Don is the author of 2019 Casey Award nominee "The Legendary Harry Caray" and "Double Plays & Double Crosses: The Black Sox & Baseball in 1920" (March 2021).
Holy Cow! Phil Rosenthal's Chicago Tribune column celebrating Harry's Chicago debut 50 years ago references my 2019 Caray bio, "The Legendary Harry Caray: Baseball's Greatest Salesman" (the whole column is stuff from the book).
https://t.co/2gKiZU5lVK
Talking about my latest, "Justice Batted Last: Ernie Banks, Minnie Miñoso, and the Unheralded Players who Integrated Chicago’s Major League Teams;" it's coming next spring. EWPK Ep. 12: Kenny & Paul chat with baseball historian Don Zminda https://t.co/HkdS5S8MSL via @YouTube
On the Fox broadcast yesterday, Adam Wainwright opined that the games were going too fast for the fans to enjoy their food, etc., and suggested adding 5 sec to the pitch count clock. Figuring 250 pitches for an avg gm, that adds 21 min. Welcome back 3 hr games!
White Sox involved in a crucial series with the Kansas City Royals, each team hoping to avoid relegation. Sorry, wrong sport, but it would definitely liven things up.
Well this is an interesting read. I have a lot of thoughts, but there's one thing I want to push back especially on... (Also thank you to @stephenjnesbitt for such a deeply reported piece.)
https://t.co/m4ieXi3aQu
The White Sox broadcasters have been playing highlights from Sunday's 9th inning comeback vs. TB like the Sox were the 1951 Giants, and Andrew Vaughn was Bobby Thomson. Now that they finally lost another game (they're 10-22), can we stop this, please?
Things are starting to turn around for the White Sox: Southpaw just won the latest Great Mascot Race on video during the 7th inning stretch of the StL-SF broadcast. I could feel the excitement in Bob Costas' voice.
Great news! My abstract "8 Strong Men: The Chicago Cubs' First Move Toward Integration (1949)" has been accepted as an ORAL presentation at SABR 51 in Chicago. This story will be a chapter in my forthcoming book about the Black players who integrated the Cubs and White Sox.
The A's-Giants Bay Area dynamic always struck me as being like WSox-Cubs in Chi... an obviously smaller fan base, but a very passionate one, and a franchise that can succeed w/ proper management. As for bending over to a billionaire to keep them, I would say, "Take a hike, son."