Elway A relentless life

Jason Cole

Book - 2020

Before his NFL career even started, John Elway was at the center of the craziest play in college football history; he threw a play so iconic in Super Bowl lore that it's played on highlight reels every January in the lead up to the game. Over the first 10 years of his professional career Elway led Denver to three Super Bowls, but lost in progressively worse fashion each time. Finally, after 15 years of perseverance, Elway led the Broncos to back-to-back championships. He won the Most Valuable Player award in his final Super Bowl game and then walked away from football. Within four years of quitting football he suffered personal tragedies and a difficult divorce. In search of redemption, Elway returned to football-- and spent eight year...s running the Colorado Crush of the Arena Football League. Cole shows that through it all, Elway has always put his passion for competition on display. -- adapted from jacket

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : Hachette Books, Hachette Book Group 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Jason Cole (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xxix, 337 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780316455770
  • Foreword
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. Jack
  • Chapter 2. The Barracuda and the Sheriff
  • Chapter 3. From a Chevy
  • Chapter 4. An Odd Way to L.A.
  • Chapter 5. Happy Jack's Flying Circus
  • Chapter 6. High School
  • Chapter 7. The Recruiting Trail
  • Chapter 8. Number One Versus Number One
  • Chapter 9. Early Signs of Trouble
  • Chapter 10. Elway Versus Elway
  • Chapter 11. Ups, Downs, and An Awful Ending
  • Chapter 12. Kill Or Be Killed
  • Chapter 13. George Steinbrenner's Dream
  • Chapter 14. Pete Rozelle's Quandary
  • Chapter 15. Edgar Kaiser and the Pursuit of Elway
  • Chapter 16. Arm of Gold, Knee of Tin
  • Chapter 17. Dan Reeves and the QB Culture War
  • Chapter 18. Driving the Browns Out of Cleveland
  • Chapter 19. Super Misery
  • Chapter 20. Bradshaw Pours it On, 49ers Reign
  • Chapter 21. Pat Bowlen, Red Teeth, and Reeves
  • Chapter 22. The End With Reeves
  • Chapter 23. The Wade Years
  • Chapter 24. Don't Be Afraid to Manage
  • Chapter 25. Sunflower Seeds
  • Chapter 26. Beating the Packers
  • Chapter 27. 1998
  • Chapter 28. Retirement
  • Chapter 29. The Arena Challenge
  • Chapter 30. Paige
  • Chapter 31. Tebowmania
  • Chapter 32. Peyton
  • Chapter 33. Fox Trots, Manning Dances
  • Chapter 34. Miracle On 13655 Broncos Parkway
  • Chapter 35. Super Bowl 50
  • Chapter 36. The Next Challenge
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sportswriter Cole (Giant, coathored with Plaxico Burress) delivers an in-depth, entertaining biography of one of football's greatest quarterbacks, John Elway. Cole painstakingly details Elway's life, beginning with his Port Angeles, Wash., childhood and his move to Los Angeles when his father became head football coach of Cal State--Northridge. In high school, Elway excelled at both football and baseball, and competed against Darryl Strawberry in the 1979 Los Angeles baseball championship. But it was football that took Elway to Stanford in 1979. Cole details Elway's college career, including his reaction to "The Play" at Stanford--one of Elway's best drives that nevertheless resulted in a loss and, according to Elway, "ruined my last game as a college football player." The Denver Broncos picked him at number one in the 1983 draft, and he went on to play his entire 16-year career there, taking the team to Superbowl victories in the 1997 and 1998 seasons. After his retirement in 1999, he became co-owner of the Colorado Rush arena football team and returned to the Broncos in 2011 to become general manager. Cole smoothly takes readers from on-field action to back-office decision-making as Elway drafted University of Florida quarterback Tim Tebow, with mixed results, before signing veteran Peyton Manning. Cole shows Elway's nervousness during his job interview for the general manager position, as well as the Super Bowl triumph that came after Manning was signed. This is a must-read for Elway and Broncos fans. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Through high school, college, and the NFL, quarterback John Elway (b. 1960) redefined his position, championed professional athletes' autonomy, and earned a legacy as one of the greatest football players of his generation. Cole (Bleacher Report) attended Stanford University while Elway was leading the school's football team. His personal memories of that era give him unique insight into Elway's controversial transition to the NFL and prominent role in the game's shift from defense and coaching to an emphasis on quarterbacks. From the anguish of "The Play" in 1982, marking Elway's last moments on a college football field, to redemptive triumph in Super Bowl 50, the Hall of Famer was always known for pushing boundaries. In this well-rounded, comprehensive biography, Cole illuminates the origins of Elway's skill set and ultra-competitive nature, and puts the athlete in his rightful place as a football immortal. VERDICT With exclusive recollections of Elway's college football years, Cole delves into the forces that shaped the quarterback and gave him the resiliency to overcome challenges both on and off the field. Recommended for all public library collections, and especially for readers interested in the evolution of sports in the late 20th century.--Janet Davis, Darien P.L., CT

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Vigorous biography of the hard-driven football star. As Cole notes in this admiring narrative, there have been statistically better quarterbacks in the history of the NFL: Tom Brady, Joe Montana, and Brett Favre, to name a few. However, the author convincingly shows that no other quarterback has combined his drive, intelligence, willpower, and athleticism, and none has been so relentless in seeking self-improvement and gridiron glory. Cole traces some of John Elway's skill to the instructions provided by his father, Jack, who coached for San Jose State University and Stanford and who provided postgame analyses while Elway was playing high school and college ball--analyses that focused less on individual plays than on Elway's leadership skills and attitude. Elway later brought his father to Denver to coach for the Broncos, where Elway enjoyed a distinguished career that took off after he figured out how to apply those leadership skills to a sometimes recalcitrant team. "After ten years of playing statistically ugly football," writes Cole, "Elway began a run many athletes and sports experts would consider strange," with the QB putting up his best numbers in his last six years of playing, which doesn't often occur. Cole is a fluent interpreter of the game of football and its arcana, and he has a considered appreciation for what it is that makes a great leader; as he notes, the quarterback is "an extension of management," to say nothing of being the "highest-paid player on the team." Elway's skills as a team builder made management strong-arming needless, and when he became a general manager himself, he saw to it that his successor, Peyton Manning, developed the same abilities--even though Elway's haggling over money nearly caused Manning to leave the team more than once. Fans of the Broncos--and football in general--will enjoy this portrait of one of the game's greatest players. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.