BAM!
John Madden, the NFL Explosion, and the Video Game that Changed Sports
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- Pre-Order
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- Expected 13 Oct 2026
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- 159,00 kr
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- Pre-Order
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- 159,00 kr
Publisher Description
How John Madden—never the winningest coach, the most polished broadcaster, or the loudest executive in the room—became the NFL’s most influential figure, fueling the league’s rise from the broadcast booth to Madison Avenue to video games, while quietly grappling with football’s human cost, a reckoning born the day opposing player Darryl Stingley was paralyzed on his watch
John Madden retired abruptly from coaching in 1979, at forty-two years old—five months after receiver Darryl Stingley’s paralyzing injury against his Raiders. That moment would never leave him. And he had no intention of entering broadcasting. Yet within a decade, he would become the most recognizable voice in football and the catalyst behind the NFL’s explosion into America’s most powerful sports league.
In BAM!, veteran sports journalist Scott Howard-Cooper reveals how Madden arrived at exactly the right moment. Television reshaped sports, cable networks emerged, and the NFL needed a translator to turn complex strategy into entertainment. Madden didn’t just analyze football; he reinvented how it was explained, watched, and loved. From innovations like the telestrator and pre-game film study to making Thanksgiving football a ritual, Madden changed sports television forever.
But BAM! goes beyond the booth, tracing Madden’s influence through advertising, network wars, labor crises, concussion debates, and the birth of the Madden NFL video-game franchise—which reshaped gaming and brought football to new generations. Even as he built the game into a cultural juggernaut, Madden wrestled with its human cost. Along the way, he emerges as brilliant, instinctive, anxious, conflicted, and profoundly devoted to the game.
BAM! is the story of how one rumpled, affable man became the connective tissue between football’s rise and its reckoning—between spectacle and player safety, promotion and responsibility—and why the NFL cannot stop invoking his name.