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Paperback My Turn at Bat: The Sad Saga of the Montreal Expos Book

ISBN: 155022512X

ISBN13: 9781550225129

My Turn at Bat: The Sad Saga of the Montreal Expos

The decline and fall of the Montreal Expos. In 1969, the Montreal Expos played their first game. Thirty-two years later, the team that once boasted baseball's best farm system is nearly dead. In this book, former Expos president Claude Brochu gets to the bottom of the Expos' story. From his successful marketing career at Seagram's, Claude Brochu was thrust into the role of Expos president in 1986. Back then, the Expos were a team with terrific potential...

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Insight in to the Expos demise

After visiting Montreal in 2002 to see the Expos I was disappointed to hear they were moving to Washington D.C. Brochu provides his opinion and account on why the Expos were first sold to the other 29 owners in MLB and eventually moved from Montreal. Reading this book wished I could have gone to more Expos games when they were in Montreal. A good read, but keep in mind it's written from one point-of-view.

Forgotten Team in Baseball

Mr. Brochu offers both a personal vindication story aas well as the story of the downhill spiral of the Montreal Expos franchise. Most Americans may not know that Montreal has over 100 years of baseball history, including interactions with Tommy Lasorda and Jackie Robinson. In the Expos era, the team was an amazing success in the 80's, outdrawing the New York Yankees and producing great players who often left when free agency beckoned them to larger markets and more recognition than French Canada could offer. But the Expos, fighting for their own identity in the hockey capital of the world, made great strides in establishing the franchise as a model of production for young players. Some of the great "home grown" Expos include Hall of Famer Gary Carter, Andre Dawson, Steve Rogers, Tim Wallach, Marquis Grissom, Randy Johnson (yes -that Randy Johnson), Ellis Valentine, Larry Parrish, Orlando Cabrera and one who could be among the all-time greats - Vladimir Guerrero. Baseball fans and Expos fans alike should hear how the greed and personal agendas of some can take away the team that we fans give our hearts and souls. As a life-long Expos fan in the US, baseball will never be the same without "Nos Amours."

Running the Expos behind the Scenes

Claude Brochu reveals just what it takes in running the Montreal Expos. The first-third of the book starts off well as details are provided on what are key ingredients to keep a sports franchise running: Mr. Brochu is appointed the chief of operations of an ownership consotium.The middle-third is still entertaining but the storytelling starts to get uneven. The good parts are the downtown ballpark project and his views on each of the partners of the consortium: they were either with him or against him. However, Mr. Brochu does not shed much light into some other significant events that happened to the team during this period (such as the hiring and competence of then General Manager Jim Beattie).The last-third imitates Brochu's last months on the job: everything starts to crumble. This is the most frustrating part to read. Only bits and pieces of a much larger puzzle are revealed. There is an appendix at the end, with copies of faxes and letters in response to serious issues that arose with the ball club during Brochu's tenure.All in all, a whole lot of what went on behind the scenes that was not originally revealed accurately (or without personal bias) by the Montreal press core finally is described in this book. The biggest surprise is who Mr. Brochu classifies in his good book and in his bad book.

Brochu passes the buck, but does give valuable insight

Brochu gives valuable insight to his tenure as Expos president and the multiple dismantlings of the team -- including the disintegration of the downtown stadium plan. However, too much of this book is him defending himself from gripings of the limited partners and the media. Brochu's continual passing of the blame gets tiresome, however much truth is in it. I wish there was a book out there with both sides of the story, as the one-sidedness comes through in "My Turn At Bat." I am convinced after reading, however, that Brochu wanted to keep the Expos in Montréal, despite conspiracy theories that state otherwise. The truth is obviously somewhere in between Brochu's account and that observers saw when the team was sold to Jeffrey Loria (whom I think DID want to move the team) in 1999.
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