• Joel Brown

    Staff Writer

    Portrait of Joel Brown. An older white man with greying brown hair, beard, and mustache and wearing glasses, white collared shirt, and navy blue blazer, smiles and poses in front of a dark grey background.

    Joel Brown is a staff writer at BU Today and Bostonia magazine. He’s written more than 700 stories for the Boston Globe and has also written for the Boston Herald and the Greenfield Recorder. Profile

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There are 4 comments on What We Learn by Learning about Baseball

  1. This is a sport that cant die fast enough….I used to love the game. (when it was played in 2 1/2hours) now with the 3 1/2 to 4 hour marathons? Am done the game is boring and ridiculous. DH in half the league? really? lets let the NFC football teams play with an extra defender? or let AFC offensive teams have 14 players and NFC teams have to play with 10 defenders….

    Why anyone would use the discombobulated racist mess of the history of baseball to teach anything other than this exactly how not to do something is beside me….

    but it was right about one thing baseball is america and america is baseball; A discombobulated racist mess

  2. Thanks for a well written article Joel. I myself don’t like baseball that much, but I love what Chris Tom and Andy have to say about it. The history, social analysis and science is fascinating.

  3. Before the late 1940s all major leaguers benefited from the most potent PED of all: segregation. They never had to play against the best black athletes in their prime. Take 1941 for instance. Would Joe Dimaggio have had a 56-game hitting streak if he’d faced Satchel Paige 2-3 times in that stretch? Or Ted Williams: if he faced Satch 8-10 times (8-team leagues, remember), could he have hit over .400? I wouldn’t want to bet on it.

    PS, baseball will never die.

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