“Skipper: Why Baseball Managers
Matter and Always Will”

Updated: 6.25.25
The author: Scott Miller
The details: Grand Central Publishing/Hatchette Book Group, $30, 400 pages, released May 13, 2025; best available at the publishers website and Bookshop.org.
“The Last Manager:
How Earl Weaver Tricked, Tormented
& Reinvented Baseball”

The author: John W. Miller
The details: Avid Reader Press/Simon & Schuster; $30, 368 pages, released March 4, 2025; best available at the publishers website and Bookshop.org.
A review in 90 feet or less

Joe Maddon had a burr in his saddle. The former Angels’ skipper felt tossed overboard with a flimsy life preserver that, for the moment, provided him with nothing to preserve much of his patience or self-worth.
As once the manager of the successful Tampa Bay Rays when the organization was at the forefront of the analytics revolution in the 2000s, Maddon rode the Chicago Cubs to 103 wins and the 2016 World Series title, despite arm-wrestling the front office over lineup decision and then exposing himself at various times in the championship series against Cleveland.
Maddon’s return to the Los Angeles Angels starting in 2000 (he had interim managerial stints in 1996 and ’99) was once again too short to properly size up. It should have been a victory lap after all the years he spent as a team’s bench coach and fact-checker of managerial decisions on the fly. Instead it was more internal combustion of old school-new school thinking — at least that’s one way of thinking about it.
Jason Jenks from The Athletic reached out to Maddon recently for a Q&A that started this way:
Continue reading “Day 12 of 2025 baseball book reviews: Effective skippering”















