Show overview
All About Baseball with Byron Copley has been publishing since 2024, and across the 2 years since has built a catalogue of 131 episodes. That works out to roughly 35 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 12 min and 18 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language Sports show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 4 days ago, with 27 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 63 episodes published. Published by Byron Copley.
From the publisher
A podcast where baseball is the main character, a supporting player, or a silent partner. The possibilities are vast and varied.
Latest Episodes
View all 131 episodesReplay: In Memoriam, Stuart Mitchell Copley, January 4, 1989 – June 27, 2025
Interview with Ed Achorn: Author of Two Must-Read Books About 19th Century Professional Baseball
Why Can’t MLB Umpires Admit That They Are Wrong — When They Are?
Was Hector Borg a Scapegoat for the Giants’ Failure?
Why Don’t Pitchers Pitch Anymore?
The Disastrous Detroit Tigers
Book Review: The Summer of Beer and Whiskey
Support The Kirk Gibson Foundation for Parkinson’s
Interview: Cormac Terry, Former College Baseball Pitcher
Interview: Jeff Frye, former MLB player
Interview: Samuel Skinner, High School Varsity Baseball Coach
Replay: 715 – The Moment I Missed, and Then Realized
On April 8, 1974, Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s all-time home run record on national television. Because today, April 8, 2026, is the 52nd anniversary of that event, I thought that I would replay one of the earliest episodes of All About Baseball that recounts my personal experience of that moment when Aaron’s bat made contact with the ball. It was one of extreme disappointment, which transitioned into one of personal growth. [email protected]
The Politics of Baseball and the Anti-Trust Exemption
Major League Baseball, unlike the other professional sports in the United States, has been exempt from the Sherman Anti-Trust Act since 1922, meaning that no competitive professional baseball league can be established to directly compete with MLB for its players, fans, or markets. Still, that hasn’t prevented a few United States legislators from threatening to introduce legislation that would repeal that exemption because — well — listen to this episode that focuses on one Stuart Symington, a senator from Missouri, who strong-armed American League president Joe Cronin in 1967 to replace the Kansas City Athletics with the Kansas City Royals in the span of a mere 18 months — or else. Be prepared to venture down a few rabbit holes that chase the language of the Sherman Act, the volatile relationship between Symington and Charles Finley, the owner of the Kansas City Athletics, and the willingness of politicians to jump from one side of the fence to the other to get what they want. [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin
What Should be in a Nickname?
That’s the question that this episode of All About Baseball answers. A listener requested an episode on nicknames, and I tried to place a larger context around the topic and opine that nicknames no longer, “augment a given name and provide a richer and more explicit denotation.” But that’s only part of this story. Listen in to hear the rest of it. https://sabr.org/journal/article/an-analysis-of-baseball-nicknames/ [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin
The Devolution of the Check Swing
In this episode, I, unfortunately, rant somewhat on yet another tinkering of the rules of baseball, using technology to yet again supplant the human factor, which, once ensconced in the game, is “progressively” taking a back seat to machines. “Hey, IT says so!” Controversy resolved, right? As we ignore the larger controversy of handing the judgement and management of the game over to things. I think this is a bad idea, and so does Charles Dickens. [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin
The Mysterious Fourth Out
Baseball has numerous interesting and quirky rules. Perhaps none more so than the “Fourth Out Situation,” where an extra out can be made and applied to replace the third out made in an inning. This episode offers a hypothetical example that is a literal game-changer, and it also recounts two specific incidents in Major League baseball that demonstrate the importance of the rule as well as its rarity in application. With instant replay now a fixture in MLB, however, the Fourth Out has gained significance, and teams need to recognize that any play “isn’t over until it’s over,” to quote Yankees’ Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra.
Book Review: The New York Game
Subtitled Baseball and the Rise of a New City, the book The New York Game is about the interdependent rise of professional baseball in New York with the grand and grandiose progress that New York accomplished from 1901 to 1945. This is the first episode of that podcast that I wrote in advance so that my words were measured and what I intended to say. I recommend this book, but not for the reasons that reviewers expressed. I find that Baker presents most of the principle characters as universally deficient in moral character. And I think this book clashes its baseball content with the non-baseball content as they compete in a tug-of-war throughout the book. Finally, there are two glaring factual errors — that have no business being inaccurate — that could call into the question the accuracy of other accounts described in the book. Still, Baker describes several famous events in New York baseball history with stunning visualization. Overall, a worthy read with a few swings and misses. [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin
Is It Possible to Play Quantum Baseball?
This episode takes the lessons from a book that I read — and still read — called Quantum Golf, by Kjell (pronounced Shell) Enhager, which offers a radical yet reasonable way to approach the game of golf and asks the question: “can those same lessons be applied on the baseball field to help players enhance the game?” I think they can, and I explain why. I also identify several players who may have been playing Quantum Baseball all along without realizing it. [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin
Why Did The Tigers Sign Justin Verlander to a Major League Contract?
This episode asks and answers this question to my satisfaction. At first, I was skeptical if the signing was a good idea. However, as I ruminated in real time, without much preparation, but with an open mind and a predisposition to express gladness that Verlander is a Tiger again, I discovered in the process that I can change my own mind by just talking it through with the “record” button activated. [email protected] Music: “Field Grass,” by Sergei Pavkin Screenshot
A Tale of Clashing Personalities: Why there was no World Series in 1904
This episode examines in a fair amount of detail the reasons why I think that there was no World Series in 1904. The personalities who could have worked out an equitable solution — Byron Bancroft “Ban” Johnson, president of the fledgling American League, John T. Brush, owner of the National League’s New York Giants, and John McGraw, manager of the Giants — were simply too obstinate to negotiate. Instead, they waged a vicious verbal war in the newspapers during the summer and autumn of 1904: firing cocksure word salvos, rife with calumny, covered in vitriol, aimed squarely at their mutual hearts. It was baseball theater at its finest; a passion performance of three men — who refused to play games to preserve (so they thought) their reputations, their pride, and their principles.
