I'm Just Getting Started (Cover)
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I'm Just Getting Started
Baseball's Best Storyteller on Old School Baseball, Defying the Odds, and Good Cigars

Author: Jack McKeon with Keven Kernan

Publisher: Triumph Books

Published: 2005

Pages: 213; Binding: Hardcover

Price: $16.47 (Order Here)

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Best Attribute: Fun look at of one of baseball's most colorful characters in the modern game.

Worst Attribute: Like make baseball assists, writing outside of the quotes makes it a good, not great biography.

The Wanderer

Jack McKeon, one of the game’s most colorful characters, is a baseball nomad. He has wandered the landscape during the past five-plus decades as a professional player, World Series champion manager, scout and general manager since 1949. McKeon introduces fans to his myriad peaks and valleys in the 2005 book titled “I’m Just Getting Started,” his journey through America’s pastime.

 

 

The 200-plus page work from Triumph Books in Chicago, filled with sometimes hilarious, sometimes poignant but always wonderful moments, is aptly subtitled “Baseball’s Best Storyteller on Old School Baseball, Defying the Odds, and Good Cigars.”

Defy the odds he has.  Jack is a five-time major league skipper.  He got the Royal treatment in Kansas City and won his “I Survived Charley Finley” t-shirt in Oakland in the 1970s, head Friar to the Pads in San Diego in the ’80s, Marge’s man in Cincinnati in the ’90s and enjoying his golden years chasing pennants in Florida as skipper of the Marlins since 2003. Four of his five major league teams have winning records, including the World Series trophy in 2003 as the National League wild-card winning Marlins upset the New York Yankees.

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McKeon earned his nickname, “Trader Jack,” while wheeling and dealing in his earlier days in the big leagues, especially during his tenure as general manager with the Padres. In what can only be described as reverse-nepotism, McKeon even dealt his son-in-law, pitcher Greg Booker. 

His position in both the front office and in the dugout has given McKeon the ability to do battle with the FrankenSteinbrenner monster teams of the free agency era.  High dollar signings may dazzle the talking heads and keep New York television sets tuned into YES, but Jack’s steady, persistent approach to winning prove a player’s a player, no matter how small. Get enough of them together, and you can win it all.

McKeon has also had a long and colorful career in the minors: He played and managed in outposts like Wilson, North Carolina; Missoula, Montana; Greenville, Alabama; and Appleton, Wisconsin. He’s also dominated dugouts from Canada to Puerto Rico.


While a good portion of the book deals with the wild ride to baseball’s pinnacle in 2003 World Series, this “behind the scenes” bookexamines his relationships with future Minnesota Twins greats like Jim Kaat, Zoilo Versalles and Tony Oliva in the minors or his work with big-league like standouts Tony Gwynn, George Brett, Harmon Killebrew, Dick Allen, Willie Horton, Garry Templeton, Roberto Alomar, Joe Carter, Ken Griffey Jr., Barry Larkin and Pudge Rodriguez, particularly enjoyable are McKeon’s many funny snippets from his travels and travails in the minor leagues.

Jackie Got A Gun

In one wild tale, a Cuban player named Juan Visteur, who was a good center fielder but an atrocious base runner, never wanted to stop at third base. He was always thrown out by a mile when heading for home plate, despite McKeon’s repeated screams of “whoa.” McKeon told Visteur that he was going to shoot him if he ever did it again. One day, he thought that might really be a great idea.

 “I had picked up a couple blank guns in Greensboro (N.C.) and was going to put them to good use with Juan. I stuck the guns in my back pocket and went out to coach third. Sure enough, it wasn’t long before Juan ran right through my stop sign. The second baseman had knocked down the ball and Juan thought it was in the outfield. Juan must have thought I was saying, “Go, go,” and off he went, right past me. So I did what I told him I was going to do: I shot him.

“Pow! Pow!”

It was like Saturday afternoon at the movies. I must have fired seven or eight shots, and Juan heard them all. About 30 feet from home he ducked for cover. As it turned out, they threw the ball away and he would have been safe, but he wouldn’t move. He was scared to death. He thought he was shot. After that, I never had a problem with him running through my stop sign. Like I said, you just have to be creative.”

The 74-year-old New Jersey native could no doubt fill several volumes with zany tales from his countless days at the ballpark. However, this latest account, co-authored with Kevin Kernan, is much more. McKeon says that it is family, faith and baseball are the threads that have held his life together.

Life 101

Jack is an instinctive baseball guy.  His family has been more of a learning process. He admits that he wasn’t around enough for his children, but he has become a devoted grandfather and husband. He’s a spiritual person who attends Mass almost every day, and does volunteer work whenever possible.

No better anecdote describes the man and his personality better than this: He refers to a Miami group called Ascending Life, which stresses that senior citizens (who McKeon calls seasoned citizens) get and stay involved in many activities. The archdiocesan director, Hugh Clear, says the organization’s motto is “Live while you live.”

Jack McKeon has done that and then some, and as he says, he’s just getting started.

Our Take:

Jack is cigar-chomping, living inspiration to everyone over the age of 65 who can still handle a field, not be put out to pasture in it.  His wit and wisdom are still sharp, even though, back in 2003, someone had to tell him where his triple-A team had moved (Canada, Albuquerque. They send us players, right?)

Fish fans, who generally love Jack when the Florida Marlins are winning, and curse him every time he forgets to have his players do their community gigs, are not likely to change much of their thinking after sitting down with “I’m Just Getting Started.”

Jack fans from his Padres or Reds stints will enjoy the trip around the memory base path, and A’s fans might be inspired to pull out their Jack voodoo dolls again.

Readers get a peek into McKeon’s more serious side, but the numerous laugh-out-loud situations are the highlight of this book and from the career of a baseball nut. 

We'd take issue with the bit of cover hyperbolie about Jack being the best storyteller in baseball.  The writing outside of the quotes isn't very strong and the emphasis on the lighter moments keeps it from being a landmark book of the sport. Still, Jack's improbable life story is fun reading, and a great gift for the baseball fan who likes stories of the colorful personalities of the National Pastime.

Reviewed by Todd Mishler for Minor League News

 

 

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