SI Andy Staples: Ranked Teams as American Literary Classics

Submitted by Marley Nowell on

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/writers/andy_staples/09/27/top-25…

 

This Week: 22

Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston: Much of the action in Hurston's novel takes place in The Muck. The area, near Florida's Lake Okeechobee, also produced Wolverines tailback Vincent Smith, who is averaging 8.5 yards per carry this season. The Wolverines also resemble main character Janie Crawford, who returns to Eatonville, Fla., as a mysterious figure and the subject of gossip by her fellow townsfolk. The rest of the Big Ten is wondering about Michigan, which once again has started hot. The Wolverines' dominant win against San Diego State suggests Michigan has improved under Brady Hoke, but Rich Rodriguez's team started off 5-0 last year and lost six of its next eight.
Last game: Beat San Diego State, 28-7
 

The Muck starring Vincent Smith, Jeremy Gallon, and Brandin Hawthrone

Kal

September 27th, 2011 at 3:19 PM ^

If there anything I'm learning from Staples' column, it is that he is trying to prove that he is the most well-read sports journalist.

I will also admit I've never heard of that book.

oriental andrew

September 27th, 2011 at 3:35 PM ^

Because this is MGoBlog and we're all MGoNerds, pop quiz - how many of those books have you actually read?  Bonus - do you have a favorite among them?

I've read Slaughterhouse-Five (LSU), To Kill a Mockingbird (Bama), Grapes of Wrath (Oklahoma), A Prayer for Owen Meany (Boise St), The Catcher in the Rye (USC-NTUSC), Moby Dick (VT), The Invisible Man (TAMU), Huck Finn (Nebraska), Tom Sawyer (Clemson), The Great Gatsby (Florida), The Sun Also Rises (Arkansas), Last of the Mohicans (Baylor), Catch-22 (WVU), As I Lay Dying (ISU). 

Woo, more than half!  Although, admittedly, most were in high school, so it's been a while.  Most recent read was A Prayer for Owen Meany, which is also my favorite of the bunch.  I've never even heard of Their Eyes Were Watching God. 

Also, does reading the SCar description make anyone else really wish we had signed Sammy Watkins? 

Benoit Balls

September 27th, 2011 at 4:04 PM ^

although theres a couple more on there I was supposed to read but went the lazy route, paid attention in class and bs'd my way through the paper

To Kill a Mockingbird is definitely my favorite read from anything assigned to me in academia that appears on this list. Also, I am astonished the author didnt find a way to work Lord of the Flies in there somehow

m1jjb00

September 27th, 2011 at 4:52 PM ^

I'm older so I pick up a couple books out of school (Bright lights .. & The Man in Full), and I read Their Eyes Were Watching God in a seminar class at U of M.

Edit: Top 5:

1.  Catch-22

2.  Huck Finn

3.  The Invisible Man

4.  The Grapes of Wrath

5.  The Sun Also Rises

6.  The Great Gatsby (Had to keep going until I got Gatsby in)

Elise

September 27th, 2011 at 3:36 PM ^

That's actually a pretty decent comparison the more I think about it.. though the comparison where Janie (Michigan) gets off for murdering (axing) Tea Cake (Rich Rod) via an all-white (Bo/Carr/Moeller camp?) jury is a tad uncomfortable.

blue note

September 27th, 2011 at 3:44 PM ^

The most recent book on that list deserves to be ranked with Faulkner, Hemingway, et. al - if you haven't already, go out and read The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz. Funny, honest, poignant. Wonderful book.

three red spiders

September 27th, 2011 at 4:31 PM ^

I teach high school English (we're actually in class now...shhh...don't tell), so I've read a lot of this list, and I have taught Eyes.  It's not my favorite to be sure (that'd be Grapes of Wrath...don't even get me started on how absolutely perfect that book is...which is why I was crushed that Staples gives it to OU on the most ridiculously obvious/surface level comparison)...ours is kinda a superficial comparison as well...what might have been better is to discuss how for years Eyes was ignored (our loss of our past stature) , and only when a devotee of the book, Alice Walker, (Brady Hoke) traveled back to literally the author's grave (return to past tradition) , did the book takes it's "rightful" place in the canon (our return to prominence)

Other Chris

September 27th, 2011 at 7:39 PM ^

And you haven't read Semi-Tough? Heresy!

It's probably a dated read now, but it's a quick and hilarious one. My mom (crazy, I know, but the woman taught me to hate the Crimson Tide and how can that ever be wrong?) was a huge football fan and a voracious reader and I worked my way through the works of Dan Jenkins in the 80s.

Beats the hell out of Melville and Franzen, that's for sure.

Roy G. Biv

September 27th, 2011 at 10:12 PM ^

Sorry if someone already beat me to it, but I bet this equating of football teams with literary classics is none too popular amongst tSIO faithful.  I envision them as the under-evolved, early pubescent bully on the school grounds who made fun of kids who got good grades.  And, to borrow from A Christmas Story, the toadie(s) associated with said bully.