“Sweet Lou – Lou Piniella: A Life in Baseball”, by Melissa Isaacson is a new book, published in 2009. It contains a lot of valuable insight about the current manager of the Chicago Cubs, much of which I did not know. Here are some pearls:
One phrase which comes up over and over to describe Lou’s personality, is: “Lou’s Lou”. I guess this phrase is similar in some ways to “Manny being Manny”, and it is used by Mr. Piniella’s long time buddies to describe their friend. “Lou’s Lou”. What more can I say?
Lou was once told, “I never realized how intelligent you are because you hide it so well with your temper.”
I learned, from this book, that Lou’s grandparents emigrated to Florida from Spain. My dad had been telling me that “Piniella” is an Italian name. When I informed my dad that the name was, in fact, Spanish, he thought for a second, then smiled and said: “Hey, like my grandmother, she was from Spain, too.” Then The World’s Greatest Living Cubs Fan smiled and smiled. And it’s true. My great grandmother was Spanish, from Spain.
The book talks about Lou growing up in West Tampa and Ybor City. I’ve been to Ybor City and I liked it. Saw the old cigar factories and visited an active brewery. Check it out.
Johnny Bench is quoted: “When you’ve won as much as we have, I guess it’s like sex. It’s great every time, but you don’t have all those weird reactions like you did the first time.”
Lou learned a valuable lesson about managing while with the Yankees: “You can’t manage scared. Sooner or later, you’ll be fired – every manager knows that – but while you have the job, you must do it your own way.”
Lou credits Yogi Berra with showing him that: “Patience is an art. Just because you have a certain position of responsibility, it doesn’t mean you have to be uncivil.”
In describing his famous temper, Lou says: “I’ve got that Spanish temperament, that blood, whatever it is, and I get a little excited. There’s nothing wrong with that.”
George Steinbrenner once told Lou: “You’re the manager. You do the managing. I’m the owner. I’ll do the second-guessing. That’s the way it’s supposed to be.”
**I have to say that George Steinbrenner comes off in this book as being maybe just a little bit unbalanced.**
When Lou was working as the color analyst for the Yankees he enjoyed “the free time it afforded him for his family, golf, the track, and other business involvements. Most of all, he appreciated the noticeable absence of stress.”
When Lou was interviewing with Marge Schott for the job of managing the Cincinnati Reds, she wasn’t very familiar with him. “Marge Schott thought Piniella was a rum-punch drink you picked up in Puerto Rico. She didn’t know Piniella from a bale of hay.”
And Lou is credited with telling his players in Cincinnati: “We have 162 games – we’re going to win 50 for sure. We’re going to lose 50 for sure. I want you guys ready for the other 62. When they’re going to be, I don’t know, but that’s what I want you ready for, to bust our behinds for those other 62.”
We are reminded of “Chicago Tribune columnist Mike Royko’s Ex-Cubs Factor, Royko’s theory that the A’s had no chance because they had more ex-Cubs than the Reds.”
Bret Boone of the Seattle Mariners says Lou: “ended up being my all-time favorite manager that I ever played for”. Bret further describes Lou as: “a teddy bear who really, truly loves his players.” By the way, the Mariner’s slogan that year was “Refuse to Lose.”
Gary Shelton described Lou managing the Tampa Bay Devil Rays as being “like Butch Cassidy leading the Teletubbies.” “In the end, as Shelton said, some managers plant and some harvest, and Piniella was ‘an autumn kind of guy on a spring sort of franchise’.” Lou eventually told the Tampa Bay ownership: “You can’t pay me enough money to lose.”
The final chapter of the book, titled “Curses”, is about Lou Piniella managing the Chicago Cubs. Of course, this was my favorite chapter in the book. And Lou is quoted as telling reporters: “Curses are for people without self-confidence.”
After being in Chicago a few months Lou declared: “Now I know why you guys haven’t won. It’s just everything here. Guys don’t take pitches; they don’t learn how to slide step in the minors. It’s crazy, I’m reteaching things guys should know. I’ve had to completely change the mentality. Any time something goes wrong, it’s ‘Oh well, it’s just the Cubs.’ That shit has to stop.”
Another reaction Lou had to Chicago: “What is it with the media in this town? I don’t shave and it’s a f***ing news story.”
Lou’s old friend Lee Elia once said about Cubs fans in Wrigley Field: “Eight-five percent of the f***in’ world is working. The other fifteen come out here.”
In as extremely prescient 2007 quote, Lou said: “You don’t take superstars out of the lineup.”
I enjoyed reading “Sweet Lou – Lou Piniella: A Life in Baseball”. I came away with a much deeper appreciation for Lou’s experience and track record as a manager. And with that in mind, I wish Lou and the Cubs and all Cubs fans the very best for the second half of the 2009 season.

Great review.
Thanks.
Our 2nd half is starting out well.
Let’s keep this going!!!
Thanks for the great review! I already have this book, it’s been sitting in my “to be read” pile for awhile now. Thanks to this I will be moving it to the top of the pile!
Great review dude. I’ve always like Uncle Lou because I lived in NY in 1980 – during that year I watched every Yankees game on WPIX or in person and Lou was the left fielder. Once Reggie Jackson dogged a run to first base and the outfielder dropped the ball and still threw him out because Reggie had already headed back to the dugout – when he got there Piniella was waiting on the steps for him. My impression was that Uncle Lou gave it to him loud and dirty, that way it would stick.
Doug, lizzie and Mastrick,
Thanks for reading and thanks for sharing. Glad you enjoyed the review.
Doug, I agree. It’s a lot more fun when the Cubbies are winning.
lizzie, what else do you have hiding in that book pile?
Mastrick, Yeah, Lou’s Lou!
While I would never read a book about Lou Piniella…I’m glad you did and I, too, enjoyed the post here.
I was listening to a Lou Piniella podcast the other day, they said in the book it also mentions that his mom gets on him whenever he makes a bad decision during a game.
sherm: Happy to save you the trouble.
Terrelle Pryor 2: Mom’s mom! That’s her job. Lou’s mom is a baseball fan and has baseball in her blood. But I think Lou would agree that he’s the manager, and she’s not.
Well, I’ve been reading or rather attempting to read “Living the Dream: An Inside Account of the 2008 Cubs Season” by Jim McArdle but I just can’t force myself through it. Remember awhile back I asked if you’d review a book you hated, or just say nothing? Well, this is the book I was referring to. I want to like it, but so far it’s been futile!
lizzie,
I can’t comment on “Living the Dream…” because I’ve never heard of it. Maybe it’s time for a different subject.
Have you considered reading “The Bolivian Diary Of Ernesto Che Guevara”? I didn’t hate it, but the constant miserableness was hard for me to take. And I guess we know the ending.
Or perhaps it’s time for a movie: “The Tibetan Trilogy” remains in my memory as one of very few movies which I paid to see and still got up and walked out on. Before it ended.
Now I’m curious. Why did you add “Living the Dream…” to your list of books to read if you aren’t liking it? What attracted you to it? What’s turning you off about it?
No Bolivian Diaries or Tibetan Trilogies for me … I watch/read only happy things. I cried watching Bolt for heaven’s sake, I’m pathetic!!!
But back to the question at hand. I picked up Living the Dream because it seemed like a great story and I’m a sucker for behind-the-scenes type stuff and it seemed like it would tell an insider’s story of our beloved Cubs and their 2008 season. But it’s a difficult read, very choppy and actually not much about the Cubs (?!?!?!?!?!?), at least not yet and I’m about halfway through. Might be a good book for a lifelong season ticket holder because the author attempts to tell stories about some of the more frequent visitors to Wrigley but he names so many of them I can’t keep anyone straight. There may be 20 new names on a single page and then those 20 are never mentioned again, or maybe they are and I just can’t follow it all.
Anyway that’s more than I needed to say. I tend to finish any book I start as long as there’s no misery or something to really turn me off so I’ll keep hoping it gets better as I get to the second half of it. And if it does I’ll absolutely say how wrong I was!