cover image Man in the Dugout, The: Baseball's Top: Managers and How They Got That Way

Man in the Dugout, The: Baseball's Top: Managers and How They Got That Way

Leonard Koppett. Crown Publishers, $22.5 (404pp) ISBN 978-0-517-58545-0

The theory espoused by Koppett, a former New York Times sports columnist, is that all modern managers are descended from three seminal figures: John McGraw, who established the principle that the manager is the unquestioned boss of his team; Branch Rickey, who organized the teaching fundamentals; and Connie Mack, whose concentration on finding talented players enabled him to build two dynasties decades apart. Koppett's genealogy, for example, traces the influence of McGraw through Frankie Frisch and Leo Durocher to Bill Rigney. This otherwise splendid and original book overemphasizes New York managers, however. Among the 19 in-depth portraits, 11 are of men who led the Yankees, Giants, Dodgers or Mets. Photos not seen by PW. (Mar.)