News

When Earl Weaver died in January 2013, John W. Miller was covering the steel industry for the Wall Street Journal. But someone on the sports desk knew Miller was a baseball nut — a former ...
Major League Baseball's stadium landscape looks dramatically different in 2025, with the Tampa Bay Rays (hurricane damage to Tropicana Field) and Athletics (en route to Vegas) temporarily moving ...
He had borrowed it in 1974 as a 13 year old "baseball nut" but never returned it. "When you're moving with a bunch of books, you're not examining every book. You throw them in a box and go," said ...
He had borrowed it in 1974 as a 13-year-old “baseball nut” but never returned it. “When you’re moving with a bunch of books, you’re not examining every book.
JT Realmuto exits game after taking brutal nut shot. June 4, 2025 by Darryn Albert • Comments . ... sending the baseball straight into Realmuto’s family jewels. Here is the video of the play.
New Women's Pro Baseball League to launch in 2026: 'We have been waiting over 70 years' The league, created by trailblazing coach Justine Siegal, says the WPBL aims to begin play in 2026 in the U.S.
Chuck Hildebrandt, 63, of Chicago said he visited the public library in Warren while in town for Thanksgiving, carrying a book titled “Baseball’s Zaniest Stars.” He had borrowed it in 1974 as a ...
He had borrowed it in 1974 as a 13-year-old “baseball nut” but never returned it. “When you’re moving with a bunch of books, you’re not examining every book.
He had borrowed it in 1974 as a 13-year-old “baseball nut” but never returned it. “When you’re moving with a bunch of books, you’re not examining every book.
He had borrowed it in 1974 as a 13-year-old “baseball nut” but never returned it. “When you're moving with a bunch of books, you're not examining every book.
Chuck Hildebrandt, 63, of Chicago said he visited the public library in Warren while in town for Thanksgiving, carrying a book titled “Baseball’s Zaniest Stars.” He had borrowed it in 1974 as a ...
DETROIT (AP) — Fifty years later, a man who grew up in suburban Detroit tried to return a very overdue baseball book to his boyhood library. The answer: You can keep it — and no fine. Chuck ...