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Moneyball
- The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
- Narrated by: Scott Brick
- Length: 10 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged Audiobook
- Categories: Sports & Outdoors, Baseball & Softball
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Summary
Moneyball is a quest for something as elusive as the Holy Grail, something that money apparently can't buy: the secret of success in baseball. The logical places to look would be the giant offices of major league teams and the dugouts. But the real jackpot is a cache of numbers collected over the years by a strange brotherhood of amateur baseball enthusiasts: software engineers, statisticians, Wall Street analysts, lawyers, and physics professors.
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Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Kenny
- 02-08-14
Interesting book, overdramatic reader
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
Yes, if they were interested in baseball. Pretty dull if you're interested in sports/math.
What did you like best about this story?
It's about the statistical revolution in baseball which is basically synonymous with the title of the book and it's worked incredibly well. It's a great book about modern sport and has a great mix of underdog narratives (fat guys, weird pitchers, etc) and math.
Would you be willing to try another one of Scott Brick’s performances?
No... he's just too over dramatic. He does not fail to pronounce "any" as anything but "an-ny". Throwaway phrases like "there wasn't anything that anyone could do" become smug triumphs: "there wasn't AN-NY-THING that AN-NY-ONE could do." I made it through the endless Atlas Shrugged also read by him and the moment I started listening, I recognized his over dramatized style. Not every sentence needs to be a revelation.
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
It's non-fiction.
10 people found this helpful
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Overall
- CDubya
- 13-04-13
Recommended reading for all sports fans
This book has been much referenced in UK sports in recent years - especially football - and you can see why, even if the major Premier League teams show few signs of heeding the lessons. The sheer weight of baseball statistics can be a bit heavy at times for us Brits, but it's a fascinating story of applying intelligent and analytical thinking to the task of building a sports team. The descriptions of groupthink and received-wisdoms in the baseball management and scouting community are funny and insightful, and no doubt have parallels in our sports. If you're a sports fan, I recommend it, but if you don't like sport, don't spend your money on this - however much you liked Brad Pitt in the movie.
7 people found this helpful
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- Adam
- 08-01-16
If you're not a baseball fanatic then it's not for you...
As a sports fan I thought I'd get the heads up before watching the film. But I couldn't manage all of the book as its too heavy on intricacies of Baseball, loads of stats and obviously written for the baseball fans. I thought it might have been tailored to a more mainstream market but it's really only written for proper baseball fans.
10 people found this helpful
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- M. T. Crowe
- 19-02-15
love a good stat I do.
loved it must read for anyone who love stats or baseball. made me rethink how to mesuer the value in my fields of interest.
2 people found this helpful
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- Nick Morris
- 17-01-16
Amazing read
I've read a lot of Lewis's work but this is by far the best. The perfect mix of stats, baseball and amazing characters.
I didn't want to listen to much as I was desperate for it not to end!!
1 person found this helpful
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- Mick
- 29-12-13
Again, an excellent Lewis book
If you could sum up Moneyball in three words, what would they be?
Surprisingly-good, great-as-always, it-doesn't-matter-it's-baseball
Who was your favorite character and why?
The manager (can't remember his name Billy something)
Any additional comments?
I came to this as a Lewis fan with an interest in finance. Having listened to most of his work I had avoided this due to the fact that it's baseball. I finally listened after Seth Klarman recommended it (as a finance book but he is a big baseball fan). I still don't rate baseball but nonetheless the listen was great.
2 people found this helpful
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- Brian B.
- 29-04-22
Baseball insight
It's best if you have a reasonable knowledge of baseball.
If you have this is quite a revelation. How a cash strapped team over achieves due to statistics and a unique General Manager. Very good narrator.
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- Lee Taylor
- 18-03-22
Superb
Don't know why I avoided this or the film for so long, brilliant book, fantastic writing and an amazing story with data showing how us data guys can really make a difference.
I know a bit about Baseball, but not much l, but that didn't matter.
Really great performance as well from Scott Brick.
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- Anonymous User
- 09-02-22
brilliant
no disappointment having loved the movie, still absolutely excellent but no requirement to have seen the movie either
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- Ian C
- 04-01-22
Best book i've listened to on audible (from 100's)
So, let me start by saying I'm not into sports, I don't watch sports apart from the odd world cup and certainly don't follow any particular sports or teams.
I was nervous given some of the other reviews stating a knowledge of baseball was required, and my exposure to baseball is a couple of films and watching a match in San Francisco once about 15 years ago.
I shouldn't have worried, as long as you have a general idea (man with bat, man with ball, bunch of fielders and 4 bases to run around) you will be fine. There is quite a lot of statistical talk but its easy to understand, just remember that "getting on base" which is the fundamental principle of the book means a batter getting to first base without getting out (and subsequently moving round one base a time as each of the batters does the same, each scoring a point).
The best thing about the book however, is the human stories, its about Billy Beane and Paul Depodesta's approach, taking baseball's "we've always done it this way" and completely reinventing the game, but it tells the stories of the players, who overlooked because of how they looked, how much they weighed or how they threw a ball, and these stories are fascinating and mean you can barely put the book down.
The narration is perfect, the story perfectly paced, surprisingly emotional. This is the first time in a long time ive sat up until the small hours with a book because i just cant put it down. Its perfectly summarised by the epilogue of the journey of Jeremy Brown.
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- A Kirk
- 24-09-18
So you aren't a baseball fan?
It's OK, neither am I. I wouldn't know a shortstop from a triple play. Actually that's not quite true, I do now courtesy of this book, but it doesn't matter because Michael Lewis is a (perhaps THE) master of telling a story on a specific subject and making it about a whole range of issues related to that subject. You won't even notice that you've left the main road for a scenic detour through (for example) one player's formative years, his thoughts and hopes and aspirations and experiences, until you're suddenly back on topic and cruising through the main story again. You never lose sight of the main road, but the detours let you see it in context.
As is often the case he looks into the technology of his subject (without ever making it dry), the schools of thought surrounding it, both the conventional ones and the heretical ones... and most of all the people. Just as you don't need to be a finance expert (or even be particularly interested in finance as such) to appreciate The Big Short, you don't need to be a baseball fan to appreciate this story.
The story is about overcoming odds. About developing new ways of thinking to achieve something when conventional wisdom says you can't. About finding value in skills and people where the world says that the value doesn't exist. And, of course, about the people who come up with those ideas, the people who are affected by the ideas, and the people who push back against them.
As with many of Lewis' books you'll meet an interesting array of diverse characters who come to life through the words Lewis uses, and the stories he tells about them.
Scott Brick does an excellent job of bringing the story to life; he has a good voice, is easy to listen to, and adopts just the right pace to keep the listener engaged.
I really couldn't tell you how many times I've listened to this book since I bought it, save to say that I know the last time I listened to it won't be the last time that I listen to it.
1 person found this helpful