May 18, 2012

My Short, Short List

In my first Short, Short List, I listed some books I wanted to read. Well, I have read one of those books. However, I have read at least a couple of college football books since then and am working on one now. Here is my new Short, Short List.

1. Meat Market: Inside the Smash-Mouth World of College Football Recruiting. Bruce Feldman. Good book, and here is my review of the book. By the way, if you are interested, Brian at inthebleachers.net has a podcast in which he interviews the author, Bruce Feldman. You can check it out here.

2. Fourth and New Orleans: How Tulane Football Survived the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrinea. Benjamin Hochman with Coach Chris Scelfo. My review for this book is here.

3. We Are Marshall. Starring Matthew McConaughey and Matthew Fox. A co-worker of mine who is not a big football fan told me that she cried when watching this movie. It is very moving and inspiring. Gives a bit of background on how freshmen were eventually allowed to play on varsity college football teams. If you love college football and feel-good stories, this is one you want to watch.

Coming Soon

Tarnished Heisman: Did Reggie Bush Turn His Final College Season into a Six-Figure Job?
by Don Yager and Jim Henry. Visit their website here.

Fourth and New Orleans: A Book Review

In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the Tulane football team endured a long and grueling season filled with weekly trips to different stadiums, a semester living in a condemned dorm rooms, and the horror of knowing that players’ families lost much or all that they owned.

This book follows the Tulane University football team, New Orleans’ own college football team, through the 2005 season after Hurricane Katrina slammed into their home and sent the team packing for the entire fall. The book begins just a few hours before the hurricane makes shore as the football team loads chartered buses and pulls out of New Orleans. The Green Wave football team, along with some extra passengers, eventually end up in Dallas, TX, hosted by Southern Methodist University. It is there that Coach Chris Scelfo and his staff, along with the team, make the gut wrenching decision to proceed with the season.

The book delves into the lives of many of the young men on the team and their families. Once such person was Tulane linebacker Brandon Spincer. Tragically, Spincer, a young man from New Orleans, who wanted help rebuild New Orleans and work with disadvantaged kids was murdered during the fall of 2006.

The book also gave a glimpse into the plight in which so many New Orleanians suffered in the aftermath of Katrina. Even the Tulane coaching staffs were not immune to Katrina’s destruction. And, of course, the Tulane University campus was severely damaged.

The toll of living from a broken down dorm in another town, dealing with the loss of so much, and the stress of the entire situation turned an otherwise promising season into a disappointment. Indeed, it seemed as if the team was relieved that the season was over instead of preparing for a bowl game. Getting back to normalcy became the goal, but the goal was a very implausible one. The 2006 season also suffered from the events of 2005, and Tulane did not fair any better on the field. In the end, the University decided to part ways with Coach Scelfo.

Check your local bookstore, or your local Borders, for a copy of Fourth and New Orleans: How Tulane Football Survived the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina by Benjamin Hochman and Coach Chris Scelfo.

Meat Market: A Book Review

Meat Market: Inside the Smash-Mouth World of College Football Recruiting has got to be one of the most interesting reads about college football. The book is written by ESPN Columnist Bruce Feldman and follows former Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron as he dives head first into the world of recruiting the class that would change the direction of the program that Orgeron oversaw. It is a particularly interesting read now that Oregeron has been replaced at Ole Miss by former Arkansas coach Houston Nutt.

Feldman is the “fly on the wall” during Ole Miss coaching meetings discussing recruits, particularly in the “war room,” the place where Orgeron did his recruiting work. Feldman reports what coach Orgeron and his coaches say about potential recruits and how Orgeron’s staff identifies and pursues future college stars such as Joe McKnight whom Ole Miss made a serious attempt to sign out of New Orleans. Feldman also reports how certain circumstances during the football season caused the Rebel staff to place a greater importance on “character” players as well as academics in their recruiting strategy.

Feldman explains the use of the Ole Miss summer football camps to identify the “sleeper” recruit which is a tactic of summer football camps all over the country. Orgeron and his staff seemed to embrace the use of the internet recruiting sites using them to boost their own rank with potential recruits by either being the first to pursue a recruit or just by being on a recruit’s short list.

The most exciting part of Felman’s book are the last two chapters as National Signing Day looms closer. This at part of the book is like an intense action-packed 3 hour movie in which circumstances seem to change every 5-10 minutes. Those two chapters follow the most sought after recruits on the Ole Miss board and the reports, rumors, and communications (including text messages) which give the coaches an indication of the direction in which each recruit will or will not go. Feldman seemed to be able to interview some or all of the recruits as well as their families, coaches, mentors, or teachers, etc.

One problem I had with the book is the ability to keep up with all of the different people introduced in the book. Undoubtedly, Feldman met far more than he mentions in the book. I am not really sure how he could help the reader keep up with the ones he mentions. He did provide some helpful reminders, but I often found myself asking about someone he mentioned earlier to try to remember how he or she was mentioned and why.

It is a good read, especially during the spring part of college football when recruiting players for your favorite college football team is still fresh in your minds. Hop on down to your local Borders Bookstore and buy a copy. And, enjoy.

My Short, Short List

Borders Books has been producing something called the Short List. It is where authors and other entertainers give their Short List of things to read, watch, listen to, etc. I am going to do something similar. I am going to give my Short, Short List. I wanted my list to relate to football. Therefore, based on what I have read this year, my list is kind of short. But, I will mention three.

1. Bowls, Polls & Tattered Souls: Tackling the Chaos and Controversy that Reign Over College Football. Stewart Mandel. Stewart is a college football writer from SI.com (Sports Illustrated) and author of the popular Mailbag on the SI.com website. He really seems to have a handle on the sport’s most “hot button” issues. He gives a good, historical perspective on each of the issues at hand. You will have some “ah ha” moments while reading this book.

2. Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football. Jim Dent. This is a great story about the orphans from the Fort Worth Masonic Lodge who competed and won at high school football in Texas. While the stories are good, the reader will be amazed at how far reaching the affects of the little Mighty Orphans had on football in the 30′s, 40′s, and 50′s in the United States as a whole. Members of those great teams went on to play college and pro football. Head Coach Rusty Russell eventually coached at SMU where he had the opportunity to coach Doak Walker.

3. Tony Romo: America’s Next Quarterback. Mac Engel. This book will always have the distinction of being the first book written about Tony Romo. Romo, the Dallas Cowboy quarterback, was an Undrafted Free Agent out of Eastern Illinois University who took over as the starter last season and set the NFL on fire with his play. This is a great book for the aspiring young quarterback in your household.

Book I Hope to Read

Fourth and New Orleans. Chris Scelfo. The story of the Tulane football program in the months following Hurricane Katrina.

Every Week a Season: A Journey Inside Big-Time College Football. Brian Curtis.

Who’s #1?: 100-Plus Years of Controversial National Champions in College Football. Christopher J. Walsh.

One team that we know is number 1, in the Football Championship Subdivision, is Appalachian State. The Mountaineers won their third straight national title. What if West Virginia would have held on against Pitt and then won the BCS Title? The two Division I Champions would have been the Mountaineers. By the way, do you know how to spell Appalachian now? I do.