Latino Stars in Major League Baseball

From Bobby Abreu to Carlos Zambrano

By (author) Jonathan Weeks

Hardback - £35.00

Publication date:

16 June 2017

Length of book:

300 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

237x158mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781442281721

Some of the best players in Major League Baseball were born outside the United States, with Latino players representing one of the fastest growing ethnicities in the league. Current and former stars such as Albert Pujols, Rod Carew, and Miguel Cabrera all found incredible success in MLB. They have won major awards, guided their teams to the postseason, played in All-Star games, and an elite few have been enshrined in the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Latino Stars in Major League Baseball: From Bobby Abreu to Carlos Zambrano celebrates the ever-increasing diversity of baseball in America. It includes more than 140 in-depth profiles of retired and active ballplayers representing countries across Latin America and the Caribbean. For many of these players, the road to “The Show” wasn’t easy—discrimination, poverty, language barriers, and government restrictions are major obstacles that Latino players have faced in the past and continue to face today. Author Jonathan Weeks covers these struggles and more in the profiles, showing the players’ strength, resiliency, and ultimately, their rise to the top of professional baseball.

Latino Stars in Major League Baseball is a definitive collection of the best and brightest Latino stars both past and present. Full of colorful anecdotes and inspiring stories, this book provides a rich understanding of Latino players’ impact on baseball in the United States.
Baseball writer Jonathan Weeks’s latest book describes prominent individuals from Major League Baseball’s most prolific source of foreign-born players—Latin America. In 11 chapters he briefly profiles the lives of a number of the best-known players from countries that have produced major leaguers, from the Dominican Republic (with 41 MLB players) to Puerto Rico (22), Venezuela (25), Cuba (25), Panama (9), Mexico (7), Colombia (4), Curacao (4), and Nicaragua, Honduras, and Brazil (1 each). Each chapter begins with an outline of the origins of baseball in that country (one-half to two pages), followed by player descriptions under the categories of “Major Stars of the Past” and “Notable Active Players.” Player information typically includes a little biographical background on birthplace and youth, minor and major league team affiliations, positions played and special playing characteristics, playing statistics and honors, injuries, and sometimes, personal characteristics, noteworthy events, and post-playing activities such as managing, coaching, and instruction. There are no photographs and, although more up-to-date, the information is much skimpier than what is found in Peter Bjarkman’s Baseball with a Latin Beat (CH, Jun'95, 32-5719), and does not cover racial and language-use issues.