio Penitentiary. Their top slugger, Willie Horton, would have rather been boxing. Their centerfielder, Mickey Stanley, a top defensive outfielder, would unselfishly volunteer to play the biggest games of his life at shortstop, so that their great outfielder, Al Kaline, could get into the World Series lineup.

The story of this team, their triumph, and what happened in their lives afterward, is one of the great dramas of baseball history.

The Tigers of ’68 is the uproarious, stirring tale of this team, the last to win a pure pennant (before each league was divided into two divisions and playoffs were added) and World Series. Award-winning journalist George Cantor, who covered the Tigers that year for the Detroit Free Press, revisits the main performers on the team and then weaves their memories and stories (warts and all) into an absorbing narrative that revives all of the delicious—and infamous—moments that made the season unforgettable. Tommy Matchick’s magical ninth-inning home run, Jim Northrup’s record-setting grand slams, Jon Warden’s torrid April, Dick McAuliffe’s charge to the mound, Denny McLain’s gift to Mickey Mantle, the nearly unprecedented comeback in the World Series, and dozens more.

The ’68 Tigers occupy a special place in the history of the city of Detroit. They’ve joined their predecessors of 1935 as an almost mythic unit—more than a baseball team. The belief has passed into Detroit folklore. Many people swear, as Willie Horton says, that they were “put here by God to save the city.” The Tigers of ’68 will help you understand why.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781589799288
Publisher: Taylor Trade Publishing
Publication date: 03/07/2014
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 620,729
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

George Cantor worked as a reporter, columnist, and editor for thirty-nine years at both the Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press. He also wrote for the Detroit Jewish News and taught sports writing at Oakland University. He is also the author of Courtney’s Legacy, the story of his daughter’s accidental death at the age of eighteen. He died in 2010.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

1 Light My Fire 1

2 A Pennant Squandered 9

3 Springtime in Lakeland 13

4 Selling the Dreams 19

5 A Matter of Race 25

6 The Duke of Earl 30

7 April Getaway 36

8 An Easy Kind of Game 41

9 Stop the Presses 46

10 The Shuffleboard King 52

11 The Rivals 57

12 The Fox 64

13 Troubled Times 70

14 The Healer 75

15 Reason to Believe 80

16 The Gater 88

17 Deadline USA 94

18 Mad Dog 99

19 The Lost Weekend 104

20 Ratso 111

21 Laughing All the Way 135

22 Rolling to 30 141

23 End of the Weight 149

24 Six 158

25 The Big Finish 165

26 On Dangerous Ground 171

27 Demolition Derby 176

28 Duel in the Sun 181

29 The Doughnut Man 186

30 The Final Comeback 193

31 Grand Finale 199

32 Celebration 205

33 After the Ball 211

Appendix: Statistics 220

Index 226

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