Opening Day
The Story of Jackie Robinson's First Season
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Narrated by:
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Richard Allen
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By:
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Jonathan Eig
About this listen
April 15, 1947, marked the most important opening day in baseball history. When Jackie Robinson stepped onto the diamond that afternoon at Ebbets Field, he became the first Black man to break into major-league baseball. World War II had just ended. Democracy had triumphed. Now Americans were beginning to press for justice on the home front, and Robinson had a chance to lead the way.
He was an unlikely hero. He had little experience in organized baseball. His swing was far from graceful. And he was assigned to play first base, a position he had never tried before that season. But the biggest concern was his temper. Robinson was an angry man who played an aggressive style of ball. In order to succeed, he would have to control himself in the face of what promised to be a brutal assault by opponents of integration.
Drawing on interviews with surviving players, sportswriters, and eyewitnesses, as well as newly discovered material from archives around the country, Jonathan Eig presents a fresh portrait of a ferocious competitor who embodied integration's promise and helped launch the modern civil-rights era. Full of new details and thrilling action, Opening Day brings to life baseball's ultimate story.
©2007 Jonathan Eig (P)2007 Tantor Media Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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On April 18, 1981, a ball game sprang eternal. What began as a modestly attended minor-league game between the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Rochester Red Wings became not only the longest ever played in baseball history, but something else entirely. The first pitch was thrown after dusk on Holy Saturday, and for the next eight hours the night seemed to suspend its participants between their collective pasts and futures, between their collective sorrows and joys....
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I love baseball
- By Sher from Provo on 04-08-13
By: Dan Barry
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Bums
- An Oral History of the Brooklyn Dodgers
- By: Peter Golenbock
- Narrated by: Raymond Todd
- Length: 19 hrs and 32 mins
- Unabridged
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Before the team headed to Los Angeles in 1957, the Brooklyn Dodgers were one of the most colorful and beloved teams in baseball. In Bums, best-selling author Peter Golenbock has compiled a fascinating oral history of the Ebbets Field heroes with recollections from former players, writers, front-office executives, and faithful fans.
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A MUST for the true Dodgers or Giants fan!!
- By Karen on 02-25-07
By: Peter Golenbock
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The Big Bam
- The Life and Times of Babe Ruth
- By: Leigh Montville
- Narrated by: Scott Brick
- Length: 15 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Babe Ruth was more than baseball's original superstar. For 85 years, he has remained the sport's reigning titan. He has been named Athlete of the Century...more than once. But who was this large, loud, enigmatic man? In The Big Bam, Leigh Montville brings his trademark touch to this groundbreaking, revelatory portrait of the Babe.
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The Big Bam
- By Alan on 06-13-06
By: Leigh Montville
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The Chicago Cubs
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- By: Rich Cohen
- Narrated by: Adam Grupper
- Length: 9 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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For Rich Cohen and millions of other fans, the Chicago Cubs have always been more than a team: they've been the protagonists of a King Arthur epic, in search of the Holy Grail that is winning the World Series. A chronicle of the last few miraculous seasons as experienced through the prism of Cubs history, The Chicago Cubs tracks the famous curse, which was placed on the team in 1945 by the infamous owner of the Billy Goat Tavern, who was ejected from Wrigley Field when he tried to bring his goat into the grandstand for the fifth game of the World Series.
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just listen and it all happens again
- By Z. Kuhn on 10-28-17
By: Rich Cohen
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Pete Rose
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- By: Kostya Kennedy
- Narrated by: Ben Bartolone
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Pete Rose played baseball with a singular and headfirst abandon that endeared him to fans and peers, even as it riled others--a figure at once magnetic, beloved and polarizing. Rose has more base hits than anyone in history, yet he is not in the Hall of Fame. Twenty-five years ago he was banished from baseball for gambling, then ruled ineligible for Cooperstown; today, the question "Does Pete Rose belong in the Hall of Fame?" has evolved into perhaps the most provocative in sports, a layered, slippery and ever-relevant moral conundrum.
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Good book, not so good production.
- By david d. on 05-01-14
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The Summer of Beer and Whiskey
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- By: Edward Achorn
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Chris Von der Ahe knew next to nothing about baseball when he risked his life’s savings to found the St. Louis Browns, the franchise that would become the St. Louis Cardinals. Yet the German-born beer garden proprietor would become one of the most important - and funniest - figures in the game’s history.
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Well written and extensive research but just not interesting
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Game Six
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Best-selling author Mark Frost takes listeners back to the 1975 World Series in this thrilling account of the greatest baseball game ever played. The Reds and Red Sox endured three soggy days of inactivity to reach game six. But all that downtime could not prepare them for what happened when the skies finally cleared.
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For the love of Baseball
- By Al on 03-23-10
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1954: The Year Willie Mays and the First Generation of Black Superstars Changed Major League Baseball Forever
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- Narrated by: David Drummond
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Jackie Robinson heroically broke the color barrier in 1947. But how—and, in practice, when—did the integration of the sport actually occur? Bill Madden shows that baseball’s famous black experiment” did not truly succeed until the coming of age of Willie Mays and the emergence of some star players—Larry Doby, Hank Aaron, and Ernie Banks—in 1954. And as a relevant backdrop off the field, it was in May of that year that the US Supreme Court unanimously ruled, in the case of Brown v. Board of Education, that segregation be outlawed in America’s public schools.
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Acumen bugaboo
- By steve finkelstein on 04-25-21
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The Best Team Money Can Buy
- The Los Angeles Dodgers’ Wild Struggle to Build a Baseball Powerhouse
- By: Molly Knight
- Narrated by: Hillary Huber
- Length: 11 hrs and 38 mins
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In 2012 the Los Angeles Dodgers were bought out of bankruptcy in the most expensive sale in sports history. Los Angeles icon Magic Johnson and his partners hoped to put together a team worthy of Hollywood. By most accounts they have succeeded, if not always in the way they might have imagined.
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BOTH BOOK AND TEAM NEED TO BE BETTER
- By Ray on 09-06-15
By: Molly Knight
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The Bad Guys Won
- A Season of Brawling, Boozing, Bimbo Chasing, and Championship Baseball with Straw, Doc, Mookie, Nails, the Kid, and the Rest of the 1986 Mets, the Rowdiest Team Ever to Put on a New York Uniform - and Maybe the Best
- By: Jeff Pearlman
- Narrated by: Jeff Pearlman
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It was 1986, and the New York Mets won 108 regular-season games and the World Series, capturing the hearts (and other assorted body parts) of fans everywhere. But their greatness on the field was nearly eclipsed by how bad they were off it. Led by the indomitable Keith Hernandez and the young dynamic duo of Dwight Gooden and Darryl Strawberry, along with the gallant Scum Bunch, the Amazin's left a wide trail of wreckage in their wake-hotel rooms, charter planes, a bar in Houston, and most famously Bill Buckner and the hated Boston Red Sox.
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Maybe 3.5
- By Lifeisshort on 02-15-22
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The Last Folk Hero
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- Length: 22 hrs
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From the mid-1980s into the early 1990s, the greatest athlete of all time streaked across American sports and popular culture. Stadiums struggled to contain him. Clocks failed to capture his speed. His strength was legendary. His power unmatched. Video game makers turned him into an invincible character—and they were dead-on. He climbed (and walked across) walls, splintered baseball bats over his knee, turned oncoming tacklers into ground meat.
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If you are a sports fan and over 35 years old, you have to listen/read this. Awesome!
- By betty sammons on 06-29-23
By: Jeff Pearlman
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What listeners say about Opening Day
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Laurence R. Baker
- 03-22-24
Interesting Facts and Distressing Narration
I read this book because I had just finished Eig’s book on Martin Luther King, which I thought was tremendous. I was not as enthralled with “Opening Day . . .” I thought it had strengths. It does a great job detailing Jackie Robinson’s recruitment by Branch Rickey. It also dispels myths and emphasizes the immense challenge Robinson had not responding to indignities. I also applauded the way Eig would digress away from the field and supply vignettes of persons who were impacted by baseball’s racial integration. It helped convey the societal impact of the event. HIs favorable bias toward New Yorkers was ridiculous. He speaks of Joe Dimaggio as a demi-god. And he bends over backward to create doubt about whether New York Daily News writer, Dick Young was a racist. (He obviously was). I also thought it very strange that he went into such detail recounting the 1947 World Series. I have one MAJOR flag regarding the narration. While I can certainly forgive the mispronouncing of a couple of baseball names (e.g., Hall of Famer Red Schoendienst), there was one pronunciation that I never got over. Instead of a long “E” for the word negro, the narrator pronounces it the vowel like the “i” in “dig.” So literally hundreds of times he says “nigro” all too similar sounding to the “n” word. Perhaps this is some regional habit of the speaker, but for me it ruined the narration.
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- Anonymous User
- 10-23-24
Important story about a crucial episode in baseball AND United States history.
Terrific story about a great ballplayer and an even greater man. I shed a few tears hearing about the gentleman who always wore a shirt and tie when he went to work in a once-segregated shipping department - a job he got thanks to an owner whose consciousness was raised by seeing Jackie Robinson’s battle for his own job.
Seems like there were more than a few mispronounced players names in the narration but that’s my only gripe. Overall it’s a helluva tale.
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Overall
- Joe Baseball
- 08-30-07
Great book, not so great reading
Eig did great work writing this book, and I enjoyed it a great deal. I just wish that the reader and recording engineer had been baseball fans. The mispronunciation of the names of prominent baseball figures is truly annoying. And it isn't just people from 1947. Many of those guys are still around the game today. Anyone acquainted with Major League Baseball would have been a vast improvement.
I would gladly purchase another copy of this audio book, if it were redone with a fan doing the reading.
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5 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 03-16-12
greatest day ever
april 15. 1947 at the brooklyn dodger club
the greatest day in the history of baseball
it's importance only grows with time
no athletic season was ever more deserving of analysis
as "luckiest man" showed jonathan eig is the man for the job
others have told this story but none have done better
the telling detail / the counterintuitive interaction
the underlying personalities of the teammates
each insightful part of the puzzle gets presented
what stays with you is just how damn hard it was to do
rickey at his best / robinson at his best / brooklyn at its' best
it was for each of them their finest hour
have you done the right thing in the right way at the right time ?
do people line up to help you ? or do they drag you down ?
did the players have any idea of the history they were making ?
the very human nature of the struggle comes through clearly
these were brave tough lonely determined people
jonathan eig has made their lives more than memorable
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2 people found this helpful
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Overall
- R. E. Calla
- 06-19-07
narrator
The mispronouncemet of so many well known baseball players was ridiculous. the narrator should at least know how to pronounce names-it was vert distracting
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4 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 10-22-23
A lesson in Bravery for all times
A giant in our country and history. We are blessed by his story and grit
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