Jim Dent, "New York Times" bestselling author of "The Junction Boys,"
pens the story of Texas high school football integration, and the three
men who put together a championship teamJim Dent takes readers
to the heart of the Texas gridiron with the incredible story of the
state's high school football intergration. In the summer of 1964, a high
school all-star team lost the most significant football game in Texas'
proud history to the Pennsylvania Big 33 squad. Three months later,
Coach Bobby Layne met with the governor, determined to prevent another
loss. His important request: authorization to recruit black all-stars
for his new squad.
It was an ambitious plan: Texas high school
football, launched in 1910, was dominated by white players, even though
the state was flush with great black stars, some of whom would become
the most notable players in the history of the NFL. And Layne's scheme
never would have worked without two very special young men
--happy-go-lucky quarterback Bill Bradley, and his Big 33 roommate,
Jerry "the Jet" Le Vias, a speedy receiver who was also the first black
athlete to sign to a letter-of-intent with a Southwest Conference
school, SMU. Bradley looked out for Le Vias--one of only three black
players chosen for the team--uniting the integrated team. Together--and
with Layne's indomitable will to win--the two led their team to
triumphant victory in Hershey park. With this moving story, reminiscent
of Remember The Titans, Jim Dent once again brings readers to cheers and
tears with a truly American tale of leadership, brotherhood, and good
old Friday Night Lights style football.
Check Catalog
Sports
You can click the links to check availability.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment