The Soul of Basketball
The Epic Showdown Between LeBron, Kobe, Doc, and Dirk That Saved the NBA
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- 11,99 €
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- 11,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
“A fascinating, thorough look at pro basketball’s continuing evolution to becoming the ‘sport of the American Dream.’”—Publishers Weekly
The Soul of Basketball tells the story of an NBA prodigy, his league, and their sport in the throes of crisis during the pivotal 2010-11 season. It began with The Decision, that infamous televised moment when uber-star LeBron James revealed that he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers—thereby distancing himself from his role model Michael Jordan—to pursue his first championship with his former opponents on the Miami Heat. To the great fortune of LeBron, the NBA, and basketball itself, the mission didn’t work out as planned. In this book, veteran NBA writer Ian Thomsen portrays the NBA as a self-correcting society in which young LeBron is forced to absorb hard truths inflicted by his rivals Kobe Bryant, Doc Rivers, and Dirk Nowitzki, in addition to lessons set forth by Pat Riley, Gregg Popovich, Larry Bird, David Stern, Joey Crawford, and many more.
Brimming with inside access, The Soul of Basketball tells the inspiring story of LeBron’s loneliest year, insecure and uncertain, when his ultimate foe was an unlikely immigrant who renewed the American game’s ideals. From Miami to Boston, Los Angeles to Dallas, Germany to the NBA’s Manhattan headquarters, the biggest names in basketball are driven by something more valuable than money and fame—a quest that would pave the way for Stephen Curry, Kevin Durant, and future generations to thrive.
“Ian Thomsen provides an antidote to the fast-food, twitter feed of instant information consumption…deft prose and snappy anecdotes…Great, great stuff.”—Leigh Montville, New York Times-bestselling author of Sting Like a Bee
“A fine work of sports journalism.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Through an array of profiles, NBA.com contributor Thomsen insightfully examines the 2010 2011 NBA season, which saw players and coaches negotiating the league's rise in popularity, massive financial success, and increased marketing savvy. Realizing that the NFL and MLB had "recognized their own symbolism" ("Baseball was peace. Football was war"), the NBA board questioned what its "higher calling" might be. Thomsen focuses on four key players he believed helped, knowingly or not, NBA's mission. Veteran Celtics coach Doc Rivers tried to maintain his team's winning team-first tradition in an era when players were more concerned with individual accomplishments; superstar LeBron James turned the scrappy inner-city narrative into unheard-of success, but experienced backlash when he announced on his vanity show The Decision that he was leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers for the Miami Heat; Kobe Bryant early on emulated Michael Jordan, but because of accusations of sexual assault, instead followed the "controversial path of Jordan's adversary Isiah Thomas"; and Dallas Mavericks' Dirk Nowitzki was the underdog who became a star. Thomsen's ability to get personal, especially with unlikely sources, will hook readers, as when he captures the stoic Larry Bird gushing over LeBron James's otherworldly skills, proclaiming him "the one guy I could watch play basketball all day long." By thoughtfully plumbing the NBA's biggest names, Thomsen offers a fascinating, thorough look at pro basketball's continuing evolution to becoming the "sport of the American Dream."