Leo Durocher: The Logic of Provocation (In Command)

★★★★★ 4.7 55 reviews

US$90.00
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

Sold and shipped by www.vinet-sarl.com
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here.
US$90.00
Price when purchased online
Free shipping Free 30-day returns

How do you want your item?
You get 30 days free! Choose a plan at checkout.
Shipping
Arrives Jul 11
Free
Pickup
Check nearby
Delivery
Not available

Sold and shipped by www.vinet-sarl.com
Free 30-day returns Details

Product details

Management number 231977457 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price US$90.00 Model Number 231977457
Category

Leo Durocher and baseball leadership collide in a searching cultural history of authority, conflict, and power in America’s game. Leo Durocher: The Logic of Provocation explores managerial volatility, dugout confrontation, and the psychology of command at a moment when baseball—and the nation—still believed pressure revealed truth.This book is not a biography of anecdotes or a catalog of tantrums. It is a serious literary examination of how Leo Durocher used provocation as a method of leadership, how that method functioned inside mid-twentieth-century baseball, and why it ultimately became incompatible with a game that learned to govern itself quietly. Drawing on game history, institutional change, and cultural analysis, the book reframes Durocher not as a caricature of rage, but as a diagnostic figure whose confrontations forced baseball to show where authority actually lived.From Brooklyn to Chicago, from dugout battles to league offices, Durocher’s career traces a larger transformation in American sport. Baseball once relied on visible conflict to clarify legitimacy. Managers argued, umpires negotiated, crowds participated, and authority was tested in public view. Over time, that openness narrowed. Rules hardened. Procedures replaced discretion. Power moved away from the field and into administration. Durocher did not fail to adapt so much as he exposed the cost of adaptation itself.Written in a sustained narrative voice that blends sports history with cultural criticism, The Logic of Provocation examines why antagonistic leadership once worked, how it shaped the modern game, and what was lost when provocation became something to be contained rather than engaged. This is a book about baseball managers and umpires, but it is also a book about American institutions, about the shift from contest to management, and about what happens when authority no longer needs to be argued with in public.Bill Johns situates Durocher within the larger arc of twentieth-century American life, connecting dugout confrontations to broader changes in governance, professionalism, and the ethics of visibility. The result is a portrait of a man who mattered enough to be outgrown, and of a game that learned how to preserve order by absorbing the very pressures that once defined it.For readers drawn to baseball history, sports leadership, cultural nonfiction, and the hidden architecture of authority, this book offers a deeper way of understanding why the noise mattered—and why its disappearance still echoes. Step into a world where arguments were not distractions but instruments, and discover what Leo Durocher can still teach us about power, memory, and the uneasy silence that follows provocation. Read more

ASIN B0GDWLNHNW
XRay Not Enabled
Edition 1st
Language English
File size 1.4 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 305 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Part of series In Command
Publication date January 5, 2026
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

Correction of product information

If you notice any omissions or errors in the product information on this page, please use the correction request form below.

Correction Request Form

Customer ratings & reviews

4.7 out of 5
★★★★★
55 ratings | 23 reviews
How item rating is calculated
View all reviews
5 stars
86% (47)
4 stars
2% (1)
3 stars
1% (1)
2 stars
1% (1)
1 star
10% (6)
Sort by

There are currently no written reviews for this product.