More interesting still, in this fascinating book (sorry if I am boring the heck out of everyone here rehashing stuff you all know - I have never read this book before and find something startling on every other page), is James' discussion of writing a book on the greatest team ever, which appears on pages 131-2.
He actually has written a large part of it, but says he will never publish it because : 1) no one cares about another book saying the 1927 Yankees are the best team ever and 2) those who think baseball was better in a different era will think a team from that era was best and anyone who thinks play has improved up to today will say the 1998 Yankees are best - in fact James argues that the 1998 Yankees changed his mind about the 1927 Yankees, which actually means his first objection to publishing the book is out the window.
None of this, however, is what makes the book really interesting: instead, the idea is that he would follow 8 teams in each league, through an entire season, BUT when the 1975 Reds played the 1911 Athletics in Philly they would have to play in 1911 - deadball, almost no homeruns (except Frank Bakers'), etc. and when the 1906 Cubs played the 1961 Yankees in Yankee Stadium they would find that their starters could not coast through batters when no one was no base because everyone could hit a HR at any time.
In other words, James' idea was to base a book on the greatest team ever on ...normalization. So what we are all doing here at WIS is what made James think the book would be fun to write, but the idea that no one would ever change their minds about who the greatest team and era ever were stopped him.
I think he is wrong about that, and would love to read that book (like 20 times): first, I am one of the few people I know that does NOT think play has improved over time once you adjust for technology: give Honus Wagner a decent glove and he will play like Ozzie Smith at SS, give him time to adjust to the cut fastball, the slider etc. and he will hit more or less as of old, with some reduction in average. The de-segregation of baseball remains to me the one really big change in the game that has meant improvement in overall play, since something like 20% of the best players now play that were excluded in previous years.
Otherwise, I would still take Babe Ruth over Barry Bonds or Sammy Sosa. A lot of the idea that players were on average better came from two phenomena:
The exercise-working out in the gym craze, and steroids. I am not convinced today's players are better than the 1950s Dodgers, or 1917 White Sox.
Nevertheless, I also DO think the 1998 Yankees were the greatest team ever. So thinking that era A was the best does not necessarily mean you think the greatest team ever came from era A, though there is a logic to this. Besides, James himself finally came to the right opinion about the best team ever

, so someone else could be convinced to. And he is a Red Sox fan as far as I can tell. So there is hope for everyone.
My criteria for thinking the '98 Yankees the greatest team ever: I ask myself, would team A have found a way to win against team B, and vice-versa ? The 1975-6 Reds, the 1969-70 Orioles and the '27 Yankees were very great and formidable teams. On paper they should eat the '98 Yankees' lunch. But '75 Red Sox almost beat the Reds, the '26 Cards did beat an only slightly lesser 1926 Yankees team and the Orioles got beat by a team that looked on paper like it couldn't hit its way out of a paper bag (Al Weiss !).
I think that the '98 Yankees find a way, their pitching keeps the lesser stars out of the picture all together, Ruth and Gehrig, or Bench and Foster and Morgan etc. hit with no one on base, they wear down the starters, get into bullpens that are not as good as the '98 team has and take the lead late, then shut it down with Mariano.
At least, that is how the book would go if I wrote it. Let's hope James writes his.
ps. (boogerlips, am I near getting the "freakin' long post" award yet ?) - I know what you are all thinking: what about the 2004 Red Sox ? They don't make the playoffs, no wildcard, only 8 teams per leg. Deal with it.