Publishers Weekly
09/09/2019
Selig, who served as the ninth commissioner of Major League Baseball from 1998 to 2015, delivers a straightforward, insightful account of his life and how he dealt with challenges in a quickly changing sport. Starting with his ownership of his hometown Milwaukee Brewers in 1970, through his becoming commissioner after the resignation of Fay Vincent, Selig gives an honest account of his struggles with what he believed were owners “stuck in the past” and “planted on the wrong side of history” when it came to modernizing the league’s economic system and forging a partnership with the Players Association. Selig praises union negotiator Marvin Miller, who understood “that the union, and not management, controlled the players.” After the baseball strike of 1994, Selig was hard on team owners, who he felt needed “to see that they could not rely on a union-based solution” to fix the economic problems they faced, but instead “had to look beyond the players and union for ways to increase revenue and ensure their teams’ solvency.” Selig doesn’t shy from the many controversies in MLB, and is equally hard on the players—and himself—especially his role during the league’s widespread steroid issues that lasted until the end of his tenure. Baseball fans looking for a straight-talking, insider look into the business of the sport will delight in this outing. (July)
From the Publisher
Entertaining and important, For the Good of the Game is filled with details and up-close insights into the business, the competition, and the innovation challenges and successes of Major League Baseball, offering a depth of understanding that fans rarely get.” — - Tony La Russa
“Bud Selig’s career in baseball demonstrates the power of persistence. From the highest levels of our great game, he has always remained a loyal fan first. Bud’s insights on a life in our National Pastime are unlike any other.” — —Hall of Famer JOE TORRE, MLB’s chief baseball officer and four-time world champion manager of the New York Yankees
“Bud and I have been the best of friends for more than sixty years. I am so proud of Bud for writing the book. It shows why he is in the Baseball Hall of Fame.” — - Hank Aaron
“I’ve never met an owner, or a commissioner, who loves the game, and cares for it, more than Bud Selig. In this book he reveals how he modernized baseball’s economics and repaired the game when steroids threatened it, with fascinating details and admirable perspective.” — - Tim Kurkjian, ESPN baseball analyst
“This in-the-trenches memoir provides us with Bud’s full take on the controversies, regrets, and many significant achievements that marked the tenure of one of sports most consequential commissioners.” — - Bob Costas
“Charming, informative and even entertaining. Selig’s book is about the best memoir you can hope to read from a powerful professional sports insider. Much of that is due to the deep love and respect that Selig carries for the game of baseball.” — - NPR
“Selig’s testimony is a necessary addition to baseball history.” — - Washington Post
“Baseball fans will appreciate Selig’s coverage of the key issues that arose during his tenure, the financial resurgence of baseball, and the spread of the game around the world.” — Kirkus Reviews
Hank Aaron
Bud and I have been the best of friends for more than sixty years. I am so proud of Bud for writing the book. It shows why he is in the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Hall of Famer JOE TORRE
Bud Selig’s career in baseball demonstrates the power of persistence. From the highest levels of our great game, he has always remained a loyal fan first. Bud’s insights on a life in our National Pastime are unlike any other.
Tony La Russa
Entertaining and important, For the Good of the Game is filled with details and up-close insights into the business, the competition, and the innovation challenges and successes of Major League Baseball, offering a depth of understanding that fans rarely get.
Tim Kurkjian
I’ve never met an owner, or a commissioner, who loves the game, and cares for it, more than Bud Selig. In this book he reveals how he modernized baseball’s economics and repaired the game when steroids threatened it, with fascinating details and admirable perspective.”
NPR
Charming, informative and even entertaining. Selig’s book is about the best memoir you can hope to read from a powerful professional sports insider. Much of that is due to the deep love and respect that Selig carries for the game of baseball.
Bob Costas
This in-the-trenches memoir provides us with Bud’s full take on the controversies, regrets, and many significant achievements that marked the tenure of one of sports most consequential commissioners.”
Washington Post
Selig’s testimony is a necessary addition to baseball history.
Washington Post
Selig’s testimony is a necessary addition to baseball history.
Kirkus Reviews
2019-05-22
A former commissioner of baseball rehearses his years and achievements in the game.
After a foreword by Doris Kearns Goodwin, Selig begins with a difficult year for him and baseball—2007, a year dominated by Barry Bonds' chase for the all-time home run record and steroid scandals—before settling in to a fairly conventional chronological (and sometimes clichéd) summary of his experiences as a fan, owner (Milwaukee Brewers), and commissioner, the job that earned him a Baseball Hall of Fame induction in 2017. Although the author focuses almost entirely on his baseball life, he briefly discusses his marriage, his daughter's management of the Brewers, and his friendships, especially with Hank Aaron, whose record Bonds broke, and George W. Bush. Selig provides a fairly extensive account of 9/11, how baseball contributed to public healing, and how then-President Bush was, in the author's view, a hero. He also includes a tribute to the late Sen. John McCain, whom he greatly admired (he offers no comment about Donald Trump, who has publicly denigrated McCain). Baseball fans will appreciate Selig's coverage of the key issues that arose during his tenure, including the introduction of the "wild card" teams, the Pete Rose gambling case (Selig believes Rose's banishment from baseball remains just), the rise of the players' union, the destructive battle about steroids and other drugs, the notion of revenue-sharing among the teams (a concept borrowed from the NFL and its former commissioner Pete Rozelle, whom Selig praises extensively), the financial resurgence of baseball, and the spread of the game around the world. Selig does not express a lot of modesty or offer much in the way of confessions of failure, human or professional; in all, he maintained "clear eyes, an open mind, and a willingness to make personal sacrifices for the good of the game."
A broken-bat blooper that falls for a double.