After reading a story by
Sports Illustrated writer
Alexander Wolff on the annual
Gus Macker three-on-three tournament in Michigan, Rushin struck up a correspondence with Wolff. He ended up writing an anthology of sports nicknames.
From A-Train to Yogi, with Wolff and Chuck Wielgus. One section was a lament for recently razed Metropolitan Stadium whose site became the
Mall of America and housed more than 800 stores, making it the largest shopping center in the United States.
Greenland, the
India-
Pakistan border and other far- and near-flung locales. Rushin covered events like the World Series, the World Cup and Wimbledon. He ate his way around America's ballparks and once rode a dozen rollercoasters in a day. His weekly column,
Air & Space, ran from 1998 to 2007, and was often about sports. returning in a contributing role in July 2010. He resumed his column - renamed "Rushin Lit" - on an occasional basis in October 2011. During his time away from
S.I., Rushin became a contributor to
Golf Digest and
Time magazine, for which he wrote back-page essays. Rushin is the author of the billiards guide
Pool Cool (1990), the travelogue ''Road Swing: One Fan's Journey Into the Soul of America's Sports
(1998), the collection The Caddie Was a Reindeer
(2004), the novel The Pint Man
(2010). and the baseball historical The 34-Ton Bat: The Story of Baseball as Told Through Bobbleheads, Cracker Jacks, Jockstraps, Eye Black, and 375 Other Strange and Unforgettable Objects (2013)''. Rushin has written numerous essays for
The New York Times with memoirist and former
Sports Illustrated colleague
Franz Lidz. Three of them appear under the title
Piscopo Agonistes in the 2000 collection
Mirth of a Nation: The Best Contemporary Humor. == Personal ==