• How to Beat a Broken Game

  • The Rise of the Dodgers in a League on the Brink
  • By: Pedro Moura
  • Narrated by: Pedro Moura
  • Length: 8 hrs and 27 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (31 ratings)

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How to Beat a Broken Game

By: Pedro Moura
Narrated by: Pedro Moura
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Publisher's summary

The inside story of how the Dodgers won their first championship in more than thirty years - but helped cripple the sport of baseball in the process

After years of frustrating playoff runs, the Los Angeles Dodgers finally reclaimed the World Series trophy after more than thirty years, led by star pitcher Clayton Kershaw, electric outfielder Mookie Betts, and a bevy of impressive young players assembled by team president Andrew Friedman. No team is better positioned to win now and in the future.

Yet winning at modern baseball is nothing like it was even twenty years ago. In the years since the famous Moneyball revolution, baseball has grown to look less like a sport than a Wall Street firm that traded its boiler room for a field. Teams relentlessly chase every tiny advantage to win games and make money, even as it hurts fans, TV ratings, and players, courting bigger problems in the long run.

This dramatic and insightful book takes you into the clubhouse with the championship players, as well as into the offices where teams constantly seek new ways to win - even when it hurts the game. How to Beat a Broken Game shows not only what it takes to win but what it will take to save the sport.

©2022 Pedro Moura (P)2022 PublicAffairs

Critic reviews

“Today, baseball is deciding who it will serve in - and for - the coming generations. Soaked in greed and in the hands of Ivy League numbers crunchers, the game teeters between sport and thesis paper. Better it is in the hands of Pedro Moura, who, in How to Beat a Broken Game, has captured the science, the economics, and the soul of a pastime laboring to rediscover its most authentic self. It’s a brilliant book about the championship Dodgers. It’s a book about so much more.”—Tim Brown, bestselling coauthor of The Phenomenon and Imperfect

“Pedro Moura has written a clear-eyed, absorbing account of the Dodgers’ rise - and baseball’s decline. It lays out everything broken about Major League Baseball while simultaneously reminding us exactly why we love the sport so much. How to Beat a Broken Game is a book with heart to match its brains. If only the league itself could say the same thing.”—Eric Nusbaum, author of Stealing Home

“The scope of this book is just extraordinary. It’s supposedly about a single championship team, but it’s really about everything: technology and culture, insiders and outsiders, the young and the old, and all that’s right and wrong and now and next in the sport today. Moura is such a great reporter that he does what every writer wishes they could do: He comes to know even more about his subject than his sources do. I loved this book, even if it did make me feel old.”—Sam Miller, bestselling coauthor of The Only Rule is It Has to Work

What listeners say about How to Beat a Broken Game

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AMAZING

Want to see how far the other teams have to go, listen to this! Go Dodgers! In Friedman, we trust!

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Good insight on Dodgers system

I really enjoyed getting a better understanding of how the Dodgers are using data and getting their edge. Very cool!

The book kind of trailed off a bit towards the end. Too much detail on Bauer and arbitration (and a bit too political). I sped up the book through those parts. Solid book though.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Underwhelming. Gets Political Towards the Ending

I'm a Dodgers fan and was expecting a critique of baseball, but instead, the book mainly summarized the players' Wikipedia entries. Unfortunately, the author's injection of politics into the narrative towards the end ruined it for me. Maybe sail the seven seas for this one.

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Wrong Title

I am a Dodgers fan, and I enjoyed learning the backstories of the players and the organization.

But there was no critique about how baseball is broken. No real analysis about how analytics is making the game boring. You get this in the introduction and that's it.

I think the author is too close to the organization and needed a third person to tell him he was too hyperfocused on what great things the Dogers are doing.

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