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Arm: Inside the Billion-Dollar Mystery of the Most Valuable Commodity in Sports [Kõva köide]

4.19/5 (7936 hinnangut Goodreads-ist)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 376 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x31 mm, kaal: 572 g, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Collins
  • ISBN-10: 0062400363
  • ISBN-13: 9780062400369
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  • Kõva köide
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 376 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x31 mm, kaal: 572 g, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 05-Apr-2016
  • Kirjastus: Collins
  • ISBN-10: 0062400363
  • ISBN-13: 9780062400369
Teised raamatud teemal:
The Yahoo Sports lead columnist and author of Death to the BCS examines the franchise lifeblood role of pitchers in Major League Baseball and the considerable vulnerability of pitching arms, drawing on rare interviews with Daniel Hudson, Todd Coffey and Sandy Koufax to share insights into the impact of injuries on careers and teams. 50,000 first printing.

Yahoo’s lead baseball columnist offers an in-depth look at the most valuable commodity in sports—the pitching arm—and how its vulnerability to injury is hurting players and the game, from Little League to the majors.

Every year, Major League Baseball spends more than $1.5 billion on pitchers—five times more than the salary of every NFL quarterback combined. Pitchers are the game’s lifeblood. Their import is exceeded only by their fragility. One tiny band of tissue in the elbow, the ulnar collateral ligament, is snapping at unprecedented rates, leaving current big league players vulnerable and the coming generation of baseball-playing children dreading the three scariest words in the sport: Tommy John surgery.

Jeff Passan traveled the world for three years to explore in-depth the past, present, and future of the arm, and how its evolution left baseball struggling to wrangle its Tommy John surgery epidemic. He examined what compelled the Chicago Cubs to spend $155 million on one arm. He snagged a rare interview with Sandy Koufax, whose career was cut short by injury at thirty, and visited Japan to understand how another baseball-mad country treats its prized arms. And he followed two major league pitchers, Daniel Hudson and Todd Coffey, throughout their returns from Tommy John surgery. He exposes how the baseball establishment long ignored the rise in arm injuries and reveals how misplaced incentives across the sport stifle potential changes.

Injuries to the UCL start as early as Little League. Without a drastic cultural shift, baseball will continue to lose hundreds of millions of dollars annually to damaged pitchers, and another generation of children will suffer the same problems that vex current players. Informative and hard-hitting, The Arm is essential reading for everyone who loves the game, wants to keep their children healthy, or relishes a look into how a large, complex institution can fail so spectacularly.

Prologue 1(4)
Chapter 1 A Dead Man's Tendon
5(20)
Chapter 2 Dummyball
25(18)
Chapter 3 The Men Who Changed Baseball History
43(14)
Chapter 4 Chimps, Quacks, and Freaks
57(12)
Chapter 5 Young Guns
69(26)
Chapter 6 Overuse, Underuse, and No Use
95(18)
Chapter 7 Pay the Man
113(24)
Chapter 8 The Second Time Around
137(20)
Chapter 9 Rehab Hell
157(18)
Chapter 10 Fear, Loathing, and Rotten Meat
175(20)
Chapter 11 Land of the Rising Arm Injury Rate
195(30)
Chapter 12 Changeup
225(20)
Chapter 13 The Swamp of Possible Solutions
245(30)
Chapter 14 Dog Days
275(18)
Chapter 15 The New Frontier
293(32)
Chapter 16 Spring
325(18)
Epilogue 343(10)
Acknowledgments 353