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Unable to buy into an existing team and rebuffed by National
Football League owners who had no desire to expand, 27-year-old
Lamar Hunt, the son of Texas billionaire H.L. Hunt, formed the
American Football League in 1959. He placed his team in Dallas,
called them the Texans, and invited other young entrepreneurs to
join him. The seven men who did called themselves members of the
"Foolish Club, " but on September 9, 1960, the AFL made its regular
season debut and went on to change the face of football forever.
Unlike the NFL, the American Football League featured wide open
offenses and innovative coaching strategies, capturing a new
generation of fans dedicated to the league and its players. The AFL
aggressively pursued college stars--Heisman Trophy winner Billy
Cannon in its inaugural season and Joe Namath in 1965. The eight
teams signed a collective television agreement that split the money
equally among the franchises, thus providing far more stability and
balance than earlier start-up leagues. Based on interviews with
owners, coaches, players, scouts, broadcasters and writers from the
era, this is a colorful account of the AFL and its place in sports
history.
The day of the Ice Bowl game was so cold, the referees' whistles
wouldn't work; so cold, the reporters' coffee froze in the press
booth; so cold, fans built small fires in the concrete and metal
stands; so cold, TV cables froze and photographers didn't dare
touch the metal of their equipment; so cold, the game was as much
about survival as it was about skill and strategy. On New Year's
Eve, 1967, the Dallas Cowboys and the Green Bay Packers met for a
classic NFL championship game, played on a frozen field in sub-zero
weather. The "Ice Bowl" challenged every skill of these two great
teams. Here's the whole story, based on dozens of interviews with
people who were there-on the field and off-told by author Ed Gruver
with passion, suspense, wit, and accuracy.
In late 1975 and early 1976, at the height of the Cold War, two of
the Soviet Union’s long-dominant national hockey teams traveled
to North America to play an eight-game series against the best
teams in the National Hockey League. The culmination of the
“Super Series” was HC CSKA Moscow’s faceoff against the
reigning champion Flyers in Philadelphia on January 11, 1976. Known
as the “Red Army Club,” HC CSKA hadn’t lost a game in the
series. Known as the “Broad Street Bullies,” the Flyers were
determined to bring the Red Army team’s winning streak to an end
with their trademark aggressive style of play. Based largely on
interviews, Ed Gruver’s book will tell the story of this epic
game and series as it lays out the stakes involved: nothing less
than the credibility of the NHL. If the Red Army team had completed
its series sweep by defeating the two-time Stanley Cup champion
Flyers, the NHL would no longer have been able to claim primacy of
place in professional-level hockey. Gruver also describes how the
game and series affected the styles of both Russian and NHL teams.
The Soviets adopted a more physical brand of hockey, while the NHL
increasingly focused on passing and speed.
Sports fans had much to occupy themselves with during the memorable
summer of '41, including New York Yankees great Joe DiMaggio's
record-setting consecutive games hit streak and Boston Red Sox star
Ted Williams' dogged pursuit of batting .400. No sports story,
however, loomed larger that summer than Joe Louis versus Billy
Conn, the hard-hitting heavyweight champion, Detroit's Brown
Bomber, battling the stylish and cocky Pittsburgh Kid." Considered
one of the greatest matches in boxing history, the fight saw the
underdog Conn well ahead on points until Louis knocked him out in
the 13th round. Ed Gruver captures the high drama of that sultry
night at the Polo Grounds, the brash confidence of the challenger
from Pittsburgh, and the quiet dignity of the Black champion Louis,
who personified "the memory of every injustice practiced upon his
people and the memory of every triumph."
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