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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN num: 9781400081400
ISBN number: 1400081408
Label: Three Rivers Press
Manufacturer: Three Rivers Press
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 320
Printing Date: August 28, 2007
Publishing house: Three Rivers Press
Release Date: August 28, 2007
Sale Popularity Level: 182297
Studio: Three Rivers Press
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Rated by buyers
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This item arrived quickly and in good condition. This is more 'times' than 'life', but the combination works well and delivers a great book.
Rated by buyers
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When I read that Unitas was receiving a new biography I was very excited. After reading many great sports-related books in the past few years (Maraniss' "When Pride Still Mattered," Kriegel's "Namath," Barra's "The Last Coach," and everything by Halberstam), I just knew that Unitas had to be getting his just due. Sadly, this is not the case. I can't believe the favorable reviews for this book! There is nothing new that is not found in others concerning the Colts and Unitas. The '58 Championship and Super Bowl III make up the majority of this book--who hasn't heard, read, or seen everything there is to know about these games? The author had the opportunity to fill in the gaps between and after these events, but fails to do so.
More attention could have been paid to Unitas' other 2 MVP years--1964 & 1967. Also, a fuller account of the politics surrounding Unitas' demise in Baltimore would have been interesting. A frank post-career history should have been included--I'd like to know how he was screwed by his business partners as much as how his kids thought he was a great dad.
All-in-all just a major disappointemnt. I really thought the author kind of mailed it in on this one.
Too bad. Johnny Unitas was the greatest, and he deserved a better treatment.
Rated by buyers
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It's not often that a book can "transport" the reader back to the time and with the feeling that they experienced at the time the depicted events were happening but "Johnny U" does just that.
As a kid growing up in a town on Maryland's Eastern Shore, the Colts were our team and Johnny U was our man. In our neighborhood, every kid who took his turn at QB in a vacant lot game became "Johnny U" (or Berry or "the Horse").
As I read this book, the times, the excitement, the flavor of that era once again became real to me. If you were a Colts fan during the time of Johnny U, you can feel it. If you are a younger fan of football, you can get a real flavor of the game and the place of that time.
It was a time when the Quarterback was the field general, calling most if not all the plays. It was the time before the "spike" when a QB in the two minute drill called 2 plays in the huddle and executed them both for gains or a win. It was a time when the sideline was the 12th man on the field and it was a time when your QB (#19) put the ball where only his teammate could catch it and stop the clock at the same time. We never seemed to worry if the Colts were down by less than 14 points at the 2 minute warning. Johnny U and company could (and often did) still pull out a win.
If you are a football lover or sports fan who wants an excellent history book, it doesn't get any better than "Johnny U".
Rated by buyers
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I couldn't put this one down! Almost made me late to work. Easy to read, bringing great names to life. As I read, I came to feel that I personally knew Unitas, Nomellini, Tittle, and the rest. It makes me sad that the days of "smash-mouth" football are gone!
Rated by buyers
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I wasn't around in the days of Unitas but reading this book gives one a feel of what life was like in the 1950's NFL and it definitely gives us a good look at Unitas the man.
Johnny Unitas comes across as a legend and leader. What more could a team or nation want from a sportsman?
If you want to read a good, solid book and get a fair bit of hero worship (not a bad thing), then this is the book to read.
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