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Book Review: "Root For The Cubs"

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Charlie Root is the Cubs' all-time leader in wins (201), games pitched (605) and innings pitched (3137.1), nearly 70 years after he threw his last pitch for the ballclub.

This new biography, cleverly titled with a play on words "Root For The Cubs", brings this nearly-forgotten figure back to the forefront. And rather than focus on the one event that made Root famous -- an event he despised and in his later years as a pitching coach, would throw at any one of his players who would mention it -- this book is mostly about the 1929 Cub pennant-winning season, which was Root's second-best as a Cub (second only to his breakout year, 1927, when he was 28 years old and won 26 games, which is the most wins for a Cubs pitcher since 1912), when he helped lead the team to their first pennant since 1918. (The Ruth "called shot" is discussed in detail in the book's epilogue.)

The book's charm comes mainly from its primary source, Root's 90-year-old daughter, Della Root Arnold, still living in California (where a family car bears the license plate "BABEWHO"), who sat down for long interviews with the book's author, Roger Snell. She gave Snell many clear recollections of events eight decades past, and apparently kept a journal through many years of her father's career. There's quite a bit of detail about Cubs spring training on California's Catalina Island, where the team trained from 1921-51 (with interruptions during World War II). They trained there primarily because the team's owner, William Wrigley Jr., had bought the island for a song not long before. The book also goes into quite a bit of detail on how Wrigley wrested full control of the team from "Lucky" Charlie Weeghman. The parallels to today's situation aren't exact, but like Tom Ricketts, Wrigley was a huge baseball and Cubs fan, spent many days at the ballpark and was always looking for ways to improve his team both on and off the field; he was one of the first owners to realize the promotional potential of radio broadcasts. Of baseball, Wrigley said:

No man is qualified to make a genuine success of owning a big league ball team who isn't in it because of his love for the game. He's sure to weaken in his support at some critical point of its development if his heart isn't in the sport. On the other hand, it is no undertaking for a man who hasn't practically unlimited financial resources at his command, regardless of how much he loves the game. If he regards it merely as a means of making money, he'd much better invest his time and capital in an enterprise strictly commercial in character.

Operating a successful big-league ball team is radically different from running any commmercial or industrial business, because you are dealing, 100 percent, in and with human nature -- and that's always a variable quantity.

There's a catch in this business at every turn, because you're playing with tricky, variable human nature, not inert physical commodities and mechanical methods.

Words, I think, for Tom Ricketts to live by as he takes over the team sometime later this year.

Wrigley also hired Joe McCarthy as manager and, like Lou Piniella today, McCarthy managed to change the team's culture. But Wrigley also fired McCarthy after blaming him (wrongly, I think) for the team's loss in the '29 World Series, where they executed what is still the biggest blown lead in a World Series game, an 8-0 seventh-inning lead in Game Four, when they could have tied the series (a game in which Root had pitched brilliantly up to that time), and a one-out, nobody-on, 2-0 lead in the ninth inning of Game Five. The Cubs had been favored to win despite the Athletics' better regular-season record. McCarthy, who never played in the majors, went on to win seven World Series with the Yankees, and although the Cubs and Root would be in three more Fall Classics... well, you know the end of that story.

This book tells about a part of Cubs history that is largely forgotten today. With only the possible exception of Mordecai Brown, Charlie Root is the greatest pitcher in the history of the Cubs. Read this biography and you'll know him better, and you'll also know more about the 1929 Cubs, one of the franchise's greatest teams.

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Comments

Sounds like an interesting read

And any knowledgable baseball fan — even Yankee — knows where the next pitch would have gone had Ruth pointed to the bleachers.

Looks like Al has been spending a little time in front of books and crossword puzzles

to take his mind off of some of the recent games involving the Chicago National League Ballclub :-)

Presuming yesterday was the start of a winning streak...

… I can pay more attention.

Al like your new tagline
Thought I'd change things up.

Who knows, maybe I’ll change it again soon. Keep watching!

No man is qualified to make a genuine success of owning a big league ball team who isn’t in it because of his love for the game.

Advise that his son should have taken. William Wrigley loved baseball, Philip hated it. The Cubs languished under the younger Wrigley for to may years. May that fallow period end soon.

More so...

… William should have realized this and either set up so that the team would be sold to someone who cared after his death, or found someone in his family who did care to take over.

This sounds like a great book to read.

Is it only available in Chicago? If so, I’ll get it there the next time I go there.

I’m currently reading “Crazy 08.” I should have plenty of time on Thursday to finish it, especially on my flight from Philadelphia to San Francisco.

You can order off Amazon....

… using the link in this post.

Crazy ’08 is also terrific. I reviewed it when it came out two years ago.

I got it as a present

Great book Crazy ’08. Learn not only about the Cubs but a lot about baseball in that era

AL Check this out

As a 13 year old standing in line at the Walgreens in downtown Des Plaines I looked behind me and saw this tall skinny fellow in a Standard oil shirt….. I bluted out your Guy Bush … he said yes I am, how did you know that ? I said I have your baseball card IO’m
a Cub fan. He said its a surprise to have a young person know who I am. And we went
our separate ways…… It was Bush and Root in the dugout giving Ruth the Razzzberry.

That's very cool.

And a long time ago. Guy Bush died in 1985.

Guy Bush

Must have been 46/47 …… he had a gas station corner of Rand & River. No agent, or
financial manager

That must have been in the late 1960's, then.
NO - NO

I was 13 so that would have been either 1946 or 1947 …. I was a Freshman at Maine Twp. HS…..and my Dad told me that Bush had the station at Rand & River road in Des Plaines……

Oh, I get it now!

Geez, that WAS a long time ago.

Thanks !

FOR REMINDING ME THAT I REALLY AM AN OLD CUBBIE FAN GEEZER

LOL

From another old guy.

I love the review and your comments, Cub fans

You can get the book at Barnes & Noble nationally, online at Amazon.com or I will send you a signed, first edition paperback for $17 + $3 shipping at rootforthecubs.com.

Even if you don’t help me pay for my daughter’s college education, check out the web site for a rare film of Charlie Root warming up before the 1929 World Series (at 4:30 on the counter) and several news stories in recent days.

I’ll add Al’s great review to the news and reviews. I think you’ll find that Della turns this into a love story, not just a baseball story.

I'll help you pay for her college...

That sounds like a great read.

Thanks for this post!

In light of the ridiculous rants that are posted after every loss, seemingly after every bad play, a post like this is very much appreciated.

Root gets a shout out on Cubs.com

From the mail-bag:

Mitch Williams wore No. 99 while on the Phillies. What number was the highest number worn by a Cubs pitcher? What was the lowest? I’ve seen Mike Hampton wear No. 11, which seems low for a pitcher.
— Scott J., San Antonio

The highest number for a Cubs pitcher was No. 96, worn by Bill Voiselle in 1950. The highest by a Cubs player was No. 99, which Todd Hundley wore in 2001. I believe Charley Root, who won 201 games for the Cubs, has the lowest number for a pitcher at No. 12, which he wore in 1932. He pitched for the team from 1926-41, but ’32 was the first year the Cubs began wearing numbers on their jerseys. The first No. 1 for the team was infielder Woody English.

Timing is everything.

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