April (one book)
Weaver on Strategy: The Classic Work on the Art of Managing a Baseball Team
by Earl Weaver and Terry Pluto
This book is Earl Weaver handbook on how to run a baseball team. He dives into the inning to inning tasks as well as what he thinks needs to be considered over the course of the full season. Personally, I have no read this work and have been told by many that this is essential reading for not only any Oriole fan, but also for any fan of baseball.
May (two books)
The Extra 2%: How Wall Street Strategies Took a Major League Baseball Team from Worst to First
by Jonah Keri
This is Jonah Keri book on how the Tampa Bay Rays success story. It is about how the worst team in baseball looked to find any and every advantage, no matter how small. By slightly exploiting areas more efficiently than the Yankees or Red Sox enabled them to be successful. Studying the Rays' success may provide some perspective to how the Orioles might be better run.
Built to Win: Inside Stories and Leadership Strategies from Baseball's Winningest GM
by John Schuerholz, Bob Costas, and Larry Guest
Schuerholtz tells some stories about his career and throws down some of his knowledge. As I know his strategies, he considers himself to some extent an anti-Moneyball-ist . . . which is not exactly something I understand what it is. We figure this is a good book to read about a successful general manager with ideas that differ from those with the Rays and, to some extent, Earl Weaver.
June (two books)
Dollar Sign on the Muscle: the World of Baseball Scouting
by Kevin Kerrane
This book is sadly out of print, but look around and try to find it for a good price. Nick Faleris suggested this one and with it being in the first half of June . . . it fits in nicely with the Amateur draft. From what I have been told, it is the history of baseball through a scout's eyes.
Odd Man Out: A Year on the Mound with a Minor League Misfit
by Matthew McCarthy
Matthew McCarthy was a left handed pitcher who was selected late in the draft by the Los Angelos Angels. This book is about his first and only season in professional baseball. There has been some dispute over the veracity of aspects of the book, but, for the most part, it is considered a reasonable portrait of minor league ball.
July (first half of July)
by Milton Jamail
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