Americans are obsessed with football, yet they know little about the man
who shaped the game to make it uniquely technical, physical, and
'man-making' at once. Walter Camp, the "Father of American Football,"
was the foremost authority on American athletics and arguably the
greatest amateur American athlete of his time.
In Walter Camp: Football and the Modern Man,
Julie Des Jardins chronicles the life of the clock company executive
and self-made athlete who remade football and redefined the ideal man.
As a student at Yale University, Camp was a varsity letterman who led
the earliest efforts to codify the rules and organization of
football-including the line of scrimmage and "downs"-to make it distinct
from English rugby. He also invented the All-America Football Team and
wrote some of the first football fiction, guides, and sports page
coverage, making him the foremost popularizer of the game. Within a
decade American football was an obsession on college campuses of the
Northeast. By the turn of the century, it was a bona fide national
pastime.
Since the Civil War, college men of good breeding had
not a physical skirmish to harden them. They had grown soft, Americans
feared, both in body and attitude. Camp saw football as the antidote to
the degeneration of these young men. When massive numbers of college
football players enlisted to fight in World War I, Camp held them up as
proof that football turned men effective and courageous. His influence
over the game, however, was not always viewed as beneficial. Under his
watch, dozens of college and high school players were killed or maimed
on the gridiron. President Theodore Roosevelt urged him to reform
football to prevent administrators from banning it, but Camp was
ambivalent about removing the very physicality that made the game
man-making in his eyes. The criticism targeted at him over the
aggressiveness of football still haunts the game today.
In this
fast-paced biography, Julie Des Jardins shows how the "gentleman
athlete" was as much the arbiter of football as he was the arbiter of
modern manhood. Though eventually football took on meanings that Camp
never intended, his impact on the professional and college game is
simply unsurpassed.
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