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The Lean Years of the Yankees, 1965-1975 | 
enlarge | Author: Robert W. Cohen Publisher: McFarland & Company Category: Book
Buy New: $32.00
New (4) Used (3) from $27.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 747361
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 240 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 078641846X Dewey Decimal Number: 796.35764097471 EAN: 9780786418466 ASIN: 078641846X
Publication Date: April 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Book Description The New York Yankees' history is filled with great achievements, outstanding performances, and unprecedented success. For more than 40 years, from 1921 to 1964, the Yankees and their fans had much to cheer aboutthe team won 29 pennants and 20 world championships and featured such greats as Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio, Mickey Mantle, Bill Dickey, Yogi Berra and Whitey Ford. Yankee haters waited endlessly for the fall of the seemingly unbeatable team from New York, and finally, in 1965, the Yankees began to flounder. The team didn't win anything for the next eleven years. Each losing season, from 1965 through 1975, is fully covered in this book. The author maintains that in their long losing streak and mediocrity, the Yankees somehow acquired a more endearing quality that had not previously existed. The team that had once offered its fans Ruth, Gehrig, DiMaggio, Mantle and other greats now offered Bill Robinson, Danny Cater, Jerry Kenney and Jake Gibbs, and standouts Bobby Murcer, Mel Stottlemyre, Thurman Munson and Roy Whitemen who knew the Yankees' long and glorious history, but also knew first-hand the decade of frustration and disappointment that Yankees players and fans had to live through.
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| Customer Reviews:
A Bleak Period For the Yankees and Their Fans January 5, 2005 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Let's face it, winning is a lot more fun than losing. This book does a nice job in documenting the PAINFUL downward spiral of baseball's greatest franchise--starting the 1965 and taking more than a decade to re-emerge as a contender. Almost 40 years removed from this time, it is not well understood nor appreciated by younger Yankee fans as to what happened. The seeds of the Yankees downfall actually began around 1960 when GM George Weiss (as well as manager Stengel) were canned. Owners Dan Topping and Del Webb had decided that they would cut back in scouting and player development expenses in order to save cash--so that the bottom line would improve---the owners had contemplated putting the team on the market. They stopped looking for the best young talent and by 1965 the farm system had dried up.
For the prior decade, the Yankees farm system was almost unsurpassed---bringing up fresh talent year after year or using prospects to trade for players such as Roger Maris, Clete Boyer, Bob Turley, Johnny Sain, etc. As the pipeline of young talent began to dry up, the Yankees stars--Mantle, Ford, Kubek, etc were aging or retired prematurely due to injuries. For those of us who remember the 1964 World series, we didn't realize it at the time, but this was the Yankees "last hurrah" until 1976. Compounding these problems was the new rule passed by Major League baseball which began the amateur draft----so no longer could the Yankees (even assuming they had the money or the will to do so, could no longer sign any player they wanted). At the same time this was happening, CBS bought the Yankees and while their were howls of outrage from sports writers and other owners (this was the first corporate ownership of a baseball team) that CBS' unlimited resources would give the Yankees an advantage--actually the reverse happened--CBS didn't understand how to run a baseball club and weren't inclined to spend money in any case.
Although 1965 looked like it would be more of the same (on paper, the Yankees still had many great players in the late '20s or early '30), the disasterious hiring of Johnny Keane as manager (and Yogi's firing) as a PR disaster and demoralized the players. The bumbling, lovable Mets became the darling of New York for the until the early 1970's.
The author contends that these consecutive losing years made the Yankees more lovable---nonsense. They couldn't compete with the Met's in this respect and comparing attendence figures bears this out. Not lovable--just lousy.
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