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9781496246981 Academic Inspection Copy

Spitballer

Stan Coveleski and the 1920 Cleveland Indians
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Spitballer is the biography of one of baseball's greatest pitchers. Stan Coveleski was a quiet, modest man, the youngest and most successful of five ball-playing Polish American brothers who worked in the coal mines near their hometown of Shamokin, Pennsylvania. Hoping to escape the mines' low wages and dangerous working conditions, Coveleski turned to professional baseball. He learned the spitball pitch during a three-year stint in the Minor Leagues after making his Major League debut with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1912. Coveleski won three games in a single World Series using the now-illegal pitch he altered with saliva to fool opposing hitters. The 1920 season was Coveleski's best in the majors; that year, he posted an impressive 24-14 record and led the American League with 133 strikeouts. "Covey," as he was affectionately known, was even better in the World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers, when he hurled three game victories, posting a sparkling 0.67. But 1920 was also a season of tragedy for both Coveleski and the Indians. On May 28 Covey received the devastating news that his wife of seven years, Mary Shivetts, had died. Then, on August 6, as Coveleski was vying for his nineteenth victory of the season against the New York Yankees, Cleveland shortstop Ray Chapman was hit in the head by a pitch thrown by the Yankees' Carl Mays and died twelve hours later. Nevertheless, Covey and the Indians persevered to capture the American League pennant and win their first-ever World Series title. Based on contemporary newspaper accounts and five major interviews Coveleski gave, Spitballer tells Covey's inspirational story in the context of his time and the rise and decline of the spitball, a tricky and sometimes dangerous pitch to control, and one that had an enormous impact on early twentieth-century baseball.
William C. Kashatus holds a PhD in history from the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of more than twenty books, including Blue-Eyed Soul Brother: The Versatile Football Life of Super Bill Bradley (Nebraska, 2024), and Jackie and Campy: The Untold Story of Their Rocky Relationship and the Breaking of Baseball's Color Line (Nebraska, 2014). He has also published essays in a multitude of periodicals, including the Philadelphia Inquirer, American History Magazine, Baltimore Sun, Christian Science Monitor, New York Times, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Kashatus has appeared on NPR and Pennsylvania Cable Network, as well as on many local television and radio stations.
"Stan Coveleski was an underappreciated Hall of Fame pitcher. He's not anymore, thanks to William Kashatus, who delves deep into Covey's career in his latest book."--Jack Smiles, author of Big Ed Walsh: The Life and Times of a Spitballing Hall of Famer "Stan Coveleski's story would seem inconceivable to a modern ballplayer: a childhood working in the anthracite coal mines of Pennsylvania, with no baseball training beyond throwing stones at cans, he rose from that hardscrabble life to perfect the spitball and author an all-time World Series performance on his way to the Hall of Fame. Now, thanks to William Kashatus, Coveleski has a lively, deeply researched biography that honors his remarkable legacy."--Tyler Kepner, senior baseball writer for The Athletic and author of K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches "William Kashatus offers a compelling study of Stan Coveleski, a complex personality who rose from the Pennsylvania coal mines to enshrinement in Baseball's Hall of Fame."--Scott H. Longert, author of The Best They Could Be: How the Cleveland Indians Became the Kings of Baseball, 1916-1920
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