Fungos & Fastballs: Baseball History & Trivia

E31: Manager Earl Weaver + Book Review, 2026 MLB Update & The Midnight Sun Game

29 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio E31: Manager Earl Weaver + Book Review, 2026 MLB Update & The Midnight Sun Game

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] A baseball game that starts at 10 p.m. with no stadium lights sounds impossible, yet Fairbanks pulls it off every year. We kick things off with the Midnight Sun Game, a summer solstice tradition that has been running since 1906, and the Alaska Goldpanners, a legendary college summer team with an alumni list that includes Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, and more. If you love baseball travel, weird history, and the parts of the sport that still feel handmade, this story is a perfect entry point. Then we bring in our friend Edwin Nolan for a tight, energetic spin around MLB. We hit each division with the headlines that matter right now: surges, slumps, injuries that change the math, and the questions that are already shaping the trade deadline. It’s a quick way to recalibrate your baseball brain without drowning in hot takes. The main event is our deep dive into Hall of Fame Orioles manager Earl Weaver, guided by John W. Miller’s Casey Award winning book The Last Manager. We talk about Weaver’s winning track record, his famous philosophy (pitching, defense, and the three-run homer), and the surprising ways he looked like a modern analytics manager decades early, from matchup index cards to radar-gun obsession. And yes, we get into the legendary blowups: 96 career ejections, umpire theatrics, and the kind of dugout character baseball rarely produces anymore, plus the trivia answer that tops even Weaver. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app, share this with a baseball friend, and leave us a review so more fans can find Fungos and Fastballs. What’s your favorite piece of baseball history that sounds made up but is 100% true? Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

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32 episodios

Portada del episodio E31: Manager Earl Weaver + Book Review, 2026 MLB Update & The Midnight Sun Game

E31: Manager Earl Weaver + Book Review, 2026 MLB Update & The Midnight Sun Game

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] A baseball game that starts at 10 p.m. with no stadium lights sounds impossible, yet Fairbanks pulls it off every year. We kick things off with the Midnight Sun Game, a summer solstice tradition that has been running since 1906, and the Alaska Goldpanners, a legendary college summer team with an alumni list that includes Barry Bonds, Roger Clemens, and more. If you love baseball travel, weird history, and the parts of the sport that still feel handmade, this story is a perfect entry point. Then we bring in our friend Edwin Nolan for a tight, energetic spin around MLB. We hit each division with the headlines that matter right now: surges, slumps, injuries that change the math, and the questions that are already shaping the trade deadline. It’s a quick way to recalibrate your baseball brain without drowning in hot takes. The main event is our deep dive into Hall of Fame Orioles manager Earl Weaver, guided by John W. Miller’s Casey Award winning book The Last Manager. We talk about Weaver’s winning track record, his famous philosophy (pitching, defense, and the three-run homer), and the surprising ways he looked like a modern analytics manager decades early, from matchup index cards to radar-gun obsession. And yes, we get into the legendary blowups: 96 career ejections, umpire theatrics, and the kind of dugout character baseball rarely produces anymore, plus the trivia answer that tops even Weaver. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app, share this with a baseball friend, and leave us a review so more fans can find Fungos and Fastballs. What’s your favorite piece of baseball history that sounds made up but is 100% true? Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

Ayer29 min
Portada del episodio E30: MLB’s Greatest Hitting Streaks & The (First) World Series That Wasn’t

E30: MLB’s Greatest Hitting Streaks & The (First) World Series That Wasn’t

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] A World Series disappears from baseball history, and it has nothing to do with war. We start with the odd, dramatic story of 1904, when the New York Giants refuse to face the Boston Americans, turning the sport’s biggest prize into a feud about leagues, rivals, and pride. It’s a reminder that MLB history isn’t just stats; it’s people making stubborn decisions that end up shaping the rules for everyone else.  From there, we get obsessive about one of the most fun corners of baseball trivia: the hitting streak. We break down what officially counts, why a day off doesn’t kill a streak, and why 30 games is the unofficial line where the record books start paying attention. Then we walk through the names that held the crown before 1941, including the strange one-season rules that created “records” that don’t really belong in modern lists.  The heart of the show is the gold standard for baseball records: Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak. We track how it starts, when the country catches on, how pitchers try to work around him, and why the streak becomes a daily headline. Then we relive the closest true chase in the modern era, Pete Rose’s 44-game run, complete with bunts, bad blood, and the kind of competitiveness that doesn’t quit even after the streak ends. We close by asking the big question: with today’s strikeouts, elite bullpens, scouting reports, and nonstop media pressure, will anyone ever touch 56?  If you love baseball history, MLB records, and the stories behind the numbers, subscribe, share this with a friend who argues about stats, and leave us a review. What do you think is the most unbreakable record in baseball? Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

22 de jun de 202631 min
Portada del episodio E29: Brooks Robinson, Human Vacuum Cleaner & The Warning Track

E29: Brooks Robinson, Human Vacuum Cleaner & The Warning Track

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] The warning track sits in every ballpark like background scenery, yet it has a darker origin story than most fans realize. We start by pulling the camera into the outfield dirt and unpacking why Major League Baseball mandated the warning track in 1949 after a run of frightening wall collisions. We talk about what it’s made of on natural grass versus artificial turf, how wide it’s “supposed” to be, and why the color and texture change is meant to protect outfielders who are sprinting full speed with their eyes locked on the sky.  After the ballpark deep dive, we shift into baseball history and a full career look at Brooks Robinson, the Baltimore Orioles icon often called the greatest defensive third baseman ever. We use WAR and the JAWS stat to frame how Hall of Fame debates happen, then balance the numbers with what opponents actually said and felt when they watched him play. We hit the big milestones, including 16 Gold Gloves, an MVP season, the Orioles’ championship years, and the 1970 World Series defensive highlights that turned the national broadcast into what some called the “Brooks Robinson show.” We also spend time on what made him bigger than baseball: the Roberto Clemente Award, philanthropy, and a Baltimore legacy built on decency as much as greatness.  We wrap with our MLB trivia answer on the most recent perfect game and why it still sticks in our memory. If you like baseball trivia, baseball history, and smart debates about how we measure greatness, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review so more fans can find Fungos and Fastballs. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

15 de jun de 202628 min
Portada del episodio E28: The Baseball: Leather, Stitches & Switch Pitchers

E28: The Baseball: Leather, Stitches & Switch Pitchers

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] The baseball is the only “player” guaranteed to show up for every pitch, and it has a bigger impact on the game than most fans realize. We start with a quick curveball: the switch pitcher, one of the rarest roles in MLB, and the hilarious logic trap that led to the Venditte Rule when a pitcher and a switch hitter kept countering each other. It’s a perfect reminder that baseball’s rulebook often follows the strangest real-world moments.  From there, we follow the ball itself through baseball history, from homemade mid-1800s designs with inconsistent sizes and bizarre cores to the push for standardization once the National League formed in 1876. We dig into the Spalding era, why dead ball conditions happened when soft balls stayed in play too long, and how changes like cork centers and tighter wool winding helped fuel higher offense and the infamous “rabbit ball” feel.  We also get specific about modern MLB baseball manufacturing: Rawlings’ official factory in Turrialba, Costa Rica, the multi-state supply chain that feeds it, and why the iconic 108 double stitches are still done by hand. Then we connect safety and fairness to the ball’s condition, including the Ray Chapman tragedy that accelerated cleaner ball practices, the league’s crackdown on sticky substances like Spider Tack, and the one old-school exception that’s still required, Lena Blackburne’s baseball rubbing mud. Finally, we talk humidors, why every stadium now locks balls up underground, and the lawsuit that helps explain why a caught foul ball can stay in your hands.  If you like baseball trivia, MLB rules, and the hidden engineering behind every game, subscribe, share this with a baseball friend, and leave us a review so more fans can find the show. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

8 de jun de 202626 min
Portada del episodio E27: Wade Boggs: Contact Hitting and Chicken; Plus The Longest Game and 2026 MLB Update

E27: Wade Boggs: Contact Hitting and Chicken; Plus The Longest Game and 2026 MLB Update

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2569696/fan_mail/new] You can measure Wade Boggs with numbers, but you can’t really understand him without the stories. We start by checking the current MLB landscape with our friend Edwin Noland, moving division by division and hitting the surprises, the contenders, and the little controversies that make a long season feel alive. Then we pivot hard into baseball history and trivia with one of the most fascinating profiles we’ve done: Boggs as both a Hall of Fame hitter and a walking collection of routines, rules, and legends.  We talk through his path from a military-family childhood to becoming the centerpiece of elite Red Sox hitting in the 1980s, built on plate discipline, line drives, and getting on base. We trace the contract fallout that pushed him to the Yankees, the championship payoff in 1996, and the late-career homecoming with the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, where he joined the 3,000-hit club in the most unexpected way. Along the way, we dig into why his game still matters in modern conversations about contact hitters, on-base percentage, and consistency as a superpower.  And then there’s the mythos: the chicken ritual, the 7:17 timing, the symbols in the batter’s box, the TV cameos, and the legendary “how many beers could a human possibly drink on a flight” tale. We also pay off our opening trivia with the unbelievable true story behind the longest professional baseball game ever played and Boggs’ place in it. Subscribe, share the show with a baseball fan who loves weird history, and leave us a review with your favorite Wade Boggs legend or your own game day superstition. Email us at fungosandfastballs@gmail.com

3 de jun de 202628 min