OT- Book Learnin
We're in peak offseason, so I figure now is a good time to catch up on some reading. Specifically books as they relate to College Football. What's some suggestions for the hardcore fan?
Some of mine:
1. 4th and Long- John U Bacon
2. The Meat Market- Bruce Feldman
3. The System- Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian.
Worst:
1. That horseshit book Rosenberg published.
Anyone else have any favorites?
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What a...crazy topic. No suggestions--but I am curious about what'll pop up here.
and I love college football. And I LOVE reading good books about college football. So I figure others do too.
Above the Line. - UM
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Rudy was still offsides... but the Hell with Notre Dame.
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"The Blind Side" by Michael Lewis
"Study Hall: College Football, Its Stats and Its Stories" by Michael Connelly
"The Art of Smart Football" and "The Essential Smart Football" by Chris Brown
to put the Chris Brown books. Breaks it down simple enough for the average football fan to understand while at the same time keeping it complex enough for football junkies.
Scoreboard, Baby by Ken Armstrong
A Civil War: Army vs. Navy by John Feinstein
Dixieland Delight by Clay Travis
The Last Season by Stuart Stevens
Rags to Roses: The Rise of Stanford Football by Joseph Beyda
The Obscene Diaries of a Michigan Fan and The Search for the Unified Field Theory (Football Edition) both by Craig Ross
Civil War. Terrific look inside both Army's and Navy's locker rooms and programs.
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Actually managed to get a copy of "The Matheny Manifesto" by Mike Matheny and it's actually a pretty interesting read, mainly geared at parents looking to get kids involved in a sport like baseball, but he injects his own experience as a player and coach and now MLB manager into it as well. A bit like Harbaugh, there's a heavy emphasis on character and trying to instill and develop that as well.
I would like to read "Billy Martin: Baseball's Flawed Genius" before the summer is out as well.
by Douglas H. Chadwick
John Mcphee.
I'm reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. I'm about 1/3 thru, so still a good chance he spends a good amount of the book talking about Michigan football recruiting. I know I would.
Its a solid read so far and making me rethink the idea that I'd never own a motorcycle.
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I don't harbor the RR hate a lot of the fanbase does.
RR committed 2 sins in my opinion.
1. Being tone deaf about the talent on hand -- running schemes which didn't fit personnel
2. Referring to tOSU as just another game.
He got a shitty deal otherwise. He won't make those mistakes again. He's doing well and will continue to do well wherever he goes.
And I agree he got a shitty deal in many respects.
But, I disagree about his firing. It was the right thing, and no, he was not one season away.
Principally from my reading of Three and Out, I have to conclude that he was inexplicably terrible at every facet of his job for the one and only time in his career. I'm not making any judgments about his fault or the fault of anyone else in this situation.
Some have argued that he was on the verge of having all the pieces in place, and that he would have done just as well with his players as Brady Hoke did with them in Hoke's first season. They are wrong. The defense was not getting any better under Rich Rod or anyone he would have hired as DC. Yes, he brought in some good players who performed well for Coach Mattison. That does not imply the team would have been just as good with a hypothetical 4th year under Rodriguez, any more than the 2015 Wolverines would have been just as good under Hoke.
I've read that... I missed the chapter about how my Ducati needs a valve job every 6K miles. Grrr! It's for sale right now! Motorcycles are fun but there are just too many blissfully unaware people on the roads these days.
Sounds like what Hugh Freeze is saying about the NCAA rule book.
NO -- READ IT!
Very insightful. Makes you think after all the goodness that is Michigan, how the fuck did we end up here?
It's also quite telling what a dick Hunter Lochmann is. Fucking flat out lied to the student government several times. Other times, Lochdawg was just too fucking stupid to know what the hell he was doing.
I have more ire for Lochmann after reading that than Brandon. Make no mistake, Brandon is a megalomaniac of Jerry Jones proportions (without the Jones cachet) but he did right by the student athletes; especially Hagerup. Can't fault him for that.
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Ooops. Thanks for the correction.
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One of the best football/life books I have ever read, Our Boys, a true story about a small-town Kansas football team/town and how they are essentially inseperable. The book is $0.01 used on amazon, definitely worth it. I have never rooted for a team so hard that I had no real attachment to (and in which the games had been played years prior).
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Jerry Kramer's Instant Replay was practically required reading for anyone growing up in Wisconsin in the 70's. As I recall, it was one of the first NFL lockerroom-books, and a fairly quick, good read. I wonder how it holds up after all these years.
Collision Low Crossers is probably the best football book I've ever read. I spent a lot of time with a D-1 college baseball coach in my mid-20's. He tought me a ton about the game that most people wouldn't even see. It's nice to view the game from a coaching perspective, which CLC absolutely helps with albeit a different sport.
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Well crafted.
is a good read for those intrigued by physics. It's written by a University of Nebraska professor and has some really interesting data in it.
are magazines
Stagg versus Yost is an exellent book for those interested in just how football was run and played in the 1890s and 1900s.
....too.