I have a
confession to make: I’m not much of a reader. While I enjoy
reading, I often find myself too strapped for time to commit to a
book, especially during the daily grind of the baseball season.
I have quite a
backlog of books I’ve been meaning to get to, and hopefully will at
some point. But I made a point to read former Dodgers general
manager Ned Colletti’s new book, ‘The Big Chair,’ written
with Joseph A. Reaves. and I’m glad I did.
Colletti has been
in baseball for 35 years in a variety of roles, starting out in media
relations and publications with the Cubs in the early
1980s. He also worked for the Giants before coming to Los
Angeles, and has basically seen it all in baseball.
This book does a
good job at telling many of those stories, with Colletti sharing
several behind-the-scenes details of various points in his career. I
read the book just before Thanksgiving and found myself loving the
tales so much that I finished it in two days.
Without giving
anything away, a few stories I particularly enjoyed included in the
book are Colletti’s exhaustive interview with Frank McCourt for the
Dodgers general manager position, how Colletti convinced Cubs general
manager Dallas Green to hire him, and Colletti’s daughter’s
reaction to the Angelsbeating the Giants in 2002 World Series.
There are details
of a few colorful disagreements between Yasiel Puig and
former Dodgers manager Don Mattingly, plus Odalis Perez and Brad
Penny each leaving the Dodgers on not the best of terms.
There
was Colletti with the Cubs watching Greg Maddux leave as a
free agent for the Braves, then nearly 14 years later bringing
him to the Dodgers in trade.
Also included in
the book is the time in 2011 a Dodgers intern posted a Fan Post on
True Blue LA that laid out Colletti’s organizational report,
including confidential information on several players, heading into
the MLB Draft. That post was eventually deleted, and the author lost
his internship.
I was surprised
that the signing of Jason Schmidt wasn’t mentioned, but
Colletti was otherwise pretty thorough discussing his tenure as
Dodgers general manager, hitting nearly all the key points that have
been discussed ad nauseum over the years.
Purchase this book, CLICK BELOW:
Original review on: www.truebluela.com
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