Got your number The greatest sports legends and the numbers they own

Mike Greenberg, 1967-

Book - 2023

"ESPN personality (Get Up and #Greeny) and New York Times bestselling author Mike Greenberg partners with mega-producer Hembo to settle once and for all which legends flat-out own which numbers. In short essays certain to provoke debate between and amongst all generations, Greeny uses his lifetime of sports knowledge to spin yarns of the legends among the legends and tell you why some have claimed their spot in the top 100 of all time." -- Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Trivia and miscellanea
Sports writing
Essays
Published
Los Angeles : Hyperion Avenue 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Greenberg, 1967- (author)
Other Authors
Paul Hembekides (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
315 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781368073561
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A sportscaster decides which players own the numbers from one to 100. Along with his longtime producer, Hembekides, ESPN stalwart Greenberg loves a good debate. He's going to get them from readers after selecting not so much the 100 most accomplished players in sports history, but those whose exploits secured "ownership" of each number--e.g., Babe Ruth with No. 3 or Tom Brady with No. 12. In most cases, it's about the men and women who wore the numbers, but other digits are awarded to such luminaries as Muhammad Ali, Billie Jean King, Michael Phelps, and Serena Williams, representing their total victories, winning streaks, or years they dominated. It's a fun, entertaining, and totally subjective book, but Greenberg's hyperbole and smug certitude get tiresome, as they do on his radio show. Sports fans will concur with many of his selections but disagree vehemently with others. "Wayne Gretzky is the greatest athlete in the history of North American team sports," he writes, and golf is "the greatest game ever invented." Even for a book about superlatives, there is an eye-rolling excess of "greatest ever," "best who ever lived," and similar effusions. Greenberg allows his enthusiasms to run away with him, with a breathless writing style that grates after a few pages. Sometimes he contradicts himself: "Tom Brady is the greatest football player that has ever lived," he writes; 50 pages later, he anoints Jim Brown as "the best football player that ever lived." Greenberg tries to hedge, contrasting "best" versus "greatest," but this sort of splitting of hairs doesn't cut it. One of the author's favorite phrases is, "there is no doubt." Readers, however, will find plenty to doubt in these pages, and the author fails to provide enough contextual information to back up his choices. Credit Greenberg for assembling a deluge of fascinating statistics. Bench him for hyperextended prose. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

#23 If there is one thing for which I have been most often ridiculed during my time at ESPN, it is the frequency with which I mention that I began my career covering Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls. In response to this criticism, I simply ask: If you had been fortunate enough to occupy a seat on the piano bench while Mozart tickled the keys, or if you donned a smock in the studio while Picasso painted a canvas, wouldn't you talk about it a lot? For the record, I do not consider either of those comparisons to be overreaching. For nearly five years, I had the privilege of a front-row seat to the greatest show in the history of sports. Any day that I do not mention it requires enormous restraint. My most lasting recollection of that time, more than any of the titles or Olympics or commercials, was the extraordinary intensity with which Jordan competed every single night. This seems especially noteworthy in this era when healthy players routinely sit out games in the interest of "load management," their actions openly stating that some games aren't all that important to them. In Michael Jordan's final three seasons in Chicago, he did not miss a single game, and he approached a Tuesday night matchup with New Jersey in February with the same tenacity he displayed in the playoffs. This dedication remains my favorite piece of his legacy, and it manifested itself foremostly on the defensive end of the floor. Consider that there have been eleven seasons in NBA history where a player scored 2,000 points and recorded 200 steals, and Michael Jordan is responsible for six of them. He won ten scoring titles (the most ever) and was named first-team all-defense nine times (tied for the most ever). He remains the only player ever to win Defensive Player of the Year and lead the league in scoring in the same season. Meanwhile, Jordan's offensive accomplishments are thoroughly mind-blowing. He is the all-time leader in points per game in the regular season and the postseason. He once scored in double figures for a record 1,041 consecutive games, which is 366 games longer than the number two player in history. He played in thirty-seven playoff series and led both teams in scoring in thirty-six of them. He had five career playoff games with at least 55 points; no other player has more than one. He averaged 30 points in the playoffs in twelve different seasons; Jerry West is next on that list with seven. Since the advent of the three-point line, Jordan is the only player to average 35 points in a season more than once. More than anything, though, Michael Jordan is known for winning. The game-winning jumper to claim the NCAA title for North Carolina--as a freshman. Two Olympic gold medals. And, of course, six NBA championships, a perfect six-for-six in the finals, the most wins in the championship round without a loss by an MVP in NBA, NHL, MLB, or NFL history. He was the MVP in all six of those finals, to go along with his five regular season MVPs. But, again, Michael cared about winning every time he set foot on the court, not just when the title was at stake. In November 1990, his team lost three straight games--it would not lose three in a row ever again while he was in Chicago. In all, Jordan went 631 games between three-game losing streaks. Simply put, Michael Jeffrey Jordan was absolutely everything you could ever wish an athlete to be. He cared about the fans, he was endlessly accommodating to the media, and he cared more about winning than he did anything else, including money. The lessons I learned just being in his orbit have served me well. He was the best player ever, in his or any sport. If there were only space for one athlete in this book, it would be him. Excerpted from Got Your Number: The Greatest Sports Legends and the Numbers They Own by Mike Greenberg, Paul Hembekides All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.