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They Call Me Oil Can
They Call Me Oil Can

They Call Me Oil Can

Baseball, Drugs, and Life on the Edge

SPORTS & RECREATION

240 Pages, 5.5 x 8.5

Formats: Cloth, PDF, EPUB, Mobipocket

Cloth, $25.95 (US $25.95) (CA $28.95)

Publication Date: June 2012

ISBN 9781600786822

Rights: WOR

Triumph Books (Jun 2012)

eBook

eBook Editions Available

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Price: $25.95
 
 

Overview

Immensely talented, controversial, and ever quotable—in his own words

Speaking candidly to veteran sportswriter Mike Shalin for the first time about his often tumultuous career in Major League Baseball, Dennis “Oil Can” Boyd recounts a life that began in the Deep South of Mississippi, and the events that led him toward great heights atop the pitcher’s mound at Fenway Park. As part of a stellar rotation alongside Bruce Hurst and a young Roger Clemens, Boyd served a dazzling array of pitches to opposing batters, most notably during the Boston Red Sox ill-fated 1986 World Series run against the New York Mets; and while he was at once brilliant and focused on the mound, off the field—as he affectingly reveals here—Boyd was unraveled by the personal battles he waged with substance abuse and destructive mood swings. As one of the few African American starting pitchers in the history of baseball, Boyd offers a candid, insightful, and often funny portrait of an athlete with boundless passion for the game, his teammates, and the Boston Red Sox.

Reviews

"A must-read for all baseball fans, never mind Red Sox fans."  —Providence Journal 

"Interesting, amusing, puzzling and at times unsettling... [a] blunt, honest and sometimes painful work."  —The Tampa Tribune 

Author Biography

Dennis Boyd played for the Boston Red Sox, Montreal Expos, and Texas Rangers during his 10-year Major League Baseball career. He lives in East Providence, Rhode Island. Mike Shalin covered the Red Sox during his 22-year career with the Boston Herald and is the author of Donnie Baseball: The Definitive Biography of Don Mattingly. He lives in South Easton, Massachusetts.