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Three Paths to Glory: Football is the subject of new books
Sunday, October 11, 2009

Most books about football coaches celebrate their success; few give you an indication of how they achieved that success.

"That First Season: How Vince Lombardi Took the Worst Team in the NFL and Set It On the Path to Glory," by John Isenberg.

Written by former Baltimore Sun columnist John Eisenberg, this is an incisive look at how Vince Lombardi came from the division champion New York Giants in 1959 (where he had been offensive coordinator) and overturned the moribund Green Bay Packers franchise, the laughingstock of the NFL, in every way possible.


"That First Season: How Vince Lombardi Took The Worst Team In The NFL And Set It On The Path To Glory"
By John Eisenberg
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, ($25)

Lombardi was more than just an authoritarian. He knew how to make his players feel good about themselves. "We realized that we were going to be good," said future all-Pro guard Fuzzy Thurston after Lombardi's arrival. "We knew what was about to happen."

Lombardi found several key players out of position, most notably Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Paul Hornung, and instinctively put them in the right positions, Hornung to halfback.

Most importantly, he singled out a discouraged young quarterback from Alabama whom his assistants did not like.

Lombardi saw in Bart Starr what others did not, namely his work ethic and leadership qualities. Starr would win five championships under Lombardi, more than any quarterback in the past half-century.

A coach with less vision and confidence would have traded or cut most of the players Lombardi started with. Instead the Packers went from a 1-10-1 record in 1958 to 7-5 in Lombardi's first season. As receiver Gary Knafelc put it, "He was the right man for the right job at the right time."

"Resurrection: The Miracle Season That Saved Notre Dame," by Jim Dent.

A sort of companion book to "That First Season" is Jim Dent's similar story about how Ara Parseghian, perhaps the most neglected coaching genius of the 1960s-'70s, led a Notre Dame resurgence in 1964.


"Resurrection: The Miracle Season That Saved Notre Dame"
By Jim Dent
Thomas Dunne/St. Martins Press ($25.99)

If the word "miracle" in the subtitle seems like hyperbole, consider that the Fighting Irish had had five consecutive losing seasons from 1958-'63 -- a worse period than anything they've gone through this decade -- and that under Parseghian they went from 2-7 to 9-1.

The Irish came within the final quarter of the final game of the season of winning the national championship, losing to archrival Southern Cal 20-17. Notre Dame shunned bowl games back then, believing that they interfered with academics.

Dent, author of the popular "The Junction Boys," has picked a terrific subject. Parseghian, who burnt out from the pressure at Notre Dame after 11 seasons, won two national championships, but neither of them were as glorious as the one he nearly won in his first year.

"The 1964 season," writes Dent, "was not for today but for the seasons to come."

"Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains With The Smith Center Redmen," by Joe Drape.

An argument could be made that the real America can be found more easily at a high school football game than at either the pro or college levels, and Joe Drape makes it in his new book. To call a book on high school football inspirational is usually a kiss of death, but Drape, a New York Times reporter and author of "Black Maestro: The Epic Life of an American League," has found a story that needs no phony hype.


"Our Boys : A Perfect Season On The Plains With The Smith Center Redmen"
By Joe Drape
Times Books ($25)

Just as the Smith Center High School football team was embarking on a quest for their fifth consecutive unbeaten season and state championship, Drape, a native Kansan, moved his family back so he could follow the team and its hold on the community.

What he found was the kind of bond that can only be faked in professional football and is all too rare even in the college game.

"Our Boys" is like a brighter version of Buzz Bissinger's "Friday Night Lights," where Smith Center's coach Roger Barta tells his players, "I want you to dream and to dream big. When you dream big, great things happen."

When you finish this book, you may feel the same way about it that a Redmen player did at the end of the Redmen's perfect season: "Enjoy it, guys, because I'm already starting to miss it." Surely Lombardi's and Parseghian's players felt the same way.



Sportswriter and biographer Allen Barra's latest book is "Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee."
Ed Bouchette's blog on the Steelers and Gerry Dulac's Steelers chats are featured exclusively on PG+, a members-only web site from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Our introduction to PG+ gives you all the details.
First published on October 11, 2009 at 12:00 am