A deep dive into a relatively untold story about the Braves baseball franchise and their moves from Boston to Milwaukee, and then Milwaukee to Atlanta.
It is clear that author Patrick Steele put in a lot of time researching this subject, and found a mountain of information that helped explain why the Braves, who found a passionate fan base in America's Dairyland and won a World Series there, could leave their city within a decade of arriving.
It should be noted that this book focuses more on the business side of baseball, looking at the Braves and their relationship with Milwaukee County, local sponsors, media outlets, the rest of Major League Baseball, etc. It's not a story about the on-field Braves, the players, games, box scores and statistics.
While some of the book's passages dealing with financial records, stadium lease details and court testimony began to get a little dry and weighed down by heavy facts and figures, the total story that Steele tells is compelling and sheds light on a subject that gets pushed aside, especially since baseball returned to the Cream City in 1970 with the establishment of the Milwaukee Brewers (ironically, again taking a team from another city - this time, the Seattle Pilots - and moving it to MKE).
For fans of Milwaukee baseball, and Milwaukee history in general, this is a must-read. Steele allows the history of the Milwaukee Braves to be given center stage, and rightfully gives the battle for baseball in Milwaukee its place in Wisconsin sports lore.