Football Mania
I just read and can't stop extolling The System: The Glory and Scandal of Big-Time College Football by Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian (reviewed below). I expected scandal, I expected feel-good stories; what I didn't expect was a book so riveting that I missed my bus stop.
The scandalous bits will get the most press. Some surprised me, like colleges employing "hostesses" to squire high school recruits around campus, take them out to parties, then stay in touch until they commit, dazzling them with the carrot of a relationship. There's also academic fraud, rogue boosters, private planes, untraceable big money and third parties involved in recruiting and eligibility, especially in the "shadowy world of 7-on-7," the spring and summer touch football extravaganza of player evaluation. And the money! In the cathedral of college football, "there is just one church, one road leading in a single direction. To Austin and the University of Texas." The football program generated $103.8 million in revenue during the 2011-12 season, and $78 million in profit. Make no mistake: this is definitely not amateur hour.
There are good stories too, good people--players, coaches, athletic directors. It's easy to forget that we are talking about boys, boys with dreams, boys unformed, boys with problems. Boys with injuries. That gives me pause in my football ardor--players risking, at the least, subconcussions on every play. Writer and editor Rodney Clapp, in his essay "Would Jesus Love Football?" says this:
"I am sure that true fans do not watch the game primarily to see spectacular hits or the mangling of bodies. What's exciting is the long pass, the almost impossible fingertip catch, the stealthy interception... the runner's ability to dodge tackles.... At such moments it's clear that what fans really love is not the collision but the avoidance of a collision.... That's what gives the game its beauty and its thrills." In The System, Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian have given us a thrilling read. --Marilyn Dahl, editor, Shelf Awareness for Readers




