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They say baseball is a kid's game, but for one Oklahoma father it became something far more dangerous. In "Toxic Little League," author Drake Lucas Wolf peels back the glossy surface of youth sports to reveal the darker truths that simmer beneath-the politics, the power plays, and the betrayals that unfold not among the children, but among the adults who claim to love them most. What begins as a heartfelt story of legacy and love-a father placing a baseball in his young son's hand, eager to pass on the joy and discipline of the game-soon unravels into a tense and deeply personal journey through obsession, manipulation, and loss of innocence. From the wheat fields of Enid in the 1970s to the manicured diamonds of Edmond decades later, Wolf weaves a multigenerational story of fathers and sons bound by the game-and scarred by it. We meet a boy growing up in small-town Oklahoma, where dusty sandlots and grain elevators form the backdrop of his earliest dreams. A father's voice rings sharp on silent car rides home, his disappointment cutting deeper than any strikeout. Years later, that same boy becomes a man, determined to be a better dad-to rewrite the story for his own son. But in the world of youth baseball, purity rarely survives the first inning. When Wolf steps up to coach his son's little league team-the Pirates-he's met not by camaraderie, but by rivalry. Assistant coaches turn to adversaries, sideline whispers grow into conspiracies, and friendly competition morphs into full-blown power struggles. Parents form alliances and secret chats; a grandfather who should be cheering from the stands quietly stages a coup from the dugout-every handshake hides an agenda, every team photo a silent hierarchy. Through richly drawn scenes, Wolf captures both the nostalgia of his own boyhood summers and the slow corruption of a sport he once worshipped. His prose pulses with sensory detail: the scent of cut grass, the rumble of grain trucks through Enid, and the metallic click of bats in the Oklahoma dusk. Yet beneath the Americana runs an emotional current of betrayal and revelation-as one father learns that sometimes the worst opponents aren't across the diamond but standing right beside you in the dugout. "Toxic Little League" is far more than a sports memoir. It's a coming-of-age story across generations, a family saga, and a cautionary tale about how the pursuit of winning can destroy what truly matters. With raw honesty and cinematic storytelling, Wolf explores the fragile bond between fathers and sons, the price of perfection, and the enduring hope that something pure can still survive amid the noise. By the time the dust settles and the final inning is played, one truth stands clear: baseball doesn't just build character-it exposes it
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