Francona (e-bog) af Shaughnessy, Dan
Shaughnessy, Dan (forfatter)

Francona e-bog

90,41 DKK (inkl. moms 113,01 DKK)
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER. &quote;Eloquent and dazzling,&quote; the story of Terry Francona's tenure as manager of the Boston Red Sox (Philadelphia Daily News). When Terry Francona took over as manager of the Boston Red Sox in 2004, the storied franchise hadn't won a World Series championship in eighty-six years. Led by Francona, the team won two over the course of four years. During the full e...
E-bog 90,41 DKK
Forfattere Shaughnessy, Dan (forfatter)
Forlag Mariner Books
Udgivet 22 januar 2013
Længde 384 sider
Genrer Biography: sport
Sprog English
Format epub
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9780547928265
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER. "e;Eloquent and dazzling,"e; the story of Terry Francona's tenure as manager of the Boston Red Sox (Philadelphia Daily News). When Terry Francona took over as manager of the Boston Red Sox in 2004, the storied franchise hadn't won a World Series championship in eighty-six years. Led by Francona, the team won two over the course of four years. During the full eight years of Francona's tenure, the Red Sox were transformed from "e;cursed"e; into one of the most successful and profitable teams in baseball historyonly to fall back to last place as soon as Francona was gone.Francona: The Red Sox Years lets readers in on the inner workings of the Red Sox clubhouse like no book has ever done before. From the highs of the World Series to the lows of the final months of the 2011 seasonthe most epic collapse of a team in baseball historythis book features the never-before-told stories about Sox fans' favorite players, moments, wins, and losses."e;A scorched-earth memoir . . . [that] touches fleetingly on steroid use, sabermetrics, and Michael Jordan's stint in the minor leagues . . . but saves its heaviest artillery for the owners . . . [and] Theo Epstein backs him up."e;New York Times Book Review"e;It's not often that baseball aficionados and gossip gluttons can plunk down on a shared portion of outfield grass with the same book for an afternoon of readerly delight, but Francona can bridge those kinds of differences."e;Boston Globe