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Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
Michael Lewis, 2003
W.W. Norton & Co.
320 pp.
ISBN-13: 9780393324815

Summary
The Oakland Athletics have a secret: a winning baseball team is made, not bought. In major league baseball the biggest wallet is supposed to win: rich teams spend four times as much on talent as poor teams.

But over the past four years, the Oakland Athletics, a major league team with a minor league payroll, have had one of the best records. Last year their superstar, Jason Giambi, went to the superrich Yankees. It hasn't made any difference to Oakland: their fabulous season included an American League record for consecutive victories. Billy Beane, general manager of the Athletics, is putting into practice on the field revolutionary principles garnered from geek statisticians and college professors.

Michael Lewis's brilliant, irreverent reporting takes us from the dugouts and locker rooms—where coaches and players struggle to unlearn most of what they know about pitching and hitting—to the boardrooms, where we meet owners who begin to look like fools at the poker table, spending enormous sums without a clue what they are doing.

Combine money, science, entertainment, and egos, and you have a story that Michael Lewis is magnificently suited to tell. (From the publisher.)

Moneyball became a 2011 film staring Brad Pitt.