The first full biography of one of baseball’s most colorful and influential impresarios.
Before the “Bronx Zoo” of George Steinbrenner and Billy Martin, there were the Oakland Athletics of the
early 1970s, one of the most successful, most colorful—and most chaotic—baseball teams of all time.
They were all of those things because of Charlie Finley. Not only the A’s owner, he was also the general
manager, personally assembling his team, deciding his players’ salaries, and making player moves during
the season—a level of involvement no other owner, not even Steinbrenner, engaged in.
From modest circumstances in Gary, Indiana, Finley saw his semipro career cut short by the tuberculosis
that nearly killed him in 1946. Yet fourteen years later, his success in the insurance business allowed him
to buy the downtrodden Kansas City Athletics. Despite promising never to move, he relocated the A’s
to Oakland in 1968, and soon reaped the benefit of his talented minor leagues. With the emergence of
players such as Reggie Jackson, Sal Bando, Joe Rudi, Catfish Hunter, Rollie Fingers, and Vida Blue—as
skillful on the field as they were eccentric off it—the A’s won five straight division titles and three straight
World Series (1972–1974)—the latter feat equaled by only one other team in history. However, Finley
could be an insufferable bully and impetuously self-destructive. His battles with Commissioner Bowie
Kuhn were monumental; and, following the 1975 season, he tore his team apart in one of baseball’s most
controversial moments.
Drawing on interviews with dozens of Finley’s players, family members, and colleagues, G. Michael Green
and Roger D. Launius present “Baseball’s Super Showman” (Time magazine’s description of Finley on the
cover of an August 1975 issue) in all his contradictions: generous yet vengeful, inventive yet destructive.
The stories surrounding him are as colorful as the life he led, the chronicle of which fills an important gap
in baseball’s literature.