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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Ball games > American football
Riff, Ram, Bah, Zoo,
Lickety Lickety, Zoo Zoo,
Who Wah, Wah Who,
Give 'em hell,
TCU
Ezra Hood's "Riff, Ram, Bah, Zoo Football Comes to TCU"""(named
after TCU's "Riff, Ram" cheer, one of the oldest known cheers in
the nation) traces the origins of Texas Christian University, a
tiny liberal arts college in Waco, Texas, to its induction into the
Southwest Conference in 1922 as an up-and-coming collegiate
football power. Drawing from numerous newspaper sources--most
notably from the "TCU Daily Skiff"--Hood's book provides an
in-depth, game-by-game history of a football program that struggled
to find its place amongst established Texas football programs in
the early twentieth century.
Hood begins with the university's conception in 1873, when it was
known as AddRan Male and Female College, and describes the rise of
football's popularity in Texas. From there, the book chronicles
each of TCU's football seasons from its first year in 1896 to its
final year in TIAA play, before it joined the Southwest Conference
and went on to become, in Hood's words, "the prince of the
Southwest in the 1930s." Hood captures particular details of each
season--noting significant coaching changes and highly-touted
recruits--all the while providing anecdotes from local newspapers
as a way to capture the community response to TCU football in both
Waco and Fort Worth. And while the book focuses largely on the ups
and downs of the program, Hood also captures the impact of the
times on both TCU and the many towns of central and north
Texas--the impact of the first World War, for instance, on the
state of football nationwide and the loss of notable TCU players to
the war effort. Thanks to Hood's exhaustive historical account,
this book will be a valuable reference for both fans and historians
of TCU and the game of football.
Gabriel "Gabe" Rivera was one of the greatest players in the
history of Texas Tech football. He earned All American status, was
enshrined into the College Football Hall of Fame, and saw his name
elevated to the Texas Tech Ring of Honor. After his college career,
Rivera became a first-round selection of the Pittsburgh Steelers in
1983, but his career would be tragically cut short by an accident
during his rookie year that left him paralyzed from the waist down.
Sports historian Jorge Iber's newest book chronicles this Mexican
American athlete's rise to prominence and later life. Beginning
with the Rivera family in Crystal City, Texas, a hotbed of Chicano
activism in the late 1960s, Senor Sack seeks to understand how
athletic success impacted the Rivera family's most famous son on
his route to stardom. Football provided this family with
opportunities that were not often available to other Mexican
Americans during the 1940s and 1950s. While Rivera's injury
seriously derailed his life, Senor Sack also chronicles his
struggle to regain a sense of purpose. With great effort and
despite adversity, over the final two decades of his life, Rivera
found meaning in helping minority youths in his community of San
Antonio, serving as an example of what can be accomplished even
under incredibly trying circumstances. Ultimately, the true legacy
of Gabe Rivera is not just on the football field, but also in the
lives he touched with his volunteer work. One of the most storied
Red Raiders and a legend of Texas football, Gabe Rivera powered
through many obstacles to make way for future generations of
Latinos in American sports.
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