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One Great Game: Two Teams, Two Dreams, in the First Ever National Championship High School Football Game » (First Atria Books Hardcover Edition)

Book cover image of One Great Game: Two Teams, Two Dreams, in the First Ever National Championship High School Football Game by Don Wallace

Authors: Don Wallace
ISBN-13: 9780743446211, ISBN-10: 0743446216
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: September 2003
Edition: First Atria Books Hardcover Edition

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Author Biography: Don Wallace


Don Wallace is an award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in Harper's, The New York Times, and dozens of other publications. A graduate of the Iowa Writers Workshop, he is the Michener Prize-winning author of the novels Hot Water and Log of Matthew Roving. He lives in New York City with his family.

Book Synopsis


For more than a century, no Number 1 and Number 2 high schoolfootball team had ever met -- until October 6, 2001

One Great Game

This is the story of two teams -- Concord De La Salle, a private Catholic school in an upscale Northern California suburb, and Long Beach Poly, a proud public institution from a blue-collar SoCal seaport -- striving to achieve the same goal: the all-American dream.

In this supercharged account of the first-ever national high-school championship game, acclaimed sports journalist -- and former Poly varsity football player -- Don Wallace goes out onto the field and straight into the heart of each team. One Great Game offers a rare look at the world of young-adult sportsmanship, featuring up-close and personal interviews with the team players and their families, coaches and cheerleaders, rabid fans and sworn enemies. The result is a powerful piece of sports literature in the tradition of the classic Friday Night Lights. More than a book about football, One Great Game is an engaging cultural history about twenty-first-century American life.

Publishers Weekly

On October 6, 2001, two California high school football teams played in what turned out to be the first, and perhaps the only, national championship high school football game. The De La Salle Spartans and the Long Beach Poly Jackrabbits came into the season as the two top-ranked teams in high school football, according to USA Today polls and various sports polls throughout the country. Wallace, who played for Poly in the late 1960s, skillfully chronicles the stories of these two football powerhouses. De La Salle, which sported the nation's longest winning streak at 113 games, is an all-male, predominantly white, Catholic high school in the wealthy northern California suburb of Concord. Long Beach Poly is an urban, inner-city high school with tremendous racial diversity, whose more famous graduates include Cameron Diaz and Snoop Dogg. With his journalist's eye, Wallace (author of the novel Hot Water) interviews the coaches and players of each team as they prepare for the 2001 season and the game that became known as the national championship. In a fast-paced narrative, he gives a play-by-play account of the game. Although Poly seems to have a physical edge over De La Salle, the latter keep their winning streak alive with a 27-15 win. Unfortunately, Wallace never makes it clear why this game was called the national championship game, especially because it was the teams' fifth game of the season, not the final one, other than that two top-ranked teams faced each other. Overall, though, Wallace's well-told story of this season and the game captures the emotions of everyone involved in the quest to be a winning team. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Table of Contents


Contents

Prologue

One: Rumors

Two: Out Where the West Begins

Three: "What a Place for Children!"

Four: The Ambush

Five: The Clash

Six: God's Team

Seven: Minor Miracles

Eight: Something in the Water

Nine: Calm Before the Storm

Ten: Sour Rhubarb

Eleven: Precious Blood

Twelve: Fall

Thirteen: Minority Rules

Fourteen: The Shortest Season

Fifteen: Prelude in G(ames) Minor

Sixteen: Seven Days

Seventeen: Twenty-four Hours

Eighteen: A Parade

Nineteen: Vets

Twenty: The Game Don't Wait

Twenty-one: Go Tell the Spartans

Twenty-two: Still Time for a Hero

Twenty-three: Send in the Clones

Twenty-four: After the Fall

Twenty-five: Points After

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

Subjects