"Stenzel May Own NL Consecutive Hit Mark."
Baseball Research Journal 20 (1991): 32.
(80.) Leonard Koppett, "The Fight Against Spit Tobacco,"
Baseball Research Journal 28 (1999), 137-8; Laurie Fisher, "The Spitting Image of Smokeless Tobacco," Cancer Causes and Control 11, no.
This leads to a follow-up question, "Will the quasi-cycle achievers ever be listed as such in baseball's record books?" At least at this time they are now recorded here in the
Baseball Research Journal.
(31.) Richard Hershberger,
Baseball Research Journal, "Chicago's Role in Early Professional Baseball," Phoenix: Society for American Baseball Research, Spring 2011.
An Analysis of MLB Attendance, 1976-2012,"
Baseball Research Journal, 43,108-17.
(1.) Robert McConnell, "Mantle is Baseball's Top Switch Hitter," The
Baseball Research Journal (1979): 1.
(1.) Trent McCotter, "Ripken's Record for Consecutive Innings Played,"
Baseball Research Journal, 41 (Fall 2012): 7-9.
(19.) Dave Baldwin, Terry Bahill, and Alan Nathan, "Nickel and Dime Pitches,"
Baseball Research Journal 35 (2007): 26-27.
The Fall 2013 edition of the
Baseball Research Journal featured previous work by these authors on whether fans attending minor league baseball games paid enough attention to the action on the field to know the scores of those games (they did).
The SABR journal that will arrive in your mailbox next summer will carry the familiar title The
Baseball Research Journal, just like the SABR journal that will arrive in your mailbox next fall.
A "typical" issue of the
Baseball Research Journal contains 15-20 articles which are "usually" between 2,500 and 6,500 words long.
JIM SMITH, a SABR member since 1982, has contributed to The National Pastime,
Baseball Research Journal, and many other publications.