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Like many authors, Harry Turtledove references the broad effect sports and athletes have (or have had) on society. Sometimes, these references can give a reader insight into how a particular timeline differs from OTL. Other times, they are more incidental and designed to invoke a specific era or culture. What follows is a list of such references which can be found in Turtledove's body of work, organized by athlete. Sports references in the works of Laura Frankos are included here as well.

Note: As many homages are subtle, they can easily escape the notice of any given reader. Therefore we strongly encourage anyone who has found, or believes he has found, an homage not already on this list, or by an author not represented, to add it.

Cap Anson[]

Adrian Constantine "Cap" Anson (April 17, 1852 – April 14, 1922) was a Major League Baseball (MLB) first baseman. Including his time in the National Association (NA), he played a record 27 consecutive seasons. Anson was regarded as one of the greatest players of his era and one of the first superstars of the game. Anson spent most of his career with the Chicago Cubs, serving as the club's manager, first baseman and, later in his tenure, minority owner. He led the team to five National League pennants in the 1880s. Anson was one of baseball's first great hitters, and the first to tally over 3,000 career hits. Anson was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1939.

In the Worldwar series, during the Battle of Chicago, Lt. Mutt Daniels chooses the name of long-dead Cap Anson as a password, on the theory that the Race would be likelier to have heard of recent players.[1]

Hank Armstrong[]

Henry Jackson Jr. (December 12, 1912 - October 22, 1988) was an American professional boxer who fought under the name Hank Armstrong. He fought in the Featherweight, Welterweight, and Lightweight divisions. He is one of very few boxers who has held the championships of three weight divisions (Featherweight, 10/29/1937-9/12/1938; Welterweight, 5/31/1938-10/4/1940; Lightweight, 8/17/1938-8/22/1939). He is also the only boxer to hold three different weight classes' championships at the same time.

In The War That Came Early, Pete McGill reflected that the United States Navy's attempts to offer battle to its Japanese counterpart did not resemble the epic bout between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, but was more like Hank Armstrong on Benzedrine. The Navy's commanders had expected a massive engagement resembling the Battle of Jutland, but were forced into retreat by enemy aircraft without even making contact with the main Japanese naval formation.[2]

Larry Bird[]

Larry Joe Bird (born December 7, 1956) is an American former professional basketball player, coach and executive in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Nicknamed "The Hick from French Lick" and “Larry Legend”, Bird is widely regarded as one of the greatest basketball players of all time. Bird was a member of the Boston Celtics for 13 seasons.

In "A Beak for Trends," Ptolemy the parrot is distressed to read a news item about Bird's back injury.

Primo Carnera[]

Primo Carnera (26 October 1906 – 29 June 1967), nicknamed the Ambling Alp, was an Italian (and for a while American) professional boxer and the World Heavyweight Champion from 29 June 1933 to 14 June 1934. While he continued to box until 1944, his record was more or less average after 1934. He left boxing after having a kidney removed. He became a wrestler in 1946, and had a successful career until 1962. He also appeared in several films.

In Joe Steele, Charlie Sullivan thinks that Senator Carter Glass looked like he'd walked into haymaker from Primo Carnera upon leaving a 90 minute meeting with President Joe Steele in March 1933.[3]

Ty Cobb[]

In addition to Ty Cobb's background role in "Batboy", we learn in The Man With the Iron Heart that despite their shared last name, Bernie Cobb is not the baseball player Ty Cobb was.[4]

Frankie Crosetti[]

Frank Peter Joseph Crosetti (October 4, 1910 – February 11, 2002) was an American baseball shortstop. Nicknamed "The Crow", he spent his whole seventeen-year Major League Baseball playing career with the New York Yankees before becoming a coach with the franchise for an additional 20 seasons. As a player and third base coach for the Yankees, Crosetti was part of 17 World Championship teams and 23 World Series participants overall, from 1932 to 1964, the most of any individual.

In Days of Infamy, Joe Crosetti is frequently asked whether he is related to Frankie. He replies that if there is a connection, it is buried deeply in the old country.[5]

Bob Crues[]

Robert "Bob" Crues (December 31, 1918 - December 26, 1986) was a minor league baseball player. He is remembered for tying Joe Hauser's record of 69 home-runs in a single season, in 1948. He also drove in 254 runs throughout the year. Crues record was broken by Joe Bauman, a one-time teammate, in 1954.

As a POV, Bauman reminisces about Crues' record at the beginning of "The Star and the Rockets".

Joe DiMaggio[]

Dimaggio

Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio? Several alternate timelines are turning their lonely eyes to you.

Joseph Paul "Joe" DiMaggio (November 25, 1914 - March 8, 1999) was starting centerfielder for the New York Yankees baseball franchise from 1936 to 1951. He retired with a .325 batting average and 361 home runs. As of 2010 he is the only major leaguer with over 300 career home runs whose lifetime ratio of home runs to strikeouts (369) approaches 1:1. He played in ten World Series and his teams won nine of them. He is best known for hitting safely in 56 consecutive games in the 1941 season, which shattered the record for longest hitting streak and has never been approached since. He was American League MVP in 1939, 1941, and 1947, AL batting champion in 1939 and 1940, selected to 13 All-Star teams, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1955. He was briefly married to Marilyn Monroe.

DiMaggio has been referenced in several Turtledove works. In Homeward Bound, the final volume of the Worldwar Franchise, in 2031, Glen Johnson, whose stints in cold sleep have extended his life span dramatically, realizes that no one left alive would have any memories of watching Joe DiMaggio play. In the same volume, when Jonathan Yeager tell his father Sam that being his son had hampered his career as a Lizardologist, Sam lamely attempts to cheer Jonathan up by saying "If Babe Ruth's kid had been Joe DiMaggio, he would have done all right."

Abner Doubleday[]

Abner Doubleday (June 26, 1819 - January 26, 1893) was a soldier of the United States Army for more than 30 years, achieving the rank of major general of volunteers and brevet colonel of the Regular Army. He saw service in the Mexican-American War and in the American Civil War.

In 1905, over a decade over Doubleday's death, National League President Abraham Mills chaired a committee assigned with determining the origins of the game of baseball. The committee's final report, issued on December 30, 1907, claimed that Abner Doubleday had created the modern rules of baseball in Cooperstown, New York, in the summer of 1839. In fact, Doubleday had moved away from Cooperstown in 1838, and Mills' claims have since been discredited. Still, Doubleday's name remains indelibly linked with the history of a game which he may well never have seen played.

In "The Star and the Rockets", Joe Bauman's home run totals for the 1954 season approaches 70, he reflects that no baseball player, on any team, in any league, had ever hit 70 home runs in a single year since Abner Doubleday said "Let there be bases." Apparently Bauman is unaware of the evidence refuting the Mills Commission's findings.

ESPN[]

ESPN (originally Entertainment and Sports Programming Network) is an American multinational basic cable sports channel owned by ESPN Inc., owned jointly by The Walt Disney Company (80%) and Hearst Communications (20%). The company was founded in 1979 by Bill Rasmussen, Scott Rasmussen, and Ed Egan. ESPN is one of the most successful sports networks.

In "Under Coogan's Bluff," there is a sports channel in 2040 called FOXSPN. Circumstantial evidence suggests that this is ESPN after being purchased by the Fox Corporation. FOXSPN frequently broadcasts baseball games played in the 1900s by time traveling modern players against historic legends, filmed with miniaturized cameras so as to be inconspicuous to the natives of the past.

Bob Feller[]

Robert William Andrew Feller, nicknamed "Rapid Robert," "Bullet Bob," and "The Heater from van Meter" (November 3, 1918 - December 15, 2010) was a Major League Baseball starting pitcher from 1936 to 1956. As his nicknames testify, the speed of his fastballs was legendary. However, he often struggled with control; he retired in possession of the record for most bases-on-balls allowed over a career, and continues to hold the single-season record for that category, with 208 walks in his rookie year.

Feller's career, which spanned 21 years, was played entirely with the Cleveland Indians. Feller led the American League in wins six times, in strikeouts seven times, in ERA once, and won the Triple Crown in 1940. He was an eight-time All-Star and won a World Series ring with the Indians in 1948. When he retired in 1956, he owned the record for most career no-hitters, three. That record has since been broken, but one distinction that continues to be unique to Feller is throwing a no-hitter in his team's first game of the season.

Feller retired with a career win-loss record of 266-162, an ERA of 3.25, and 2581 strikeouts. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1962.

In chapter 12 of The War That Came Early: Coup d'Etat, Joe Orsatti's failed attempt to pick up a cocktail waitress at the Hibiscus Blossom in Honolulu, is compared to a high school kid flailing against Bob Feller.

In chapter 19 of Worldwar: In the Balance, Bobby Fiore likens trying to explain human love to the Race to being at the plate overmatched against Bob Feller.

Lou Gehrig[]

In addition to his career as a pro footballer in American Empire: The Center Cannot Hold, baseball legend Lou Gehrig is referenced in other Turtledove works.

In The War That Came Early: Hitler's War, Gehrig's declining health in 1938 is indirectly referenced when Herman Szulc suggests that Gehrig might be past his prime.[6]

In The House of Daniel, "Larrupin' Lou," presumably a fantasy analog of Gehrig, is referenced as one of the greatest baseball players alive in 1934.[7]

Joe Gordon[]

Joseph Lowell Gordon (February 18, 1915 - April 14, 1978) was an American professional baseball player in the mid-20th century. He was the New York Yankees' starting second baseman from 1938 to 1943, at which point his career was interrupted by World War II. After the war he returned to the Yankees but was soon traded to the Cleveland Indians, where he would play four more years.

Gordon was a lifetime .268 hitter with 253 home runs and 975 RBI. He played in six World Series and won four championships, with the 1938, 1939, and 1943 Yankees and the 1948 Indians. He was a nine-time All-Star, was the American League MVP in 1942, and was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2009.

Gordon's career helps pin down the chronology of a few of Turtledove's works. In The War That Came Early: Hitler's War, Pete McGill and his fellow Marines are able to hear part of the 1938 World Series, and catch Gordon going 2-4 with a home run and three RBI.[8] In The Hot War: Bombs Away, we learn that Gordon was hired by the PCL Sacramento Solons to manage the team and play second base just weeks before the outbreak of World War III.[9]

Red Grange[]

Harold Edward "Red" Grange (June 13, 1903 – January 28, 1991), nicknamed "The Galloping Ghost" or "The Galloping Red Ghost", was a college and professional American football halfback for the University of Illinois, the Chicago Bears, and for the short-lived New York Yankees. His signing with the Bears helped legitimize the National Football League. He was a charter member of both the College and Pro Football Halls of Fame. In 1924, Grange became the first recipient of the Chicago Tribune Silver Football award denoting the Big Ten's most valuable player. In 2008, he was named the best college football player of all time by ESPN, and in 2011, he was named the Greatest Big Ten Icon by the Big Ten Network.

In Joe Steele, Mike Sullivan attributes his survival of both World War II and the Japanese War to "running like Red Grange."[10]

Pete Gray[]

Peter James Gray (March 6, 1915 – June 30, 2002, original surname Wyshner) was a professional baseball player best known for playing as an outfielder with the St. Louis Browns in the major leagues, despite having lost his right arm in a childhood automobile accident.

In The Man With the Iron Heart, Tom Schmidt sees a Liberty Ship called USS Peter Gray in Baltimore Harbor, and can only think of Pete Gray, the outfielder.

Green Bay Packers[]

In addition to their post-eruption role in Supervolcano, the Green Bay Packers are the subject of a gag in "The Mammyth." A form of livestock known as cheeseheads are named for the Packers' souvenir hats.

Lefty Grove[]

Robert Moses "Lefty" Grove (March 6, 1900 – May 22, 1975) was a professional baseball pitcher, distinguished by his left-handedness. After having success in the minor leagues during the early 1920s, Grove became a star in Major League Baseball with the American League's Philadelphia Athletics and Boston Red Sox, winning 300 games in his 17-year MLB career. He was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1947.

In Joe Steele, with the 1932 Democratic convention in deadlock, Charlie Sullivan reflects that ever since Woodrow Wilson left office, the Democrats have been like short-pants kids swinging against Lefty Grove.[11]

Bucky Harris[]

Stanley Raymond "Bucky" Harris (November 8, 1896 – November 8, 1977) was an American Major League Baseball player, manager and executive. In 1975, the Veterans Committee elected Harris, as a manager, to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

In Joe Steele, Harris becomes manager of the Washington Senators as in OTL, and leads them to a dismal season in 1937. Thanks to President Joe Steele, the actual Senate is having a similarly dismal year.[12]

Joe Hauser[]

Joseph John "Unser Choe" Hauser (January 21, 1899 - July 11, 1997) was a professional baseball player. He played first baseman in the major leagues from 1922-1929, with the Philadelphia Athletics and Cleveland Indians. Hauser's major league career was undistinguished, but he made a name for himself in the minor leagues, where he became the first player ever to hit 60 or more home runs twice in a professional career: 63 in 1930, and 69 in 1933. That record was matched by Bob Crues in 1949, and surpassed by Joe Bauman, who hit 72 in 1954. He remained the only player to hit 60 or more twice until Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa accomplished the feat in 1998 and 1999. His career as a hitter is remembered by POV character Bauman in "The Star and the Rockets".

Willard Hershberger[]

Willard McKee Hershberger (May 28, 1910 – August 3, 1940) was an American baseball catcher for the Cincinnati Reds of Major League Baseball (MLB) from 1938 to 1940. In 160 career games, Hershberger recorded a batting average of .316 and accumulated 5 triples and 41 runs.

For three seasons, Hershberger played in relief of Ernie Lombardi, stepping in if he needed a day off or was injured. After a slump in late July and early August, Hershberger committed suicide on August 3, 1940 in his hotel room; he is the only major league player to date to commit suicide during the season. The Reds went on to win the 1940 World Series in his honor.

In Worldwar: Tilting the Balance, Mutt Daniels is thankful that he has a good sense of distinguishing what he can't help from what he can, and reflects that Hershberger was unable to make that distinction.[13]

Duke Kahanamoku[]

Duke Paoa Kahinu Mokoe Hulikohola Kahanamoku (August 24, 1890 – January 22, 1968) was a Native Hawaiian competition swimmer who popularized the ancient Hawaiian sport of surfing. He was born towards the end of the Kingdom of Hawaii, just before the overthrow, living into statehood as a United States citizen. He was a five-time Olympic medalist in swimming. Duke was also a Scottish Rite Freemason, a law enforcement officer, an actor, a beach volleyball player and businessman. Although his family were nobility in the old Hawaiian aristocracy, Duke was his personal name, not a title.

In Days of Infamy: End of the Beginning, Oscar van der Kirk is shocked when he sees how Charlie Kaapu, escaped from the Kalihi Valley prison camp, has become emaciated. Kaapu replies that next to the other prisoners, he looks like Duke goddamn Kahanamoku.[14]

Los Angeles Lakers[]

The Los Angeles Lakers are an American professional basketball team based in Los Angeles, California. The Lakers compete in the National Basketball Association (NBA), as a member of the league's Western Conference in the Pacific Division. Founded in 1947, the Lakers are one of the most successful teams in the history of the NBA, and have won 16 NBA championships, the second-most behind the Boston Celtics.

In "The Great White Way," brothers Bill and Patrick McCoy frequently go to the Lakers games. Eventually Bill starts lying that he is going to the Lakers games, as a cover for his adulterous rendezvous with Andrea.

Joe Louis[]

Joseph Louis Barrow (May 13, 1914 - April 12, 1981), who used the sporting name Joe Louis and was nicknamed the Brown Bomber, was an American professional boxer.

Louis is well-remembered for his rivalry with German boxer Max Schmeling. The two first met in 1936. Louis, rated the number one challenger in the world heavyweight division and undefeated thus far in his career, was heavily favored to beat the former heavyweight champion; however, Schmeling prepared more thoroughly than Louis and won an upset victory by knocking Louis out in the twelfth round of their match.

In 1937, Louis defeated James Braddock to become heavyweight champion of the world. He would reign as heavyweight champion until 1949 and would defend his title a record twenty-five times, including a rematch with Schmeling in 1938, where his victory badly embarrassed the Nazi Party, and a storied, hard-fought victory over Billy Conn in 1941. Louis served in the United States Army in World War II, rising to the rank of sergeant. After the war he resumed his boxing career, continuing to defend his title but clearly no longer at the prime of his career. He announced his retirement in 1949, ceding the championship to Ezzard Charles. He returned to the sport in 1950 and briefly attempted a comeback, but retired for good in 1951 after an embarrassing defeat at the hands of Rocky Marciano.

Louis is referenced a number of times in Turtledove's work. Both Joe Steele and "Cayos in the Stream" use the metaphor of "having gone a few rounds with the Brown Bomber" (or words to that effect) in passing. In The War That Came Early: Coup d'Etat, Pete McGill reflects that the United States Navy's attempts to offer battle to its Japanese counterpart did not resemble the epic bout between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, but was more like Hank Armstrong on Benzedrine.[15] Later in the same volume, after enduring a heavy Soviet artillery bombardment, Luc Harcourt feels like he'd just gone 15 rounds with Joe Louis.[16]

Connie Mack[]

In addition to his background role in "The House That George Built", Connie Mack is referenced in few other Turtledove works. For example, in The War That Came Early: Two Fronts, Peggy Druce reflects that she had admired Connie Mack since her childhood, but that by 1942, his glory days were behind him.[17]

Willie Mays[]

Willie Howard Mays, Jr. (born May 6, 1931), nicknamed "The Say Hey Kid", is an American former Major League Baseball (MLB) center fielder who spent almost all of his 22-season career playing for the New York/San Francisco Giants, before finishing with the New York Mets. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1979, only his first year of eligibility.

In Gunpowder Empire, Jeremy Solters uses a move he learned from watching a video of Willie Mays, to invent a new ballgame for Fabio Lentulo on the streets of Polisso.[18]

New York Knicks[]

The New York Knickerbockers, more commonly referred to as the Knicks, are an American professional basketball team based in the borough of Manhattan, in New York City. Established by Ned Irish in 1946, the Knicks were one of the founding members of the Basketball Association of America (BAA), which became the National Basketball Association (NBA) after merging with the rival National Basketball League (NBL) in 1949. The Knicks' ranking in national championships has had various ups and downs throughout the team's history.

In "Natural Selection," the teenage wildlife artist Spencer wears a New York Knicks shirt when on an outing which also includes Mullnor, an officer of the Hripirt Selection Center. Mullnor is initially put off by this sporting devotion, due to his recent bad experience with a group of rowdy sports fans, but comes to realize that Spencer is quite cultured and productive.

Shaquille O'Neal[]

Shaquille Rashaun "Shaq" O'Neal (born March 6, 1972), is an American retired professional basketball player who received numerous sporting awards during his 19 years in that capacity. He has also been an actor, television broadcaster, rapper, autobiographer, and reserve police officer.

In The Valley-Westside War, "Shaquille" is used as a password at a Crosstime Traffic safehouse. Characters briefly discuss O'Neal and try to remember whether he was a star of baseball or basketball.[19]

Jesse Owens[]

James Cleveland "Jesse" Owens (September 12, 1913 – March 31, 1980) was an American track and field athlete and four-time Olympic gold medalist.

Owens specialized in the sprints and the long jump and was recognized in his lifetime as "perhaps the greatest and most famous athlete in track and field history". His achievement of setting three world records and tying another in less than an hour at the 1935 Big Ten track meet in Ann Arbor, Michigan, has been called "the greatest 45 minutes ever in sport" and has never been equaled. At the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin, Germany, Owens won international fame with four gold medals: 100 meters, 200 meters, long jump, and 4 × 100 meter relay. He was the most successful athlete at the games and, being an African-American, gave an embarrassing blow to Adolf Hitler's wish to use the Games as a showcase of Aryan supremacy.

Although legend says that Hitler departed the stadium early, as a snub to Owens, some reports indicate that Hitler made his decision because of inclement weather before Owens was announced. Owens himself and a few witnesses later testified that he had met and shaken the hand of Hitler, and the meeting between the two was cordial. Because this contradicted the popular post-World War II image of the event, Owens kept silent about this except to a few people.

In After the Downfall, Hasso Pemsel believes the urban legend that Hitler refused even to shake Owens' hand because Nazi doctrine stated that Negroes were less than human.[20]

In Days of Infamy, Joe Crosetti visualizes being able "to run like Jesse Owens - run right at the Japs and run right over them.[21]

Owens' achievement is broadly paralleled in a moment in American Empire: The Victorious Opposition. During the 1936 Richmond Olympics, C.S. President Jake Featherston is momentarily irked when a Haitian runner wins a bronze medal in a sprinting event. The runner is not named or described in any detail.

Monte Pearson[]

Montgomery Marcellus "Monte" Pearson, also known as "Hoot," (September 2, 1908 – January 27, 1978) was a professional baseball player of the 1930s. His position was pitcher. He played for the Cleveland Indians from 1932 to 1935, the New York Yankees from 1936 to 1940 (playing on all four of the Yankees' championship teams from 1936 to 1939, the first time a baseball team won three or four straight titles), and the Cincinnati Reds in 1941. Pearson threw a no-hitter against the Cleveland Indians on August 27, 1938 and was selected to the American League All-Star Teams in 1936 and 1940. His career win/loss record in 100-60. He threw 703 strikeouts and finished with a 4.00 ERA.

Pearson's role in leading the New York Yankees to victory against the Chicago Cubs in Game 3 of the 1938 World Series is described in The War That Came Early: Hitler's War.[22]

Pee Wee Reese[]

Harold Peter Henry "Pee Wee" Reese (July 23, 1918 – August 14, 1999) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a shortstop for the Brooklyn Dodgers from 1940 to 1958. A ten-time All Star, Reese contributed to seven National League championships for the Dodgers and was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1984. Reese is also famous for his support of his teammate Jackie Robinson, the first modern African-American player in the major leagues, especially in Robinson's difficult first years.

In Days of Infamy: End of the Beginning, Hiroshi Takahashi's life is saved when he correctly answers a trivia question regarding Pee Wee Reese at a military checkpoint.[23]

Babe Ruth[]

In addition to his prominent roles in various Turtledove works, baseball's George Herman Ruth, aka Babe Ruth is referenced on other occasions.

In Colonization: Second Contact, President Earl Warren compares Sam Yeager as an expert on the Race to Babe Ruth's baseball performance, i.e. an incomparable champion.[24]

In the fantasy world of The House of Daniel, "the Bambino" is referenced as one of the most famous baseball players alive; due to the nature of this timeline, this is probably a Ruth analog.[25]

In The Disunited States of America, people from the home timeline explore an alternate where baseball was supplanted by "rounders," and remark on the oddity that the greatest rounders star was one George Herman, whose name is somewhat Ruth-less.

Max Schmeling[]

Maximilian Adolph Otto Sigfried Schmeling (28 September 1905 - 2 February 2005) was a German heavyweight boxer. He became Heavyweight Champion of the World following the retirement of Gene Tunney in 1930. He lost the title to Jack Sharkey in 1932. Schmeling was perceived as being past his prime until 1936, when he knocked out the heavily favored Joe Louis. Schmeling fought a rematch against Louis in 1938, and arrived in New York City accompanied by a publicist from the Reichsministry of Propaganda, who guaranteed Schmeling's victory, based not on Schmeling's individual merits but on the inherent superiority of Aryans to black people. This Nazi boasting led Americans of every race to rally around Louis. For Schmeling's part, he considered himself a German patriot and allowed a Ministry of Propaganda publicist to accompany him to New York because he felt obliged to cooperate in what he saw as an attempt to improve the increasingly negative international perception of Germany's domestic policies. However, he was neither a member of the Nazi Party nor a proponent of their racial theories; in fact, it was eventually learned that he helped two Jewish children escape the Holocaust.

Shortly after losing to Louis, Schmeling joined the Luftwaffe when World War II broke out and served in an elite unit of Fallschimjager (paratroopers). He was badly wounded at the Battle of Crete and was honorably discharged from the service.

After the war ended, Schmeling made a brief attempt to resurrect his boxing career. He retired permanently in 1948, and went to work for the Coca-Cola Company. He befriended his old rival Louis and the two became quite close, with Schmeling footing the bill for Louis's funeral service in 1981. Schmeling himself died in 2005 at the age of 99.

In The War That Came Early: Coup d'Etat, Pete McGill reflects that the United States Navy's attempts to offer battle to its Japanese counterpart did not resemble the epic bout between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling, but was more like Hank Armstrong on Benzedrine.[26] In the novel Joe Steele, when Charlie Sullivan sees his wife Esther after she's given birth to their daughter, Sarah, he thinks that she looks like she had run five miles and had gone a few rounds with Max Schmeling, complete with dark circles around her eyes that looked like she had a mouse under each eye.[27]

Jack Sharkey[]

Jack Sharkey was the "ring name" used by Joseph Paul Cukoschay (born Juozas Povilas Žukauskas, October 26, 1902 – August 17, 1994), an American world heavyweight boxing champion, inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame in 1994. In the 1920s and '30s, he had notable matches against Joe Louis, Primo Carnera, Max Schmeling, Jack Dempsey, and others. He was the only man to fight both Dempsey and Louis. On October 12, 1931, Sharkey triumphed over Carnera at Ebbets Field, but was defeated by Carnera in a rematch on June 29, 1933 at Madison Square Garden. He later claimed the second match was rigged.

In part of Joe Steele set in late January or early February 1933, Charlie Sullivan sees Senator Carter Glass reeling from blackmail threats, looking as if he just lost a boxing match. Sullivan remembers that Sharkey is scheduled to fight Carnera at the end of June.[28]

Sports Illustrated[]

Sports Illustrated is an American sports media franchise owned by Time Inc. Its self-titled magazine has over 3 million subscribers and is read by 23 million people each week, including over 18 million men. Its annual "swimsuit issue," which has been published since 1964, is now a publishing event that generates its own television shows, videos and calendars.

In "Myth Manners' Guide to Greek Missology", the female warrior Andromeda says that the Gorgons, who in this version are caricatures of famous swimsuit/lingerie models, should "Try Sports Illustrated, though gods only know what sport you'd be illustrating."[29]

Fernando Valenzuela[]

Fernando Valenzuela Anguamea (born 1 November 1960), is a Mexican-born former Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher who played 17 seasons, from 1980 to 1997, for six American teams, primarily the Los Angeles Dodgers. He retired after the 1997 season. In 2003, he returned to the Dodgers as a broadcaster. In 2015, he became a naturalized American citizen.

In "The Road Not Taken", Turtledove makes the rather grim prediction that Valenzuela will die in 2039.[30]

Bill Veeck[]

William Louis Veeck Jr. (February 9, 1914 – January 2, 1986), also known as "Sport Shirt Bill", was a native of Chicago, Illinois, and a franchise owner and promoter in Major League Baseball. Veeck was at various times the owner of the Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns and Chicago White Sox. As owner and team president of the Indians in 1947, Veeck signed Larry Doby, thus beginning the integration of the American League. Veeck was the last owner to purchase a baseball franchise without an independent fortune, and is responsible for many innovations and contributions to baseball.

Finding it hard to financially compete, Veeck retired after the 1980 Chicago White Sox season. He died of cancer six years later. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame five years later in 1991.

Veeck was known for his various publicity stunts. One of his most famous was signing little person Eddie Gaedel to the St. Louis Browns in August 1951. Gaedel stood 3 feet 7 inches tall and is the shortest person to appear in a Major League Baseball game. Veeck sent Gaedel to pinch hit in the bottom of the first of the game. Wearing elf like shoes and "1/8" as his uniform number, Gaedel was walked on four straight pitches and then was pulled for a pinch runner. This stunt still takes place in The Hot War: Fallout and is referenced in passing by Aaron Finch.[31]

References[]

  1. Upsetting the Balance, pg. 381, HC.
  2. Coup d'Etat ch 19
  3. Joe Steele, pg. 50.
  4. The Man With the Iron Heart, pg. 30.
  5. Days of Infamy, p. 125.
  6. Hitler's War, pg. 41.
  7. The House of Daniel, p. 303.
  8. Hitler's War, pg. 40.
  9. Bombs Away, pg. 36, ebook.
  10. Joe Steele, p. 374.
  11. Joe Steele//, p. 7.
  12. Joe Steele, pgs. 154-155.
  13. Tilting the Balance, p. 281, HC.
  14. End of the Beginning, p. 344.
  15. Coup d'Etat ch 19
  16. ibid ch 25
  17. Two Fronts, p. 110.
  18. Gunpowder Empire, p. 131.
  19. The Valley-Westside War, p. 283.
  20. After the Downfall, p. 214.
  21. Days of Infamy, p. 346.
  22. Hitler's War, pg. 40.
  23. End of the Beginning, p. 429.
  24. Second Contact, pg. 592.
  25. The House of Daniel, p. 194, 283, 303.
  26. Coup d'Etat ch 19
  27. Joe Steele, pg. 198, HC.
  28. Joe Steele, p. 50.
  29. E.g., Counting Up, Counting Down, p. 280.
  30. See e.g. Kaleidoscope, pg. 174, mpb.
  31. Fallout, loc. 5397, ebook.
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