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7/10
Good Slice-of-Life Baseball Film
stevergy20001 July 2022
Clocking in a just short of hour, this compilation made by the National Film Board of Canada of two seasons in the life of premier starting pitcher Ferguson Jenkins from Chatham, Ontario does not disappoint.

Focusing on the attempt by the Cubs to finally win something in the late 1960s, it looks at Jenkins in particular, but also at the manager Leo Durocher, the catcher Randy Hundley, the third baseman Ron Santo and Jenkin's best friend on the team, Billy Williams.

Of particular note is the story of Pete Reiser, the Cubs' third base coach, who played the game so hard that he had to be carried off the field unconscious eleven times in his career and eventually retired due to multiple injuries. He even had the last rites performed over him once in the dugout.

Cap Anson, a prior player/manager with the Cubs in the early part of the century helped enshrine the segregation of the game which lasted until 1947, by refusing to field his team until 'those ni**ers were taken off the field' by the other side. Jenkins and Williams still encountered hotels and restaurants which would not serve them since they were black.

Finally, the precariousness of a major league athlete's career is outlined by the examination of 'purpose pitches', i.e. Those thrown at the batter's head and the sad story of the pitcher Dizzy Dean, whose abilities were never the same after taking a line drive off his toe. The resulting change in his pitching motion led to a swift deterioration in his arm.

Earnest, insightful, not overly sentimental but still replete with profound respect for these athletes.

Highly recommended.
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8/10
Wonderful movie
dolive-578-56498720 December 2023
This wonderful movie immerses you in baseball, and in sports. You will get a sense in this rather short film, just an hour long, of why for tens of millions of people sports is such a big part of their lives. This film does not deal with the fans - the fans who make it all possible - but you sense from the roar of the crowd or when the stadium fans are booing their own team, just what's at stake. Ken Burns' Baseball epic is not to be missed. But if you're not a sports fan and people you love are, watch this movie and in an hour you'll get the broad sweep of baseball history and present-day pro athletes, and you'll understand why sports matters so much to so many. Reviewer "stevrgy2000" better explains, in more detail, why this film is worth watching. I second that opinion.
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