Proving Once Again: Best-Selling Authors Are Morons
The book Freakonomics has become a mammoth bestseller, with its askew looks on just about every measure of economic analysis. As would have to inevitably happen, one of those askew looks ended up landing on baseball, specifically Michael Lewis' own bestseller Moneyball and the Oakland A's. Author Stephen A. Levitt claimed, in a blog post in April, that the Moneyball principle was a fraud and that the A's were destined to finish under .500 this year.
Well, the A's, after collapsing at the beginning of the year, are now the hottest team in baseball and currently have the wild-card lead. Levitt, sheepishly, addresses the issue on the Freakonomics blog:
To all the Billy Beane fans I offended earlier this season:
I have noticed that the A's are now three games above .500.
I'm too busy with other stuff to even try to say something intelligent about baseball right now. Plus my fragile psyche can't take anymore of the kind of abuse that baseball fans hand out.
Boy, do we know how he feels ...
Oakland A's Are Three Games Above .500 [Freakonomics] Do The Freak [Baseball Musings]
UFC Freedom 250 Best Bets: White House Fight Night Picks
June 12 MLB Picks: Two Best Bets for Friday
Four Big Takeaways From Day 1 of the 2026 World Cup
- Best Betting Picks for Day 1 of the 2026 FIFA World Cup
- Best Bets for Knicks vs. Spurs Game 4 at Madison Square Garden
- Best MLB Bets Today: Two Plays for Phillies-Blue Jays and Brewers-Athletics
- Three World Cup Futures Bets Worth Making Before Kickoff
- Tuesday MLB Best Bets: June 9th Pitcher Props Worth Targeting
- NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Picks and Predictions Spurs vs. Knicks
- MLB Picks Today: Two Sunday Bets Worth Backing

