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Welcome to the Circus of Baseball

A Story of the Perfect Summer at the Perfect Ballpark at the Perfect Time

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
A gloriously funny, nostalgic memoir of a popular ESPN reporter who, in the summer of 1994, was a fresh-out-of-college intern for a minor league baseball team. Madness and charm ensue as Ryan McGee spends the season steeped in sweat, fertilizer, nacho cheese sauce, and pure, unadulterated joy in North Carolina with the Asheville Tourists.
"A sweet and funny book that reminds us it’s not just the game itself that draws us. It’s also the people." —Tom Verducci, MLB Network, Fox & Sports Illustrated, and New York Times bestselling author of The Yankee Years
In the spring of 1994, Ryan McGee (new college graduate) bombed his coveted interview with ESPN—the only place he ever wanted to work. But he did receive one job offer: to work for $100 a week for the Asheville Tourists, a proud minor league baseball team in the heart of North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains. McCormick Field, home to the Tourists, had once been graced by Ty Cobb, Lou Gehrig, Babe Ruth, and Jackie Robinson. What could go wrong?
Welcome to the Circus of Baseball is McGee’s hilarious, charming memoir of his first summer working in the sporting world. He has since risen the ESPN ranks to national TV, radio, and Internet host, but his time in Asheville still looms large. Among the many jewels of his experience. . . McGee recounts one of the most entertaining on-field brawls you’ll ever witness (between the fourteen league mascots who had assembled for the all-star game—an eight-foot-tall foam-costumed crustacean, a pudgy red fox, a giant skunk . . . and they were really fighting), as well as the nervous moment he oversaw the game-day entertainer known as "Captain Dynamite and His Exploding Coffin of Death." Most important, McGee details a magical summer of baseball, of learning the ropes, of the ins-and-outs of running a minor league team, and of coming to understand how the pulse of a community can beat gloriously through a minor league ball club.
Welcome to the Circus of Baseball is a baseball classic in the making.
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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2023
      ESPN writer and radio commentator McGee recounts a sentimental education in the front office of a minor league baseball team. It was 1993, and McGee, fresh out of college and living with his parents, was desperate for a job. He auditioned for ESPN only to be dismissed by sports-journalism pioneer Al Jaffe. Nonetheless, McGee, author of The Road to Omaha and Sidelines and Bloodlines, was determined to find a career in sports, so he traveled to a "Baseball Job Fair" in Atlanta to make his case. He managed to sign on with the Asheville Tourists, who played in "a perfectly picturesque All American throwback minor league ballpark." Though only paid $100 per week, McGee was pleased with his new job, especially since he had enjoyed minor league baseball since he was a kid. The author's account opens with a very funny sideshow moment involving "Captain Dynamite," who, for $500, blew himself up in his "Exploding Coffin of Death." Among other colorful characters populating the narrative, McGee recounts the exploits of a 57-year-old former pitcher-turned-coach nicknamed Tomatoes for his florid complexion and known for "his legendary and unprecedented ability to eat an entire pizza while also gnawing on a plug of Red Man chewing tobacco while washing it all down with a beer." Most of the team could have come out of Ron Shelton's great film Bull Durham, with similarly grim chances of making it to the majors, while McGee himself chronicles his blundering from task to task, miscounting ticket sales here and cooking hot dogs there. Throughout, the author delivers entertaining set pieces, including an improbable dust-up between league mascots. Near the end, McGee has harsh words for the greedy MLB owners who, in 2021, cut 40 minor league teams "because they had been deemed unnecessary." A picaresque, funny account of a side of lesser-rung baseball too little represented in the literature.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      February 15, 2023
      ESPN senior writer and radio cohost McGee sets his wayback machine to 1994, when he served as a first-year intern for the Asheville (North Carolina) Tourists, who played at hallowed McCormick Field, where Ruth, Cobb, Robinson, and Clemente made appearances as players, and Cal Ripken Jr. served as a bat boy. McGee would bolt the team for a gig with ESPN before the season even ended--hardly making for a "perfect" anything--but readers will be charmed by the gallery of owners, players, coaches, groundskeepers, concessionaires, (fighting!) mascots, fellow interns, and fans McGee paints with such vivid colors in this account of one small, all-hands-on-deck, minor-league club back in the beforetime. For fans of the movie Bull Durham.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      March 10, 2023

      After finishing college, McGee (The Road to Omaha: Hits, Hopes, and History at the College World Series), whose lifelong dream was to become a sports announcer (and who now cohosts the ESPN Radio show Marty & McGee), interned with the Asheville Tourists, a Minor League Baseball team in North Carolina, for the 1994 season. He tells the story of the internship in this nostalgic memoir. While there, he performed a huge variety of tasks for the team, including handling tickets, manning concession stands, creating promotional materials, establishing good relationships with the local community, and running errands for the administration, especially the owner. When that season ended, he was hired by ESPN as a production assistant. In the nearly 30 years since then, he has risen in ESPN's ranks to become a senior writer, college football reporter, and five-time Emmy winner. This book is a hilarious yet endearing account of McGee's experiences during that 1994 season in Asheville. Readers who are baseball fans will enjoy the descriptive, picturesque scenes McGee paints. VERDICT Will likely appeal to and attract many sports fans and general readers. Highly recommended for public libraries and collections with a sports emphasis.--Steve Dixon

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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