Jerome Holtzman

Jerome Holtzman
Jerome Holtzmanwas an American sportswriter known for his writings on baseball who served as the official historian for Major League Baseball from 1999 until his death...
al catcher guy high knew losing lost missing pitcher took
You're missing someone who should be high on the list. Al Lopez knew pitching. He knew when a guy was losing it. He didn't take the pitcher out after he lost the lead; he took him out before he lost it. He was a catcher and knew the game. He's first on my list.
fire gone guys sure
It all has to with his being a competitor. I'm sure a lot of guys could have gone on (as long) but they didn't have the fire in their belly.
gave looked nine run tying
I looked into it and in nine or 10 of his wins, he gave up the tying run but got the win,
baltimore best changed created holding johnny managers pitchers relief talked
Years later, I was in Baltimore one day and I talked to (then-manager) Johnny Oates. He said, 'You changed the game. You created the ninth-inning pitcher.' I said, 'It was the managers who did it. They started holding back their best relief pitchers to get saves.'
ahead baseball bobby innings terrific thinking three
always thinking ahead two or three innings ahead. Whitey Herzog was a terrific baseball mind, and nobody's better than Bobby Cox.
certainly
a shortstop with some, but certainly not overwhelming promise.
anticipate good great knew losing missed pitcher until wait
He was a great manager. He never missed a pitch. He had been a catcher, and one of the things he was very good at was that he knew when a pitcher was losing his stuff. He could anticipate so well. He just wouldn't wait until he was clobbered.
sports losing great-american
Losing is the great American sin.