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    Do the Great Minds that “Moneyball” Is About Hate the Movie “Moneyball”?

    Sony PicturesIn our other life away from this site, we write about sports professionally, so obviously we have been looking forward to "Moneyball," which opens a week from Friday. (Here's our review of the book, when it came out in 2003.) The book has such a complicated narrative, and is about so much more than "statistics" and "math" and even "baseball," that it seemed near impossible to turn it into a movie. (Grierson has seen it, but we won't see it until Tuesday.) Mostly: We were curious what our fellow baseball nerds would think about it. Last night, we discovered that one of our favorite ones absolutely hates it.

    Keith Law, former special assistant to the general manager of the Toronto Blue Jays and a baseball writer/analyst for ESPN, is one of the best baseball minds in the world. He's also a discerning reader, a cultural critic and an all-around intelligent guy. And on his personal site last night, he absolutely destroyed "Moneyball." How much did he destroy it? Here's his opening line:

    Moneyball, the movie, is an absolute mess of a film, the type of muddled end product you'd expect from a project that took several years and went through multiple writers and directors. Even good performances by a cast of big names and some clever makeup work couldn't save this movie, and if I hadnt been planning to review it, I would have walked out.

    Law, to the eternal entertainment of his readers, is renowned for not mincing his words, and he certainly doesn't in the review, criticizing both the movie itself and its understanding of baseball itself, which he calls "pretty gross misrepresentations or oversimplifications" This means more because Law, himself, is also at the epicenter of the revolution that "Moneyball" is ostensibly about. In fact, he's even referenced in the book (PDF):

    The first thing J. P. Ricciardi did after he took the job was hire Keith Law, a twenty-eight-year-old Harvard graduate who had never played baseball, but who wrote lots of interesting articles about it for baseballprospectus.com. That was partly Billy's idea. Billy had told J.P. that, in order to find the fool at the poker table, "you need your Paul."

    The "Paul" in that sentence is Paul DePodesta, the assistant to Billy Beane who (in a fictionalized version, an amalgam of several people, including people like Law) is played by Jonah Hill in the movie. So: In a roundabout way, one of the people Jonah Hill's character in the movie "Moneyball" is ostensibly based on hates the movie "Moneyball." We wonder if someone will make a movie about intelligent baseball analysts who come up with a new and better way to make movies like "Moneyball."

    UPDATE: Law tells us that the section of the book he is mentioned in was fabricated by author Michael Lewis. Says Law: "I am mentioned in the book's epilogue in one or two paragraphs that tell a story that never actually happened."

    "Moneyball" Review [Meadowparty]

     

    6 comments

    • Antony  •  7 months ago
      Michael S says it all. Why would Hollywood waste their time with a movie that offers no conclusion! I have been an A's fan since 1970. Billy Bean is the MOST overrated MLB executive of ALL TIME. He has traded or gotten rid of a host of players who have gone on to stardom (Andre Ethier, Nick Swisher, etc) and his drafting has been awful. He also has convinced A's owner Lew Wolfe that he can win with a low payroll which has also proven impossible. Also, even when we develop a star, we lose them immediately when they are available for free agency. BTW-my spellcheck on my IPAD would not let me spell Billy's name correctly and kept offering "Billy Beaneater" A's an alternative. That's funny and my new name for him!
    • Kody L  •  8 months ago
      This article is terrible make up your own mind read the book or go the movie!
    • chriskegbarry  •  8 months ago
      Worst headline I've ever read. Is that even grammatically close?
      • javan p 8 months ago
        "Is that even grammatically close?"... look who's talking.
    • MichaelS  •  8 months ago
      The Oakland A's under Billy "Moneyball" Beane has never won anything or even made the World Series. They haven't even really contended except for the years Jason Giambi was on HGH and Mulder, Zito, and Hudson (all high round picks) were on the team
    • ice  •  8 months ago
      wow so based on someone that seems very bitter because they are not in the movie or feel it was based on them in some indirect way you would choose to slam this movie ? First off baseball is a joke. Over priced fat guys who juiced up, went on strike a few years ago and wrecked their own sport. 162 games and most teams can't seem to win 60% of their games ? Um 60% is a FAILING grade. Sorry not a fan of baseball or this article.
    • General Zod  •  8 months ago
      Yet J. P. Ricciardi and his Moneyball decided that Russ Adams is better than Joey Votto! Just as the movie is a stupid oversimplification of Moneyball, so is Moneyball a stupid oversimplification of Baseball.
      • LeeT 8 months ago
        I don't think you've read the book.
      • KeithL 8 months ago
        I was in the room for that draft. Our scouts weren't very high on Votto, who came to our predraft workout, because it looked like he'd have to move to first base (he was a catcher at the time). It wasn't clear to any team that he'd end up with this kind of raw power.
      • AndyB 8 months ago
        General Zod is a strange username for Joe Morgan to be using ...