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The Right Kind of Heroes: Coach Bob Shannon and the East St. Louis Flyers » (1st ed)

Book cover image of The Right Kind of Heroes: Coach Bob Shannon and the East St. Louis Flyers by Kevin Horrigan

Authors: Kevin Horrigan
ISBN-13: 9780945575702, ISBN-10: 094557570X
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill
Date Published: September 1992
Edition: 1st ed

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Author Biography: Kevin Horrigan

Book Synopsis

East St. Louis, Illinois, is arguably the most dangerous and desolate city in America, perhaps our starkest example of urban collapse. With the nation's highest murder rate, it's a city in which half of the 41,000 residents are unemployed and 75 percent receive public assistance. In a city where most young men wind up on the streets, in jail, or dead, the high school football coach has sent dozens of his players on to college on football scholarships. He has done it with hard work and absolute dedication to virtues that went out of style in East St. Louis decades ago. He's done it by refusing to desert boys who need his attention and discipline. "If I don't care about them, who will?" he asks. This is the story of Coach Bob Shannon and the East St. Louis Flyers. It is a true story about a coach who won't give up and a team that has beaten all the odds. Author Kevin Horrigan, former sports editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, tells this story by focusing on two heartstopping seasons - 1990, when the Flyers lost the state championship, and 1991, when they won it back. He tells it from up close. We are there on the bench with the boys and their coach for every game. We follow them into the pitiful excuse for a locker room to hear the coach's credo firsthand: "Get it done." No water for the sinks, the toilets, the urinals? Try upstairs. No toilet paper? Bring your own. No money for new uniforms? Wear the old ones until they are rags. Get it done. Just get the job done. Coach Shannon has gotten the job done right for twenty-three years. In his fifteen seasons as East St. Louis High's head coach, the Flyers have won 152 of 173 games and the state championship six times. The Sporting News has named Shannon the High School Coach of the Year five times. This is the story of the kind of battle being waged at the core of many American cities - the power of human pride pitted against the power of poverty. In East St. Louis, pride is winning, inch by inch, with a coach an

Publishers Weekly

In the crime- and drug-infested inner city of East St. Louis, Ill., high-school coach Bob Shannon has welded his football team, the Flyers, into a precision force, leading them to six state championships in 15 seasons. Born in a shack in Mississippi, Shannon, who is black, lectures players about commitment, character and the danger of drugs, promoting the values of hard effort and teamwork in a city rife with unemployment, crack and violence. Football, to this blunt, aloof disciplinarian, is a means to an end--a way for kids to get out of East St. Louis or to stay there on their own terms. Horrigan, a St. Louis radio broadcaster and former sports columnist, takes readers through the Flyers' 1990 and 1991 seasons, interweaving profiles of players, a history of East St. Louis and an account of the outspoken Shannon's run-ins with local politicians and school officials. The result is a quietly inspirational testament to an achiever whose favorite phrase is ``Get it done.'' Author tour. (Sept.)

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