Unless a ballplayer is just a natural writer, it's really very much in their best interest to invest in a co-writer, or even a ghost writer...and often painfully obvious when they haven't done so. Too many athletes and former athletes tend to think of a book as being a more or less disjointed and random collection of sports stories and observations, with every other paragraph ending with a "punch line" and an exclamation mark.

Okay, here's a question for you guys: What ballplayer(s) would you most like to see write a book about their career, who (as far as you know) hasn't done so yet?