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When Vince Lombardi took the job of coaching the Green Bay Packers
in 1959, he inherited a team that had gone from legendary to
laughing stock. They hadn't fielded a winning team in over a decade
and had gone 1-10-1 in the 1958 season despite having seven future
Hall of Famers on the team. They were a team accustomed to losing
and in desperate need of a turnaround. """That First Season"
chronicles that turnaround at the hands of Lombardi, himself
serving as a head coach for the first time. The Packers were a team
of talented underachievers more used to lax coaching and late
nights than grueling practices and curfews. Lombardi's no-bull
coaching style helped hammer them into winners who operated with
machine-like precision. Every football fan knows that the Packers
under Lombardi were champions, but "That First Season" shows how he
did it, bringing readers the inside story of a sports
dynasty.
The epic tale of the five owners who shepherded the NFL through its
tumultuous early decades and built the most popular sport in
America The National Football League is a towering, distinctly
American colossus spewing out $14 billion in annual revenue. But it
was not always a success. In The League, John Eisenberg focuses on
the pioneering sportsmen who kept the league alive in the 1920s,
1930s, and 1940s, when its challenges were many and its survival
was not guaranteed. At the time, college football, baseball,
boxing, and horseracing dominated America's sports scene. Art
Rooney, George Halas, Tim Mara, George Preston Marshall, and Bert
Bell believed in pro football when few others did and ultimately
succeeded only because at critical junctures each sacrificed the
short-term success of his team for the longer-term good of the
league. At once a history of a sport and a remarkable story of
business ingenuity, The League is an essential read for any fan of
our true national pastime.
The Great Match Race is a captivating account of America's first
sports spectacle, a horse race that pitted North against South in
three grueling heats. On a bright afternoon in May 1823, an
unprecedented sixty thousand people showed up to watch two horses
run the equivalent of nine Kentucky Derbys in a few hours' time.
Eclipse was the majestic champion representing the North, and
Henry, an equine arriviste, was the pride of the South. Their match
race would come to represent a watershed moment in American
history, crystallizing the differences that so fundamentally
divided the country. The renowned sportswriter John Eisenberg
captures all the pulse-pounding drama and behind-the-scenes
tensions in a page-turning mix of history, horse racing, and pure
entertainment.
" On the first Saturday in May every year in Louisville,
Kentucky, shortly after 5:30 PM, a new horse attains racing
immortality. The Kentucky Derby is like no other race, and its
winners are the finest horses in the world. Covered in rich red
roses, surrounded by flashing cameras and admiring crowds, these
instant celebrities bear names like Citation, Secretariat,
Spectacular Bid, and Seattle Slew. They're worth hundreds of
thousands of dollars. But in 1992, a funny thing happened on the
way to the roses. The rattling roar of 130,000 voices tailed off
into a high, hollow shriek as the horses crossed the finish line.
Lil E. Tee? ABC broadcasters knew nothing about him, but they
weren't alone. Who knew about Lil E. Tee? A blacksmith in Ocala,
Florida, a veterinary surgeon in Ringoes, New Jersey, a trainer a
Calder Race Course, and a few other people used to dealing with
average horses knew this horse -- and realized what a long shot Lil
E. Tee really was. On a Pennsylvania farm that raised mostly
trotting horses, a colt with a dime-store pedigree was born in
1989. His odd gait and tendency to bellow for his mother earned him
the nickname "E.T." Suffering from an immune deficiency and a bad
case of colic, he survived surgery that usually ends a horse's
racing career. Bloodstock agents dismissed him because of his
mediocre breeding, and once he was sold for only $3,000. He'd live
in five barns in seven states by the time he turned two. Somehow,
this horse became one of the biggest underdogs to appear on the
American sporting landscape. Lil E. Tee overcame his bleak
beginnings to reach the respected hands of trainer Lynn Whiting,
jockey Pat Day, and owner Cal Partee. After winning the Jim Beam
stakes and finishing second in the Arkansas Derby, Lil E. Tee
arrived at Churchill Downs to face a field of seventeen horses,
including the highly acclaimed favorite, Arazi, a horse many people
forecast to become the next Secretariat. A 17-to-1 longshot, Lil E.
Tee won the Derby with a classic rally down the home stretch, and
finally Pat Day had jockeyed a horse to Derby victory. John
Eisenberg draws on more than fifteen years of sports writing
experience and a hundred interviews throughout Pennsylvania,
Kentucky, Florida, and Arkansas to tell the story almost nobody
knew in 1992. Eisenberg is a sports columnist for the Baltimore Sun
and has won more than twenty awards for his sports writing,
including several Associated Press sports editors' first
places."
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