Consistently ranked among the top ten college football rivalries by fans and pundits alike-and often ranked among the top five-the annual Army-Navy game is the one rivalry that, as one commentator has noted, "stops the most powerful men and women in the world in their tracks for one day a year." It is also quite possible that it is the only rivalry to raise over $58 million in war bonds (1944 game), have an outcome so contentious that the game had to be suspended for six years by the President (1893), or be played in the Rose Bowl (1983), requiring a military "airlift" of nine thousand cadets and midshipmen to California. But Army-Navy is first and foremost about football, and as Barry Wilner and Ken Rappoport relate in this engaging history, it may be college football in its purest form-and not just as a "training ground for the NFL." Though struggling for national ranking, the service academies have done surprisingly well over the years given their recruiting handicap, producing five Heisman Trophy winners and a number of national champions. The rivalry's most successful player may have been Roger Staubach, Heisman winner and Hall of Fame quarterback, who led the Dallas Cowboys to two Super Bowls in the 1970s following his four-year mandatory service in the U.S. Navy. The Army-Navy rivalry is also about traditions, and in a concluding chapter on the 2004 game, the authors take us through the pageantry: the march into the stadium by the student bodies of both schools; freshman push-ups after each score; and the final, moving show of sportsmanship following the game as thousands of cadets and midshipmen stand at attention while the alma mater of each school is played by their respective bands. A rivalry like no other, Army versus Navy receives due recognition in this colorful, thorough history.
Barry Wilner has been a sports writer for the Associated Press since 1975. He has covered virtually every major sporting event, including nine Olympics, seven world cups, nineteen Super Bowls, the World Series, and Stanley Cup finals. He has written eighteen books. Ken Rappoport covered every major sport out of New York for thirty years and was the Associated Press's national hockey writer for thirteen years.
1 Acknowledgments 2 Introduction 3 1926, the Greatest of Them All 4 The Beginnings, the 1890s 5 Innovators and the Rough Rider, 1900-1909 6 Stop Dalton! Stop Oliphant! 1910-1919 7 Roaring Rivalry, 1920-1929 8 Crashes and Crowd-Pleasers, 1930-1939 9 Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside, 1940-1949 10 Upsets and Upheavals, 1950-1959 11 Navy's Heisman Heroes, 1960-1969 12 Mediocre Teams, Memorable Games, 1970-1979 13 Running to the Pros, 1980-1989 14 Rekindling the Rivalry, 1990-1999 15 Now More Than Ever, 2000-2004 16 War Zone: The SEAL and the Soldier 17 Army-Navy Lore 18 Classic Games 19 Sideline Strategists 20 The Stadiums: Of Bowls and Vets and Dumps 21 Epilogue
Verlagsort |
Lanham |
Sprache |
englisch |
Maße |
154 x 236 mm |
Gewicht |
494 g |
Themenwelt
|
Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Sport ► Ballsport |
ISBN-10 |
1-58979-277-7 / 1589792777 |
ISBN-13 |
978-1-58979-277-7 / 9781589792777 |
Zustand |
Neuware |