"Rarely have we gotten such a vivid look into the reality of how big-time players avoided becoming statistics and got to be great football players and life survivors instead."--Peter King, Sports Illustrated "Dorsey tackles the story of his adopted community with an ideal balance of reverence and objectivity."--Billy Corben, director, Cocaine Cowboys and ESPN's The U "A moving meditation on hope and despair, wealth and poverty, dreams and reality, a book that answers the worthwhile question: how could one troubled ...
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"Rarely have we gotten such a vivid look into the reality of how big-time players avoided becoming statistics and got to be great football players and life survivors instead."--Peter King, Sports Illustrated "Dorsey tackles the story of his adopted community with an ideal balance of reverence and objectivity."--Billy Corben, director, Cocaine Cowboys and ESPN's The U "A moving meditation on hope and despair, wealth and poverty, dreams and reality, a book that answers the worthwhile question: how could one troubled American neighborhood produce so many NFL players?"--Steve Rushin, Sports Illustrated "Dorsey takes us behind those Friday Night Lights, getting inside the hearts and homes of high school football legends who rise, and sometimes fall, in their quest for NFL fame and fortune."--Dan Shaughnessy, Boston Globe "A story that is purely, wonderfully, tragically American. The theme is football, but the threads Dorsey pursues demand a larger stage."--Randy Wayne White, author of the Doc Ford novels For the young men of Dunbar--the low-income, historically segregated neighborhoods of Fort Myers, Florida--avoiding the path that leads to easy money as a drug dealer often means choosing complete devotion to football and dreams of NFL stardom. While such dreams remain out of reach for most, an astonishing number of Dunbar athletes, including NFL idols Deion Sanders, Jevon Kearse, and Earnest Graham, have achieved massive success. Fourth Down in Dunbar is the story of how one community, plagued by drugs and violence, where many children are fatherless, gave rise to so many stellar youth athletes. Using Sanders as the centerpiece of the story, David Dorsey explores Dunbar's history to show how the same drug culture that ruined so many promising futures also served as motivation for football success. As a reporter for the Fort Myers News-Press , Dorsey had exclusive access to the players and their relatives. He shows the success of the wildly talented as well as the regrets of those who took the wrong path, while highlighting hope for the future of Dunbar. In this poignant tale of heartbreak and triumph, Dorsey reveals the true nature of these men who overcame the obstacles in their lives and made their families and their hometown proud.
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