Whether or not Moe Berg was the “strangest man ever to play baseball,” as Casey Stengel reportedly once called him, he might have been the most interesting one. But that reputation was forged off the ...
Moe Berg was brilliant. A true Renaissance man. He knew 10 languages, including the long dead Sanskrit. He graduated from Princeton where he battled anti-Semitism and received his law degree from ...
American baseball player Morris "Moe" Berg, whose major league career spanned 15 unillustrious seasons on four different teams between 1923 and 1939, never advanced beyond the positions of backup ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. There aren’t a lot of sports stars who could claim to be as interesting as Moe Berg, a Major League baseball player who spoke ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. With the 2019 Major League Baseball season officially underway today, check out the trailer for “The Spy Behind Home Plate,” the ...
Brilliant documentary filmmaker Aviva Kempner reveals the answer in the movie of the same name that debuts June 7 at the Clairidge Cinema in Montclair. His name was Moe Berg, and for much of our ...
Moe Berg was easily the most fascinating baseball player to ever play the game. Not because of his skills as an athlete, but because he graduated from Princeton University and Columbia Law School, ...
Moe Berg played 15 mostly unremarkable seasons as a catcher in the majors for various teams, retiring in 1939 with a mediocre career batting average of .243 and a paltry six home runs. About his only ...
A Columbia Law School graduate who played for the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, Boston Red Sox and others, Berg is best known for working as a spy for the Office of Strategic Services, a ...
The history of MLB is filled with some wild stories and true heroes, and Moe Berg is arguable chief among them. He played in the major leagues for 16 years, making stops at some of the league's most ...
Run, don’t walk, to see The Catcher Was a Spy. The film should be required viewing in every American History class, not to mention a prime example of what a real American patriot looks like. Baseball ...