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Good. Connecting readers with great books since 1972! Used textbooks may not include companion materials such as access codes, etc. May have some wear or writing/highlighting. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
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Fair. Connecting readers with great books since 1972. Used textbooks may not include companion materials such as access codes, etc. May have condition issues including wear and notes/highlighting. We ship orders daily and Customer Service is our top priority!
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Fine in fine jacket. First printing. Fine in fine dust jacket. Hardcover. xiv+456 pp. Illustrated. Important, comprehensive hundred-year history of college football in America. The author shows how the game evolved from a simple game played by college students into the lucrative semi-professional industry of the 21st century. He looks at the development of rules (a 0-0 tie resulted when, without the first-down rule, Yale retained the ball for an entire game), decribes the vicious brutality of kicks, punches and eye-gouging that almost caued the demise of the game, and tells of the 1910 rules change that led to the forward pass. The game exploded into popularity in the years between the World Wars and in the post War years became involved in the inevitable scandals involving recruitment and subsudies for student athletes.
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Fine in Fine jacket. 4to-over 9¾"-12" tall. Signed by Author. 456 pages, illustrated with b&w photos. "One of the finest books on sport history. In this comprehensive, hundred-year history of America's popular pastime, the author shows how college football evolved from a simple game played by college students into the lucrative, semiprofessional enterprise it has become today." FINE HARDCOVER, FINE DUST JACKET. Inscribed by the author to the previous owner.
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Very good in Very good jacket. Xic, [2], 456, [4] pages. Format is approximately 6.75 inches by 10.25 inches. Illustrations. Notes. Bibliographical Essay. Index. John Sayle Watterson is an academic and sports historian. After earning a Ph.D. at Northwestern University, Watterson began working as an assistant professor at James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia. He published his first book, Thomas Burke, Restless Revolutionary, in 1980. In 2000 Watterson published College Football: History, Spectacle, Controversy. The book outlines the way the business was run in its early days. However, even in its infancy, Watterson shows how would-be sports headlines of the early 1900s mimic those found nearly one hundred years later, with various scandals, recruiters taking students out of preparatory school early to start playing football at the university level, and dirty techniques on the field. Watterson chronicles the sport's start and the challenges it faced from certain institutions that wished to see it banned. Watterson also looks at the number of reforms that have been implemented in the game. "In March [1892] Stanford and California had played the first college football game on the Pacific Coast in San Francisco...The pregame activities included a noisy parade down streets bedecked with school colors. Tickets sold so fast that the Stanford student manager, future president Herbert Hoover, and his California counterpart, could not keep count of the gold and silver coins...they found that the revenues amounted to $30, 000--a fair haul for a game..."--from College Football, Chapter Three. In this comprehensive history of America's popular pastime, John Sayle Watterson shows how college football in more than one hundred years has evolved from a simple game played by college students into a lucrative, semiprofessional enterprise. With a historian's grasp of the context and a novelist's eye for the telling detail, Watterson presents a compelling portrait rich in anecdotes, colorful personalities, and troubling patterns. He tells how the infamous Yale-Princeton "fiasco" of 1881, in which Yale forced a 0-0 tie in a championship game by retaining possession of the ball for the entire game, eventually led to the first-down rule that would begin to transform Americanized rugby into American football. He describes the kicks and punches, gouged eyes, broken collarbones, and flagrant rule violations that nearly led to the sport's demise (including such excesses as a Yale player who wore a uniform soaked in blood from a slaughterhouse). And he explains the reforms of 1910, which gave official approval to a radical new tactic traditionalists were sure would doom the game as they knew it--the forward pass. As college football grew in the booming economy of the 1920s, Watterson explains, the flow of cash added fuel to an already explosive mix. Coaches like Knute Rockne became celebrities in their own right, with highly paid speaking engagements and product endorsements. At the same time, the emergence of the first professional teams led to inevitable scandals involving recruitment and subsidies for student-athletes. Revelations of illicit aid to athletes in the 1930s led to failed attempts at reform by the fledgling NCAA in the postwar "Sanity Code, " intended to control abuses by permitting limited subsidies to college players but which actually paved the way for the "free ride" many players receive today. Watterson also explains how the growth of TV revenue led to college football programs' unprecedented prosperity, just as the rise of professional football seemed to relegate college teams to "minor league" status. He explores issues of gender and race, from the shocked reactions of spectators to the first female cheerleaders in the 1930s to their successful exploitation by Roone Arledge three decades later. He describes the role of African-American players, from the days when Southern schools demanded all-white teams (and Northern...