Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy

Book Summary


Former award-winning "Washington Post" sportswriter Leavy delivers an uncommon baseball book, vividly re-creating the Koufax era, when presidents were believed and pitchers aspired to go the distance. Nobody ever threw a baseball better than Sandy Koufax. He dominated the game -- and the ball, making it rise, break, sing. Then, after his best season, in 1966, he was gone, retired at age thirty, leaving behind a reputation as the game's greatest lefty and most misunderstood man. The Brooklyn boy whom the Dodgers signed as "the Great Jewish Hope" will forever be known for his refusal to pitch the opening game of the 1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur. Forty years later, Koufax stands apart and alone, a legend who declines his own celebrity. In "Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy," Jane Leavy dispels the mystery to discover a man more than worthy of the myth.

Book Details


Book Name Sandy Koufax: A Lefty's Legacy
Author Jane Leavy
Publisher Harper Perennial (Sep 2003)
ISBN 9780060933296
Pages 336
Language English
Price 1054
 
 

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