Pitching in a Pinch: Baseball from the Inside by Christy Mathewson


Pitching in a Pinch: Baseball from the Inside
Title : Pitching in a Pinch: Baseball from the Inside
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0143107240
ISBN-10 : 9780143107248
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 192
Publication : First published January 1, 1912

An inside baseball memoir from the game’s first superstar, with a foreword by Chad Harbach
  Christy Mathewson was one of the most dominant pitchers ever to play baseball. Posthumously inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame as one of the “Five Immortals,” he was an unstoppable force on the mound, winning at least twenty-two games for twelve straight seasons and pitching three complete-game shutouts in the 1905 World Series. Pitching in a Pinch, his witty and digestible book of baseball insights, stories, and wisdom, was first published over a hundred years ago and presents readers with Mathewson’s plainspoken perspective on the diamond of yore—on the players, the chances they took, the jinxes they believed in, and, most of all, their love of the game. Baseball fans will love to read first-hand accounts of the infamous Merkle’s Boner incident, Giants manager John McGraw, and the unstoppable Johnny Evers and to learn how much—and just how little—has really changed in a hundred years.


Pitching in a Pinch: Baseball from the Inside Reviews


  • Dustin

    Loved this book. Mathewson's erudite descriptions of early 20th Century baseball are fascinating and insightful. His musings really bring to light how the game we watch today came to be.

    Also, the chapter that describes Pittsburgh as the fancy town full of rich society people, with all its industry money and tycoons, in comparison to the relatively low-rent New York City, was hilarious. Once player even manicured his nails before trips to that city for fear of being made fun of by the snobby snobs there.

  • Trevor Seigler

    This is a fun re-read for me, having come across this book a few years back and enjoying it while understanding that there are some limitations to it. This book is ostensibly by Christopher "Christy" Mathewson, though it's ghostwritten by a professional sportswriter. Mathewson, one of the greatest pitchers in the history of baseball, played for the New York Giants in the early 20th century, helping lead them to a World Series victory in the second ever Series played (1905), and his consistent record of multiple seasons with twenty or more wins in a row is unlikely to be matched even today. Mathewson (through his ghostwriter) is a charming, witty narrator of what the game was really like in his day (the book is really a collection of pieces penned by the two during the 1911 season, printed in book form the following year). There's plenty of old-timey cringe material here, to be sure, but it's balanced to some extent by Mathewson's overall decency as a human being. He writes dialogue from the players that obviously feels scrubbed of anything suggestive or profane (as many old-time sports books do), and it's hard to believe that legendary Giants manager John McGraw didn't pepper some of his quotes here with a few more choice words than what the record reflects. But the book overall is a charming insider look at how baseball functioned at the turn of the 19th/20th century, and how the men who played it lived and thought about their profession and their place in it.

  • Spiros

    ' "Larry" Doyle thought that he had received the raw end of a decision at second base one day. He ran down to first, where Klem had retreated after he passed his judgment.
    "Say, 'Bill,'" exploded "Larry," "that man didn't touch the bag - didn't come within six feet of it."
    "Say, Doyle," replied Klem, "when you talk to me, call me 'Mr. Klem.'"
    "But, Mr. Klem - " amended "Larry".
    Klem hurriedly drew a line with his foot as Doyle approached him menacingly.
    "But if you come over that line, you're out of the game, Mr. Doyle," he threatened.
    "All right," answered "Larry," letting his pugilistic attitude evaporate before the abruptness of Klem as the mist does before the classic noonday sun, "but, Mr. Klem, I only wanted to ask you if that clock in centre field is right by your watch, because I know everything about you is right."
    "Larry went back, grinning and considering that had put one over on Klem - Mr. Klem.'

    This volume is replete with that sort of anecdote. Lovely and amazing.

  • Tyler Jones

    Written near the height of Mathewson's extraordinary career, this book shows just how complex the game had already become by 1912. Mathewson sheds light on a lot of technical matters like the finer points of base running, pitching and coaching - but what really makes it fascinating is the focus on the psychological aspects of the game. Filled with humorous anecdotes, he captures the spirit of the dead ball era in a way that makes it really come alive.

  • Thom

    The author was a very successful pitcher at the time this book was written, and unlike most autobiographies today, was also a decent writer. Chapters of this book read like newspaper columns (which some of them may have been), expounding on the pitchers views of managers, hitters, fielders, pitchers, and umpires. As much anecdotes as analysis, this easy-reading book remains relevant today. Recommended for baseball historians and true fans, probably over the head of anyone else.

  • Paul

    This is a fun book written by the great pitcher Christy Mathewson, who was among the first college graduates to play pro baseball. The book is well-written, and of course there are lots of boring parts talking about certain plays with players from the first decade of the twentieth century. The best parts are when he explains either historical things--like why Mordecai Brown was called "Three fingers" (He'd cut off the first two joints of his index finger on a farm machine). Or explaining Merkel's Boner, the supposedly most controversial in the history of baseball. Fred Merkel was a rookie who was standing on first base. When the next batter got a hit that would have represented the winning run, Merkle for some reason didn't run to second, but thought the game was over and ran back to first, then through the dugout and into the locker room. The other team had to chase him into the locker room to tag him for the third out. The game was ultimately played again later in the season, but Merkle felt horrible about it.

    After that, Merkle felt so bad that he lost 20 pounds and begged the manager to send him back to the minors because he'd ruined the season. The manager, the famous John Macgraw, refused to send him down, and in subsequent years Merkle became a star player for the NY Giants. Other interesting things that still apply to baseball today are the efforts to observe each opposing player during the game, and know who was "yellow" (backed away from a potential beanball). The only time I had heard of "yellow" sportsmen was in a Scott Fitzgerald short story, so being a yellow player must have lasted at least into the 1920s.

    Other funny anecdotes were when players passed by an empty barrel it meant that they would get a hit. So Mcgraw ordered a wagon full of empty barrels every day to pass players on the way to the stadium. The Giants had a good week that week. If players passed by a person with crossed eyes, it would mean they would lose the game, so they invented long routes from the hotel to the stadium to avoid one particular cross-eyed man.

    But a later problem occurred when a pitcher fell in love with a cross-eyed girl, who always sat behind third base in the stands. The pitcher could no longer throw to third base after that. Mcgraw said he would pay for eye surgery for the woman, but she gradually started sitting in the outfield and then quit attending altogether. So the pitcher could again throw to third base, but he had lost his girlfriend.

    Another interesting tradition was players rubbing the hair of black boys for luck, which probably led to the book last year titled No, You Cannot Touch My Hair.

    Between the plays by players you've never heard of, the anecdotes are worth the read.

  • Kipi (the academic stitcher)

    A really fun look at early 20th-century baseball through the eyes of one of the greatest pitchers of that or any other era. Matty was a great pitcher and was aware of his talent, but he was also aware of the times that he was off his game and when the other team's batters were better than his pitching. The book is divided into chapters that each focus on a different aspect of what he calls the "inside game," such as the impact of the crowd, the umpires, good (and bad) coaching, jinxes, etc., all of which contain wonderful anecdotes about games he was in or that were well known at the time. One chapter focuses solely on the Giants' game against the Cubs on September 23, 1908...the game made famous (or infamous to Giants' fans) by the Merkle boner...and how the Giants and manager John McGraw rallied around rookie Fred Merkle after the game and through the end of the season. Merkle begged to be sent to the minors, and the press and the fans were merciless to him, but McGraw and the team stood behind him. That story had a lot of heart. I'm not sure that many teams today would be as magnanimous, but I'm sure that the media and fans would be just as merciless.

    Most of the stories he relates require the reader to have some knowledge of professional baseball in that era as he doesn't clearly identify or provide any background information on any of the players in the stories, assuming that the reader is familiar with them all. He also uses occasional words or phrases that brought a smile, words such as "coachers" instead of "coaches" and "my salary wing" instead of "my pitching arm."

    The narrator of the audiobook was Kyle Tait, and he did nothing to detract from the book, and I consider that well done.

    If you love the history of baseball, put this one on your list.

  • Luke Koran

    The great Christy Mathewson’s 1912 book “Pitching in a Pinch” is first and foremost an insight into the psychology and technique of professional baseball rather than a typical autobiography. However, these chapters penned by Matty help the modern reader greatly in understanding the realm of the Dead Ball Era in all its tricks and turns, including the star ballplayers who made it what it was as well as the mindset of how to play the game (and perhaps most importantly, how to STAY in the game at the big-league level). As this book has been republished several times over the past century (even as recently as 2013), the insight shared here must be worthwhile, even to students of the modern game of hitting for the fences on every pitch. In any case, I thoroughly enjoyed learning about all the facets of the Dead Ball Era ballplayer, though I wished Mathewson had gone into some more detail into his own career, both personally and professionally.

  • Kenneth Flusche

    Ugg two choppy books at once. The inside information was 100 years old, a good read but not the best an not a true biography like I was thinking when I ordered this one.

  • Graeme Wright

    Mostly interesting from a historical perspective.

  • John

    Somewhat dated but a great walk through baseball as played more than a century ago. Baseball historians must read.

  • This is V!

    A very outdated book with some great info on how baseball was played back in the 1900s

  • Matt

    Baseball stories ftw

  • Meg

    DNF

  • Rick

    Mathewson, the great right-handed pitcher of the New York Giants at the start of the 20th century, was one of the first inductees in the baseball Hall of Fame (along with Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Honus Wagner and Walter Johnson). He pitched for 16 years in the big leagues, won 373 games (185 more than he lost) with a career ERA of 2.13. His teams were twice World Series champions, including in 1905 when Mathewson pitched three shut-outs. Simply put, one of the best starting pitchers ever. The book, a collection of themed essays written by Mathewson with the un-credited help of newspaperman John Wheeler (though now credited thanks to Red Smith’s afterward) for syndication after the 1911 season. A year later they were collected into a book that was very popular from its publication in 1912 and beyond. In Smith’s essay he talks about borrowing it from the Green Bay library as a kid and wearing out the pages.

    Reading Pitching in a Pinch a 102 years later is interesting, informative, and often entertaining but there are redundancies and dry patches. Unlike Lawrence Ritter’s The Glory of Their Times it is not essential reading, but if you’re a fan of the game and its history Mathewson and Wheeler provide sufficient insight, color, and story-telling to make this a pleasurable experience.

    Mathewson pitched mostly his whole career in the “dead ball” era. A time when small ball was the rule and home runs were rare. The bunt base hit and sacrifice, the stolen base, the RBI groundout, flyball or single, were the ways runs accumulated. The ball was dirty and erratic, gloves small, infields and outfields irregular with stones and ruts. To underscore the point, Mathewson gave up one of the most famous home runs of that era, one that tied a crucial game in the ninth inning. The hitter was then christened “Home Run” Baker, although he never his more than 12 in a season.

    The essays here talk about inside baseball in a colorful blend of baseball argot, spiked punch journalism and clear prose. Some meanings have changed. A “groove” in Mathewson day was the area of weakness in which a player could be handled. Some have stayed exactly the same. The balance of recognition and surprise in the language of the game is one of its pleasures.

    The book's topics include how managers impact the game, the role of superstition, legal and illegal cheating (stealing signs from the dugout, coaching boxes or basepaths being legal, but using binoculars from the scoreboard and an electrically wired messaging system being illegal), how crowds affect players, spring training, etc. The essay on jinxes is very entertaining but also cringe inducing as one jinx buster used by a team was to keep a hunchback as a team mascot so players could rub his hunchback on the way to the field or a more universal one among the all white players of the day was to rub the head of a “colored person”. Other superstitions were more benign. A bunch of empty barrels, for example, was supposed to be good luck for hitters. (Why? One of the game’s divine mysteries.) His team lost in a slump, Giant manager John McGraw arranged for several days that a horse drawn wagon stacked with empty barrels just happened by streets his players traveled to the ballpark and, as they encountered the wagon, his players in commuter groups of one, two and three escaped from their slumps. Inside baseball at his best.

  • D

    Stories from when the game was young, pitchers threw spitballs, batters didn’t wear helmets and every game was a day game. Pitching in a pitch is an enthralling step into a different era. It captures a feel for the country at the turn of century in a way a straight forward history never could. The anecdotes are delightful (the old inverting the pitching mound trick anyone?) but what really shines is the language. It’s so clearly of its era but colorful and playful that it doesn’t feel stiff at all. Casual phrases sparkle: “Managing like Gaul, and many other things, has three parts” or “Stealing second is the gentle art of taking a chance”. Those examples stuck in my head but the whole book is like that. My favorite book I’ve read this year. I can’t recommend it enough.

  • Chris Witt

    Another book you'll want on your shelf if you're a fan of the Deadball era.

    Also something you might want to read over if you are a sim player (Strat, APBA, Replay, Diamond Mind, etc.) who is playing a season from the first decade of the 20th century.

    This happens to be the 100th anniversary of this writing, as it appears this was put out sometime during 1912, the season after Matty and the Giants were taken down by "Home Run" Baker and the powerhouse that was Connie Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.

    Mathewson opens up a lot about his New York Giants teammates from the first 12 years of his playing days, and if you are at all a fan of John McGraw, there's plenty of material in here of you. I have to admit that as much of a fan as I am of the Deadball Era, I really don't know too much more about "Mac" other than "Well, he sure won a lot of games". "Big Six" will give you some inside information here on how McGraw was able to routinely maximize his team's chances of winning games.

    One thing that really struck me as I read through the book was how much of the strategy and talk about the inner workings of the game are really not too different from the way the game is still played today.

    I believe this is actually freely available on sites like Project Gutenberg, so if you have any interest in just reading it and don't necessarily need a bound copy, you can always hop over there and check it out.


    http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/33291

  • Jim

    This is a fascinating look at baseball from the inside, in the early days of the major leagues and the first two decades of the twentieth century (ghost-)written by one of the great stars of the game. Mathewson, one of baseball's most magnificent pitchers and an intelligent and erudite man, allowed his friend, newspaperman John Wheeler, to expound upon the art of playing baseball as though Mathewson were himself telling the stories. No doubt, Mathewson had a good deal to say himself, and there is a mixed air about the book, one of authenticity mixed with what passed for lighthearted literary flair in the press of the 1920s. In any event, there is a lot of fun to be had in the musings about various players, teams, and umpires, and some additional amusement to be found in the differences (and similiarities) of the game then and now. Surprisingly, in those long ago days when coaches were called "coachers" and pitchers most frequently referred to as "twirlers," some of the sophistication of modern baseball is evident, and it is clear that the brainy, strategic game played today is nothing new. PITCHING IN A PINCH is an interesting flashback to a time when the game was young and naive, but not nearly so naive as one might think.

  • Lee (Rocky)

    Despite the title, this book isn't really about pitching specifically. It's written by one of the great pitchers of the early 1900s, and there are bits of it that do talk about different types of pitches, and pitching strategy. Most of the book though, waxes philosophical about the best ways to play the game, by way of lots of anecdotes. Parts of it come across as horribly dated, mostly in terms of the language he uses to describe things, and the baseball terminology used at the time (but also the chapter about superstition in baseball included the idea that some players found it lucky to rub a black child's head, and names a player who claimed that this was the cause of his hot streak at the plate). Reading this did give some interesting insight into the life of a professional baseball player 100 years ago; it was interesting to read the different anecdotes and what he was saying about them, and thinking about which of them still seemed relevant to the game today and which ones didn't.

  • Alan

    I loved this book! Christy Mathewson is arguably one of the best pitchers to ever "twirl" (his expression, not mine). He writes about the game of baseball in the early part of the twentieth century with joy of a child. Much of the game has changed - spit balls are illegal, players are over-paid, and teams take planes instead of trains. However, much has stayed the same - the strategy, the jinxes, and rivalries. What I really enjoyed is that "Matty" had no filter - no one could get away with this today - he calls Honus Wagner a "bow-legged Dutchman" (which I assume was quite an insult at the time), he quotes his famous manager, John McGraw as saying, "the only good umpire is a dead umpire", and he refers to a rival player as having a "spine like a charlotte russe" (which I'm not sure if that's good or bad). My favorite quote: "All coaching, like all Gaul and four or five other things, is divided into three parts..." Awesome!

  • Pete

    Superstar athlete as-told-to's are pretty much the same, although this one has a few yuks resulting from being 100+ years old. The part about the umpire who was especially vain about his hairpiece is pretty funny. Interesting to think how much sports-stardom has changed since the advent of universally televised/recorded games. I was surprised by how little moralizing Mathewson does in the book, I guess I thought he had a reputation for being a rectitudinal college dude, not to say sourpuss but anyway, I am not sure I needed to read this book and it is not especially insightful but as a baseball history nerd I still gleaned some moments of pleasure from its musty electronic pages.

  • Grant

    While some of the stories were interesting, funny, and gave insight into the early days of pro baseball, the book was very repetitive. Within the chapters, Mathewson's tales seemed to jump here and there too. It wasn't confusing, it was just like talking to a guy who keeps remembering something else in the middle of telling his tale and taking a detour from what he was saying.

    If you want to read a great book about the early days of the game, check out The Glory of Their Times. It is a beautiful book for fans of the game.

  • Joel

    I love baseball, but damn, this was only good for the jargon they used 100 years ago. This could be due to playing baseball for most of my life and, as a result, already knowing quite a bit about what Christy Mathewson would call the "inside" game. I'd still recommend it for someone who is a hardcore baseball fan and interested in the history of the game, but it was a plod for me.

  • Maria

    I think I read this more for nostalgia than anything else. I love baseball, mostly because my dad loved baseball, and one of his favorites was Mathewson.

    I did like getting a peek at the words and tones they used back then. But this book is for much more ardent fans of the game than I.

  • Christy

    An entertaining baseball classic. Hall of Famer Christy Mathewson tells his best yarns, and remarks on how far America's game has come from the wild early days of the 1880s to the "modern era" of the 1910s. Tales of spitballs, sign stealing and many a colorful character.

  • Tommy

    Popped up as a recommendation on Kindle, and had the benefit of being free. Surprisingly good read. Matty's a funny guy. I dig that much of the nuance of the game is the same in 2015 as it was in 1912....