If At First by Keith Hernandez and Mike Bryan - Game By Game
Written: Jan 25 '07 (Updated Nov 11 '09)
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Product Rating:
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Pros: detailed and comprehensive look at a season of baseball
Cons: writing bogs down at times, technical aspects might not be for all readers
The Bottom Line: You might not agree with all Hernandez has to say, but he doesn't couch a typical baseball season in niceties and lets fans see what it's really like.
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| AliventiAsylum's Full Review: If at First: A Season With the Mets |
Every year before baseball season begins, I try to get myself psyched up for the upcoming season. That usually involves me watching a few baseball DVDs and reading some books to keep me “in the game” during the hot-stove months. This year, I was fortunate that while unpacking books from our move, I came across two books written by Mets players in the mid-1980’s, a time I call the “glory years”. This was a time before we knew about steroids in the game, and before icons such as Daryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden had their fall from grace.
The first book is If At First written by Keith Hernandez and Mike Bryan. Hernandez kept a game by game diary of the 1985 season. While some may not remember that season in the shadow of the incredible season a year later, 1985 was terrific in its own right. Had there been a “wild card” back then, the Mets would have surely been it, having been eliminated on the second-to-last game of the season. It was also a tough year for other reasons. Hernandez was going through a bitter divorce as well as having to testify about his own drug use (cocaine) during a trial in Pittsburgh. In addition, there was a 2-day player’s strike which is generally not something people remember in the wake of the 1981 and 1994 strikes.
Hernandez has always been controversial to one degree or another. He has been accused several times of being misogynistic due to his comments about women. Considering he has three daughters, I don’t think that’s really possible but his insight into the dealings behind a bitter baseball divorce and the animosity that’s created may explain some of it. He has views that many players have had through the years, and barriers have been broken. The first step was women reporters in the clubhouse (he comments on this) and more recently has been women trainers in the dugout (he caused a furor last season with his remarks on this). He also weighs in on the effects of wives, fiancees, and girlfriends traveling with the team. If nothing else, he is brutally honest even if you disagree with him on some of his views.
What really makes If At First a great baseball book is Hernandez’s insight into how the game is played. There are so many little things that go into a game that fans never see and never have a chance to understand. He talks about the little intricacies that go into each game, such as how where a foot is in the batter’s box or small adjustments in the stance can make a difference (it did in his season). Hearing about the difference in how a batter goes after the ball was something I never looked for until I read this book. If At First was a book that was largely responsible for the baseball knowledge I have as I learned to analyze what was happening and see what a batter was doing wrong, or if he was just probably making a bad guess on the pitch.
Hernandez weighs in on other subjects as well, such as his feelings on his fellow Mets players and those he knows from around the Major Leagues, on Whitey Herzog’s intentions when he traded him to the Mets in 1983, on drinking and baseball, and on dealing with the media. There are many other topics covered as he discusses why the players really had a low opinion of the All-Star Game and why he didn’t care if he was selected or not. I don’t necessarily agree with his philosophy there, but he makes some valid points to consider. If you truly believe that the All-Star Game is “the fan’s game” and the fans are paying your salary either directly through ticket sales or indirectly through advertising revenue, then the players should be more open to showing their appreciation in return. I can understand why, during this season with his early slump and all that was hanging over him off the field, he would choose to bypass the game, but I also subscribe to the train of thought that if it’s part of the game and you don’t like it, then find something else to do with your life.
Written day by day almost as a diary there are moments where the book bogs down. I can’t say it was something I rushed through and wanted to read each day. I read it slowly over the course of a few weeks and that pace was good. For people who don’t want to know all of the technical intricacies of the game, you will find the book tedious at times. I find all of that fascinating.
Mets fans really need to read this book, especially if you can’t remember those glory years. I really enjoyed reading the book and it was something special to read his detail about a game and remember that I had been there! I sometimes have trouble remembering what I had for dinner last night, but I can remember a baseball game from more than twenty years ago. That’s something to marvel at, and I really thank Hernandez for this trip down memory lane.
Pitchers and catchers report February 17th...
Other baseball-related reviews:
Baseball Digest
The Bad Guys Won by Jeff Pearlman ~ Ball Four by Jim Bouton ~ Chicken Soup for the Baseball Fan‘s Soul ~ The Devil Wears Pinstripes by Jim Caple ~ A Dream Season by Gary Carter ~ Iron Horse: Lou Gehrig in His Time by Ray Robinson ~ Jackie Robinson: A Biography by Arnold Rampersad ~ Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is Burning by Jonathan Mahler ~ One Pitch Away by Mike Sowell ~ When You Can’t Come Back by Dave Dravecky
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61* ~ 100 Years of the World Series ~ Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns ~ The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings ~ The Bronx is Burning ~ Bull Durham ~ Eight Men Out ~ Fear Strikes Out ~ Fever Pitch ~ For Love of the Game ~ The Jackie Robinson Story ~ A League of Their Own ~ Lucy Must Be Traded, Charlie Brown ~ Major League ~ Mantle ~ The Natural ~ Pastime ~ Pride of the Yankees ~ Soul of the Game ~ When It Was A Game ~ When It Was A Game 2 ~ When It Was A Game 3 ~ 1986 World Series New York Mets Collector's Edition
© 2007 Patti Aliventi
Recommended:
Yes
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