Review: The Last Manager

Cover image of "The Last Manager" by John W. Miller

The Last Manager, John W. Miller. Avid Reader Press (ISBN: 9781668030929) 2025.

Summary: A biography of manager Earl Weaver, his baseball career, his strategic innovations, and his feisty character.

I try to review a baseball book or two every summer. But I don’t recall that I’ve ever reviewed a biography of a manager. Earl Weaver is a fitting subject, having managed four pennant-winning teams between 1968 and 1982, each time winning over 100 games. One of those won the World Series. He brought strategic innovations to managing that changed the game. Of course, he is remembered for his feisty run-ins with umpires, tirades that mixed vulgarities and Shakespeare and lots of dirt kicking. John W. Miller’s new biography, The Last Manager, paints a full-color picture of a most colorful figure in baseball history.

But Earl Weaver never set out to be a manager. Growing up in St. Louis, which had two baseball teams (the Browns and the Orioles), he was a star high school player and made it to the minor leagues, despite his small size. He even made it to spring training on the Cardinals in 1951, only to be sent back to the minors because the manager, Eddie Stankey was still playing, and his position was second base. That was the zenith of his playing career. Miller traces his decline over the next years as a player.

But Earl always was an analyst of the game. Watching games with his uncle, who engaged in sports betting, he developed the instincts of an analyst, figuring out statistics, like on base percentage, that mattered. He analyzed managers decisions, the good and bad. At Knoxville, in the mid-1950’s, he got his chance when the team manager did abysmally and everyone recognized Weaver might be better, including the owners. About then, Paul Richards was building the Orioles farm system, and recognized in Weaver the kind of baseball man he was looking for.

Miller traces his rise from 1957 to 1968 in the Orioles farm system, working his way up the ladder and helping develop the Oriole Way, eventually managing their Rochester team. Then mid-season in 1968, the call came to replace poorly performing Hank Bauer. The team played 48-34 after Weaver took over. He insisted on the Oriole Way, which detailed excellence, both on and off the field. Weaver didn’t allow his pitchers to waste pitches but put a priority on throwing strikes. He didn’t waste outs either. He was opposed generally to the hit and run and bunting. And he was the one to introduce the radar gun and figure out the optimum difference between the speed of fastballs and off-speed pitches (about 20 mph).

Weaver not only fought with umpires but also with players. His fights with Jim Palmer were legendary, but Palmer kept turning in 20-game seasons. It was never personal and part of Weaver’s genius was to push players to their best, sometimes by uniting the team against him. In the midst of his time with the Orioles, he figured out the transition to free agency. He recognized in Cal Ripken, Jr. the potential for the big shortstop.

He coached through 1982, and then a brief return in 1985-86. It didn’t seem his heart was in it when he came back. Sports broadcasting didn’t fit. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1996, only the thirteenth manager admitted..

Miller shows how the analytics Weaver developed have expanded in today’s much more highly computerized world. While managers are much more player-oriented as a rule, Weaver’s qualities of “leadership, passion, and motivation” are still key. Weaver’s approach to spring training and practice also continues to influence the game.

We also catch glimpses of Weaver off the field. He loved to garden and had a rivalry with his groundskeeper over who grew the best tomatoes. In retirement, he was a pioneer in developing sports videogaming.

I loved this biography for both bringing out Weaver’s character and its glimpse of “inside baseball.” Miller helps us appreciate how Weaver’s on-the-field antics revealed his fierce passion for his players. And for the baseball buff, it recalls those great Oriole baseball teams of the seventies, not built with big money but a good farm system and attention to the fundamentals. This has all the elements of a great baseball book!

The Weekly Wrap: February 23-March 1

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To Tell the Truth

“But I tell you that everyone will have to give account on the day of judgment for every empty word they have spoken” (Matthew 12:36, NIV)

I consider writing a dangerous occupation. The saying of Jesus quoted above is a kind of guiding mental watchword. I write as one who believes he will give an account for his words. And over the twelve years of blogging, I’ve written millions of words. And this doesn’t count what I post on social media. I’ve a lot to account for.

Jesus mentions “empty” words. The image it calls to mind is a grain of wheat. Full words include the kernel. They nourish. And enrich. They are what they appear to be. They are true. Empty words are the husk without the grain. They deceive, leading us to believe they offer substance when there is nothing. They are trivial and mean. Trite. They lie.

What saddens me about so much of our discourse is the tolerance of known lies. I see “good Christian” people doing this as if political gamesmanship is more important than truth. I’ve contended that when we do this, we jeopardize the truth claims of the Christian message. Why would people believe I am telling the truth when I say Jesus rose from the dead if I tell them baldface lies to their face?

This is one of the reasons I love good literature, fiction or non-fiction. There is a “ring of truth” in good literature, an effort to be true to character, true to life, and in non-fiction, true to facts, insofar as it is in the writer’s capacity to do so. It protects me from becoming inured to lies. And it renews in me the hope that goodness, truth, and beauty will prevail in the end. It is what I hope to do with my own words. I write coram Deo, before God, and want to give a good account when the day comes.

Five Articles Worth Reading

For an example of one careful with words, consider Robert Caro. Over his typewriter (!) are the words “The only thing that matters is on this page” “Rifling Through the Archives With Legendary Historian Robert Caro” recounts the work of this fine writer, who is racing against his own mortality to complete the final volume of his work on Lyndon Johnson. I’m rooting for him, since I’ve reveled in the others.

Bibliophiles love to learn about upcoming books, especially from their favorite authors or on timely topics. The Millions has become know as the “go to” preview. “How THE MILLIONS’ Seasonal Previews Get Made with Sophia Stewart” offers an inside look at the process behind the preview.

The New Yorker is one hundred years old. “The New Yorker and the American Voice” offers an appraisal of the magazine’s contribution to American letters and tries to describe its distinctive voice.

You’ve seen the pictures of libraries with shelves extending beyond the reach of the tallest, accessed by a special ladder. Maybe some of us have dreamed of having such a library in our homes. “The Ascendance of the Book Ladder” gives us a history of this piece of hardware about which many of us have fantasized.

Every year I read a baseball book. I think I’ve found one for this year from this review of a biography of “The Banty, Blustering Genius of Earl Weaver.” I only wish he had managed in Cleveland!

Quote of the Week

Educator and author Mary Ellen Chase was born February 24, 1887. She made this statement to which I would personally attest:

“There is no substitute for books in the life of a child.”

Miscellaneous Musings

I just began reading Richard Osman’s The Thursday Murder Club and love the premise of four sharp seniors in a retirement community who get together every Thursday to sift through the evidence of unsolved murders. Looks like there is great fun ahead, not only in this volume but those to follow (according to my daughter-in-law).

I hate throwing out old books (except in the case of mildew). I even find someone to give ARCs to. But I met my match when I discovered old software manuals from the 1990’s in the back of a cupboard. I couldn’t even foist them on my son who loves old computer operating systems and games. Alas, to the recycling bin they went!

Editing is behind the scenes work. Good editors take a “diamond in the rough” and polish it so that the writer shines through. I did a bit of that in my last job. I have a friend who does this work at a publishing house from which I often review books. I see his name in the acknowledgements of a number of worthwhile books. I hope we never outsource this work to AI. I can see his personal touch over and over in the authors he’s worked with. And from other books, I gather this is so with many editors.

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: The Month in Reviews: February 2025

Tuesday: Paul Barnett, The Trials of Jesus

Wednesday: R. F. Kuang, Yellowface

Thursday: Michael A. Wilkinson, Crowned with Glory and Honor: A Chalcedonian Anthropology

Friday: William Kent Krueger, Heaven’s Keep

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap for February 23-March 1, 2025!

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page