The Price
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
“An explosive tell-all book.”—Sports Illustrated
“This is a must-read masterpiece.”—Paul Finebaum, ESPN college football analyst and New York Times bestselling author
Two of the nation’s most respected sports journalists team up for a vital, hard-hitting investigation into the tumultuous state of big-time college football.
We are living in the Wild West of college sports. Name, Image and Likeness endorsements, the transfer portal, collectives, conference realignment, the powerful influence of media companies have all rendered the notion of amateur athletics a quaint relic of the past, replaced by a Brave New World where money and self-interest rule.
The Price is a sweeping, in-depth, thought-provoking look at an inflection point in big-time college football. Six time New York Times bestselling author Armen Keteyian and award-winning national college football reporter John Talty conducted more than two hundred wide-ranging interviews with head coaches, athletic directors, conference commissioners, administrators, politicians, power brokers, agents and media executives from one corner of the sport to the other. They reveal never-before-reported details on major players such as Nick Saban, Jim Harbaugh, Kirby Smart, Jimbo Fisher, and Lane Kiffin. Keteyian and Talty’s reporting also lays bare the machinations that destroyed the historic conference that was the Pac-12, purely in the name of greed.
As the sport’s premier coaches race for the exits, Keteyian and Talty reveal deep, dark truths about a beloved game under siege—and the financial, physical, emotional and psychological toll taken on everyone whose dreams and fortunes often depend on the final score on a Saturday afternoon.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Esteemed sports journalists Armen Keteyian and John Talty use The Price to take an exhaustive look at the radical changes that have sent college football cartwheeling into a new reality. The advent of more lenient transfer rules and Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) payments have given more power to players and upended the way coaches and administrators have done business for decades. Subsequent ramifications for big names like Nick Saban and John Harbaugh are covered, but so is the far-reaching impact on non-powerhouse schools like Arizona and Maryland. The unseemly recruiting of quarterbacks Nico Iamaleava and Jaden Rashada proves that paying players more aboveboard does not mean that universities and their boosters aren’t still capable of being underhanded. Will Damron’s unadorned narration fits perfectly with the gravity of college football’s precarious position. The future of college athletics is impossible to predict, but Keteyian and Talty make certain that the seismic shift of recent years is thoroughly captured for posterity.