Big game The NFL in dangerous times

Mark Leibovich

Book - 2018

The "New York Times Magazine" chief national correspondent and lifelong Patriots fan presents a scathing analysis of professional football in the present climate of high success, dangerous injuries, and scandal.

Saved in:
Subjects
Published
New York : Penguin Press 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Mark Leibovich (author)
Item Description
"Brief portions of this work, some in slightly different form, first appeared in The New York Times and The New York Times Magazine"--T.p. verso.
Physical Description
xxiv, 373 pages ; illustrations (chiefly color) ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 355-358) and index.
ISBN
9780399185427
  • Football, in spite of itself
  • Respite
  • The Super Bowl without jock straps
  • The monkey's ass
  • Nuggets
  • "Tom Brady here"
  • "Beware the pissed off pretty boy"
  • Garish fist ornaments
  • Ballghazi
  • Cheater
  • No one buys tickets to watch a morality play
  • Dings?
  • Whuppings
  • "We pay him damn well to be neutral"
  • No broke dicks
  • Roger and me
  • The big splat
  • Immortality gets old
  • "Start blow-drying Teddy Koppel's hair 'cause this one's done"
  • American carnage
  • Patriotism
  • Cheesehead elegy
  • "We don't want you in Los Angeles"
  • "I'm drunk, I'm stupid, I'm a Pats fan," the man told police
  • The TV reporter in the Belichick underwear
  • Clocks and sitcoms
  • Turn-ons
  • This man's liver belongs in Canton
  • "Faith, family, and football...probably not in that order"
  • "We need a black Charlton Heston"
  • Just compartmentalize, baby
  • The last visit.
Review by New York Times Review

WASHINGTON BLACK, by Esi Edugyan. (Knopf, $26.95.) This eloquent novel, Edugyan's third, is a daring work of empathy and imagination, featuring a Barbados slave boy in the 1830s who flees barbaric cruelty in a hot-air balloon and embarks on a life of adventure that is wondrous, melancholy and strange. CAN YOU TOLERATE THIS? By Ashleigh Young. (Riverhead, $26.) The New Zealand poet and essayist writes many sly ars poeticas in her collection - a lovely, profound debut that spins metaphors of its own creation and the segmented identity of the essayist, that self-regarding self. BIG GAME: The NFL in Dangerous Times, by Mark Leibovich. (Penguin Press, $28.) A gossipy, insightful and wickedly entertaining journey through professional football's sausage factory. Reading this sparkling narrative, one gets the sense that the league will survive on the magnetism of the sport it so clumsily represents. THE REAL LOLITA: The Kidnapping of Sally Horner and the Novel That Scandalized the World, by Sarah Weinman. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $27.99.) Writing "Lolita," Nabokov drew on the real-life story of a girl held captive for two years by a pedophile. Weinman tracks down her history to complicate our view of the novel widely seen as Nabokov's masterpiece. THE SCHOOLHOUSE GATE: Public Education, the Supreme Court, and the Battle for the American Mind, by Justin Driver. (Pantheon, $35.) This meticulous history examines rulings on free speech, integration and corporal punishment to argue that schools are our most significant arenas of constitutional conflict. TICKER: The Quest to Create an Artificial Heart, by Mimi Swartz. (Crown, $27.) The long, arduous effort to invent and then perfect a machine that could stand in for the human heart offers Swartz a scandalous story filled with feuding doctors willing to stretch ethical boundaries to make great achievements. UNDERBUG: An Obsessive Tale of Termites and Technology, by Lisa Margonelli. (Scientific American/ Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $27.) Margonelli, who believes termites are underappreciated, makes her case via the researchers who study them - especially their ability to build the insect equivalent of a skyscraper. HARBOR ME, by Jacqueline Woodson. (Nancy Paulsen/Penguin, $17.99; ages 10 and up.) In this compassionate novel, a perceptive teacher requires six struggling middle school students to spend one class period a week together, just talking. LOUISIANA'S WAY HOME, by Kate DiCamillo. (Candlewick, $16.99; ages 10 and up.) Louisiana Elefante, first introduced as a minor character in DiCamillo's "Raymie Nightingale," hits the road with her grandmother, nurturing practical optimism despite hardship. The full reviews of these and other recent books are on the web: nytimes.com/books

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

There's been plenty of water-cooler chatter lately about the NFL reaching a saturation point: too many games on too many days, too many scandals, rules changes (many implemented for safety reasons) diminishing the game's excitement, and, of course, the growing concern over supporting a game that can cause long-term brain damage. Leibovich, chief national correspondent for the New York Times Magazine, usually covers politics, but he's also a lifelong New England Patriots fan, and he's spent the last four years deep-diving into the operation of the NFL. Among other research, he interviewed Tom Brady, attended an owners' meeting and the draft of college players, and spent time on the field with Commissioner Roger Goodell during the 2017 Super Bowl. (Goodell comes across as arrogant here.) The case of President Trump vs. the NFL also figures prominently in this meandering, highly opinionated, and often very funny account. Like many fans, Leibovich can't help but keep following his favorite team despite his growing misgivings about the game. With publication timed to the beginning of a new season, this book will certainly keep those water coolers bubbling.--Wes Lukowsky Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this skewering and witty cultural study, Leibovich (This Town) takes an insider look at the National Football League. Leibovich hangs out with New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady at his New York City skyscraper residence; schmoozes with team owners at the league's annual meeting in Boca Raton, Fla.; attempts to interview a very distracted NFL commissioner Rodger Goodell on the sidelines of Bank of America Stadium in Charlotte, N.C.; and tailgates with shirtless fans at Green Bay's frozen Lambeau Field. A lifetime Patriots fan, the author weaves his personal experiences chasing Brady for interviews into a charged narrative that calls out the NFL for its willful obliviousness to the physical and mental toll pro football takes on its players, as well as the league's chest-thumping defense of its logo, "the Shield." He also refers to the NFL as "the country's most polarizing sports brand" and explores the impact President Trump is having on the league by taking players to task for kneeling during the national anthem. Leibovich questions throughout whether the NFL is doomed, not only due to the sport's violence but also because the people who run it seem place the league over the players. Enhancing his casual reporting with cynical commentary, Leibovich provides entertaining reading. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

The National Football League (NFL) has dominated U.S. sports in recent years, with unlimited potential for continued growth and popularity. However, a rift between the public and the league has developed owing to a flurry of franchise relocations, violence both on and off the field, performance-enhancing drugs, the controversial New England Patriots dynasty, the old-boy network of franchise owners, and players kneeling during the national anthem to protest police brutality against people of color. How that unfolded and where it might lead is examined here by Leibovich (This Town). The author spent four years embedded with team owners, the league commissioner, and players, trying to determine whether the NFL, which once looked invincible, has already peaked and why we should still care. Showing the league as a microcosm of American values in an era of national division, Leibovich delivers an engaging, sobering portrait of a dominant institution facing critical challenges. VERDICT Current and former football fans, as well as readers fascinated by American culture, will find this an important look at the NFL today.-Janet Davis, Darien P.L., CT © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Ladies and gentlemen, the NFL, America's "beautiful shit-show of a league."A football fan and chief national correspondent of the New York Times Magazine, Leibovich (Citizens of the Green Room: Profiles in Courage and Self-Delusion, 2014, etc.) spent four years immersed in the NFL's "cultural hunger games," interviewing owners, coaches, and players to trace how football has morphed from "being one of the most unifying institutions in America to the country's most polarizing sports brand." Still superpopular and profitable, the game's present "moral and cultural moment" includes ball-tampering, child and domestic abuse, brain-disease deaths, and knee-taking during the national anthem. While exploring all of these, the author's chief focus is on the owners and players, who, like the politicians he covers daily, are all part of "the same sitcom." The 32 owners, typified by Jerry Jones of the Dallas Cowboys ("rich, audacious, distracted, shameless"), are variously described as "aging show poodles," "superrich postmenopausal dudes," and "tycoons of enlarged ego, delusion, and prostate." Jets owner Woody Johnson is "an overgrown third-grader who collects toy trains and rotten quarterbacks." Leibovich gives lengthy treatment to Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and his suspension for allegedly using underinflated footballs in the 2015 AFC championship game. Wealthy, with a supermodel wife, Brady touts sustained peak performance with his TB12 business partner and bodywork guru Alex Guerrero and famously golfs with NFL owner-wannabe Donald Trump, whose anti-kneeling tweets have their own moments. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, much-harassed by fans, dodges the author's questions and holes out watching league games on three TV sets in a man cave. Leibovich covers Super Bowl parties, the NFL draft, training camps, Hall of Fame inductions, and more. The "conservative, Republican, and nationalistic" NFL has mostly white fans (83 percent) and mostly black players (nearly 70 percent), he writes. However, the implications of that sociologyand the deep uncertainties facing the leagueare lost amid the rollicking entertainment.Must-read gossip for NFL junkies. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.