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108 of 113 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A touchdown
I became a Michael Lewis fan years ago when I read Liar's Poker. Fan may be too strong a word. I realized then that I enjoyed his style and so when browsing the book store, and with the movie trailers out, seeing that the book was by Lewis, i decided to give it a shot.

I was not disappointed. Lewis has a way of writing that brings something which you are not...
Published on November 4, 2009 by David Wilkin

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28 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Strange Brew: Hoop Dreams and Moneyball
I picked this up after reading the excerpt in SI and thinking, "man, that would make a great book!" Well, not quite great. Then again, this wasn't that book. If you read the SI excerpt and were looking for 300 pages of economic analysis on the value of the left tackle and the allocation of payroll resources in a salary capped NFL, you'll have to settle for 50 pages of the...
Published on November 2, 2006 by J. A. Walsh


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108 of 113 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A touchdown, November 4, 2009
By 
David Wilkin (La Habra Heights, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
I became a Michael Lewis fan years ago when I read Liar's Poker. Fan may be too strong a word. I realized then that I enjoyed his style and so when browsing the book store, and with the movie trailers out, seeing that the book was by Lewis, i decided to give it a shot.

I was not disappointed. Lewis has a way of writing that brings something which you are not a part of into your life and make you one with it. Some of his short works i still find that I remember vividly, twenty years later and recite from on occasion.

Here we have an encouraging story of a young black boy who really has nothing in his life but his athletic ability. We have a good family that certainly does not need to exploit the boy. So they did what we all should want to do if our situations allowed, take the boy in and help. But the story is not just about that, it covers the evolution of football, these last thirty to forty years as marquee quarterbacks, or productive west-coast offense systems come into play.

In essence it is two books because of that, and it is what makes the story. I had to call my football buddy up half-way through and tell him I had a book he needed to read. Now I have to watch a game and wonder what the left tackle is doing.

This book was a very good read, and well worth the time and effort. It may not be as fun ultimately as Playing for Pizza by Grisham, but it is pretty good in its own way.
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250 of 275 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Multiple Stories, All Good, September 26, 2006
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An incredible human interest story detailed further below but first.........the author of Liar's Poker and Moneyball is at it again with an offbeat interesting subject, or multiple subjects which are intertwined. This is an analysis of the evolution of the left side tackle designed to protect the quarterback's blind side, particularly from the evolution of speed rushers in the Lawrence Taylor mode. Lewis starts with an in depth analysis of Joe Theisman's famous leg break with some interesting facts even Joe didn't remember including who may really have been responsible. Separate stories are then presented of the new prototype Left Tackles like Jonathan Ogden whose investment banker father showed him that his value at Left Tackle would out way any interest in playing college basketball for his 6'9" son. This part of the book is intertwined with a historical perspective of how the passing game developed mainly through the Bill Walsh West Coast offense which downplays the significance of the quarterback. This section of the book is intertwined around the personal story to be described and while extremely interesting to football fans will have virtually NO appeal the typical female fan or other casual fans.

But what will be of greater human interest is the overlay of the story of Michael Oher, the "man/child" currently playing football at Ole Miss. Oher shows up at a predominantly white Christian school in the 9th grade with virtually no school history and horrible family background. An incredibly shy 350 pound kid struggles but ingratiates himself to faculty and staff and manages to stick around. Finally one Thanksgiving Day a volunteer assistant coach and his wife see him at a bus stop in his usual shorts and recognize that in addition to no money for food, he is traveling to the gym to watch practice just to be in a heated room. Through incredible acts of kindness and caring this young man is taken in by this wealthy Christian family who attempt to socialize and educate him for the future.

But little did they realize that at 6' 6" with an incredible frame and quick feet, football coaches would see their answer to possibly the most important position on the football field and they would relentlessly come calling. This presents many problems as Oher has virtually no chance of attending college with his past educational background. Thus begins the odyssey of the recruiting wars for this individual who by the end of high school has been called the best pro prospect even though he has played in only 15 football games.

This portion of the book dominates approximately 70% of the book. It is incredibly touching and I certainly applaud the sympathetic, caring approach by Leigh Ann and Sean Tuohy. This book is not just for football fans as the issues here are much greater. How does a child get to the 9th grade with virtually no retention of knowledge or ability to function in a social setting? What can a change in culture and caring do for this young man? And other questions will also appear such as is their potential ulterior motives for selecting this student out of so many and wasn't the final steps to eligibility really inappropriate? As to my opinion I choose to believe that the Tuohy's were interested in helping another human being, and in the process, it enriched the lives of their family, this young man and the possibilities that a loving, caring environment can create.

I strongly recommend this book for football fans, sociologists, and people with interest in politics, religion, or Southern Culture as there are many issues intertwined. Once again, the weakness to this book may be that he narrowed its focus by making it a "sports book". It's not. Its main message concerns underprivileged kids and how a change in environment can produce incredible results.

As a matter of disclosure, I live in Memphis, have leased Tuohy's his plane in the past and have many mutual friends. He and his wife have exceptional reputations and I applaud their involvement in helping this man.
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71 of 79 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Inspirational Story, September 25, 2006
By 
Jevon Jaconi (Luxemburg, WI USA) - See all my reviews
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Like in Moneyball and Liar's Poker, Michael Lewis examines a culture, e.g., baseball, stock market, and now football, while interspersing a biography illuminating the underlying culture.

In this case, Mr. Lewis shows how the left tackle position has rose from obscurity in the 1960s into one of the highest-paid positions in the current game. The initial focus is in how specialized a person must be to play this position as the highest level (more rare than many other positions). After this description, Mr. Lewis introduces us to Michael Oher, a person who has all of the physical tools and then some but has never played organized sports and has basically been abandoned since early childhood.

The people (parents, coaches, etc.) all want to help Mr. Oher fulfill his potential. However, it doesn't come off as being completely altrusitic as all benefit whom are in his presence, e.g., coach parlays his involvement into a college coaching position. In addition, the recruiting battles for Mr. Oher's services amplify these traits.

His adoptive parents and coaches seem angelic compared to the NCAA in this story. One of the most sobering statitistics quoted in this book is that only one of five players capable of playing in the NFL ever make through the legal and educational morass that is the NCAA.

It's hard not to root for Mr. Oher and I would think we'll see his name at the top of the draft board in 2007-2008. Excellent book and highly recommended.
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30 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beyond the Game of Football, October 16, 2006
As both an avid sports fan and reader of sports literature I found this to be by far the most outstanding sports related book I've ever read. (I've read lots of them)
Michael Lewis does a superb job of combining football statistics with human life drama as he chronicles the serendepidous coming together of the Touhy family and Michael Oher and all that follows.
If you love big time college football you'll enjoy reading about recruiting tactics of big time coaches, i.e. Fullmer, Saban, & others.
If you love NFL football you'll enjoy the statistical based reasoned explanation of how the game has evolved & changed over the past couple of decades. Throw in descriptions of personalities about prominent NFL people, i.e. Walsh, Ogden, Wallace, and others and you have a statistical based explanation with a genuine human approach.
Lewis is "Grishamesque" in his treatment of Michael Oher - I'm pulling for Michael to become an all pro left tackle.
Details of Michael's struggles, perserverance and successes brought tears to my eyes. Details of the Touhy family's care and nurturing of Michael reinforced my belief in the good of mankind. The world needs more people like them!!
Michael's final encounter with Antonio Turner caused me to jump to my feet, thrust my fist into the air and say, YES!!!!
This book is an incredible read about life, fate,big time sports and the economic value of highly skilled athletes. It is also about something more - the great economic and cultural divide in this country as evidenced by Urban America in general and Hurt Village and Dixie Homes in particular. Political leaders and public policy makers should read this book - it strikes at the heart of one of our country's greatest challenges in the 21st century - how do we close the gap between the "haves and have nots?"
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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Michael Lewis' great book is more than just the tale of Michael Oher, November 30, 2009
There are some off-base reviews here of people who loved the movie and figured that Michael Lewis' book would be the perfect follow-up. For those people, please note: the movie is BASED ON the book. Movie != Book. The movie represents just one thread of Lewis' excellent work. The sub-title of Lewis' work is "Evolution of a Game." Lewis' main thesis is hinted at in the brief voice-over that Sandra Bullock (in the persona of Leigh Anne Tuohy) provides at the outset of the film: that if the quarterback is the highest-paid position in the game, then the evolution of the game is that the second highest-paid position is the one that provides insurance to that position: the left tackle....the gentleman that protects the quarterback's blind side. Michael Oher is then presented as someone with the potential - five years in the future at of the time of Lewis' research - to assume that role in the NFL. Thus, at the time of Lewis' tale, we come to understand why he's such a heavily recruited commodity. From there, Lewis peels back the onion and we come to know of Oher's upbringing and the role of the Tuohy family.

I have to admit: I went in cynical about what to expect in the movie, fearing the worst. But director John Lee Hancock does a wonderful job here extracting the essence of Oher's tale. Because let's face it: the rest of Lewis' book - while fascinating to those of us interested in the sport - doesn't translate well to the screen. But of Oher's tale: it seems the stuff of a Hollywood movie. And it has the added benefit of being the truth. But, again, all credit here to director Hancock: I had hoped throughout the film that he'd have the good sense to finish the tale in the most powerful manner possible: by showing footage of the real Michael Oher selected in the 1st round of the NFL draft. And, that's exactly what Hancock does - followed up by a series of emotional photos provided by the Tuohy family. [Stay for the credits to see them.]

One note about where the book and movie are very divergent: the role of Sean Tuohy. In the movie, Sandra Bullock's Leigh Anne Tuohy is the driving force and Tim McGraw's Sean - while agreeable - seems along for the ride. Readers of the book know this is far from the case. Lewis cites Tuohy's special connection to high-school athletes and mentoring personality. Plus, what readers of the book don't see: how Michael Lewis happened upon this story in the first place - he and Sean Tuohy are childhood friends and high school classmates.
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An unusual, interesting, moving, slice of American life, December 4, 2006
I really enjoyed this book, read it one sitting, and then read all of the reviews just to justify continuing to think about it. Some of the reviewers didn't rate the book as highly as I did, but I can understand their complaints. The (minor, in my opinion) errors of fact are annoying, but probably only to a pretty serious football fan. And yes, if you consider the title only narrowly, you might be disappointed to find a book that is not just about football strategy and how the game has evolved. But, and I may be stretching a bit here, if you consider the title more metaphorically, there are other "blind sides" and "evolutions" at work here than just right-handed quarterbacks and the role of left-tackles.

I love football and probably have a slightly higher-than-average knowledge of the game (for a chick who was never allowed to play on a real team!) but this book taught me a few things about both the game and the business of football, on the college and professional levels.

Another "blind side" is the view of some serious holes in our society: that such desperate poverty exists alongside such immense wealth; that a child can be lost for YEARS without housing, education, health care, or any measure of security; that most of us really ought to be both more generous and more clear-minded about our responsibilities to each other and our ability to be of use. For me, this book's view of the generous acceptance, and the limits of the generosity and acceptance of a Southern Evangelical Christian community was alone worth the price of admission.

And perhaps "evolution" also includes the gaming of the ridiculous NCAA eligibility/compensation system, the dance of altruism and self-interest among some of the characters, and the growth of the young man at the heart of the story. But maybe I'm over-reaching.

I'm thinking of the old expression "neither flesh nor fowl nor good red herring." This book is like that; it's about a lot of different ideas. I think Michael Lewis does a terrific job of telling the story, without a tidy conclusion and without telling us the motivations of the people involved, instead letting us decide.

Personally, I applaud the Touhy family, here's a quote from the book by the adoptive mother: "I want a building...we're going to open a foundation that's only going to help out kids with athletic ability who don't have the academics to go to college. Screw the NCAA. I don't care what people say. I don't care if they say we're only interested in them because they're good at sports. Sports is all we know about."

If you want just one thing from a book, a football strategy guide, a tale of unlikely success, or a primer on Ole Miss, you might be disappointed. But if you want to take a deeper, closer look at a piece of our society (and you don't think that sports are a waste of time) I think you will be richly rewarded by this book. I was.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Womens Book Club Winner, September 9, 2009
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This review is from: The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game (Paperback)
Our womens Book Club is based on a group of middle aged women in a Methodist Sunday School class in Texas. We selected the Blind Side for our book this month. It was a huge success. The story is heartwarming and you finish the book (and the meeting) upbeat and hopeful. Only one member is a big football fan, but most of us work as teachers, lawyers, or in social services. The author did a wonderful job telling a compelling story of "the social services/education system" as well as the game of football and the left offensive tackle position (not that most of us could identify that position on the field, even after reading the book).Many, many laughs at our meeting concerning our ignorance which seasoned the other serious messages in the book concerning the hypocrisy of college athletics, the culture of poverty, and the Religious Right of the South. We recommend this to any womens book club.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Michael Lewis, Football, the Good Samaritan, & a Good "Rags to Riches" Story, December 29, 2006
If you like Michael Lewis, football, the biblical story of the Good Samaritan, or a good "rags to riches" story, you will love Lewis' latest work, "Blind Side." The book is the true story of Michael Oher, a black kid from the poorest, drug infested part of Memphis (Tennessee), who broke from the cycle of being hopelessly poor to making it as a highly recruited college football player. His is an unusual story because it was the white world that had so unusually aided and abetted his rise.

"Blind Side" tells the story of how Oher's odds in life changed dramatically with the help of a coach, Big Tony, who promised Oher's dying grandmother he would make sure Michael got a good Christian education. Big Tony landed Michael on the doorstep of a rich, evangelical, Republican Memphis family, the Touhy's. "He left a neighborhood in which he could drive all day without laying eyes on a white person for one where a black person was a bit of a curiousity."

Illiteracy, bad grades, car crashes, a night with the Memphis police, and NCAA investigation, men in the street who offered to become his agent could have all sent Oher back to his former home, Hurt village, the prison of his past, if it were not for his social connection to white people. Instead, the world that had once taken no notice of him was now so invested in him that it could not afford to see him fail.

The problem for Michael, as it is for many children mired in the world of poverty, was not intelligence, but rather, access to the system. While sports is the closest thing to a pure meritocracy in America, five of six public school kids with the ability to play college sports (the way out) fail to gain access due to academic disqualification. "Blind Side" is the story of academic and emotional support culminating in access.

Lewis is generous in developing the key figures in Michael's life. The book is full of interesting storylines relating to people responsible for his impoverished background, and for his unusual journey out of poverty. Lewis also devotes considerable space to the emergence of the left offensive tackle (he protects the "blind side") as the second most valued, after the quarterback, position in professional football. The rising importance of the left tackle position is another convergence that plays a key role in Michael's successful outcome.

"Blind Side" is a great, thought provoking read. It may challenge your thinking about those born into poverty and their inability to escape their environment to gain access.

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not football's Moneyball, but a great read nonetheless.., October 15, 2006
By 
JS Cutler (Massachusetts) - See all my reviews
If you are looking for the football version of Moneyball you might be a bit disppointed by Blind Side. It's not really that kind of book. (Indeed, there are few books that completely alter one's view of a subject the way Moneyball did) There are some interesting chapters about Bill Walsh and the innovations he brought to the offensive side of football, but Blind Side is much more of a human interest story. It's a highly readable and engaging story and it will surely make you pay more attention next time an Ole Miss game is on TV. I highly recommend it.
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33 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not the Disney version of Oher's story, November 23, 2009
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Warning to potential buyers: this book is not the text version of the Sandra Bullock movie, which from the trailers appears to have simplified the story down to Disney level. This is a book about football first and foremost, with the story of Michael Oher interwoven.

The author begins by providing a history of the economy for specific types of NFL players using anecdotes and data about changing trends in football. This is all done so that we can understand how Michael Oher's arrival on the football scene became such a sensation, and also quite possibly for the love of the game as well. I found these parts of the book incredibly educational and enlightening.

The story then begins to focus on Oher himself. This tale is not as simple as the movie would perhaps have you believe. As much as my heart would love to think that the Touhy family saw him sitting on the side of the road, brought him home, and adopted him, this book makes it clear that it was not that simple. Without telling the entire story, it definitely left me wondering what would have happened to Michael Oher if he couldn't play football, and for me, called into question a bit the Touhy's motivations. Oher must be an absolutely brilliant young man if he improved academically in the way described in the book; but these talents are not encouraged by the Touhys except as a way to get into college so he can play ball. Then again, that may just be the whole point of the book--the power of football.

Overall, I really enjoyed the book's primer on the history of player market value in the NFL, as well as the background on coaching styles. To football diehards this information may be old news but it's worth a second look. Finally, regarding the Oher part of the book, I confess that I was not left with a great impression of the Touhy family. However, the author's analysis of the nuances involved in this story was appreciated far more than the sanitized version.
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The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game
The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game by Michael Lewis (Paperback - September 17, 2007)
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