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The Last Coach: A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant
 
 
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The Last Coach: A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant [Hardcover]

Allen Barra (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 11, 2005
The explosive biography of the greatest college football coach in history.

When Paul William "Bear" Bryant died on January 26, 1983, it was the lead story on the all three networks' evening news. New York City newspapers reported his death on their front pages. ("Crimson Tears," read the headline in the New York Post, "Nation weeps over death of legendary Bear Bryant, 69.") Three days later, America watched in awe as an estimated quarter of a million mourners lined the fifty-five mile stretch from Tuscaloosa to a Birmingham cemetery to pay their respects as his three-mile long funeral cortege drove by.

President Reagan and the three former American presidents sent flowers, as did people as diverse as Bob Hope, ABC's Roone Arledge, advice columnist Ann Landers and the Reverend Billy Graham. Scores of Bryant's former players, including Joe Namath, Lee Roy Jordan, Ken Stabler and Ozzie Newsome, were in attendance. So were Bryant's most distinguished colleagues, the greatest living football coaches, including Southern Cal's John McKay, who said, "It was like a presidential funeral procession. No coach in America could have gotten that. No coach but him. But then, he wasn't just a coach. He was the coach."

Bryant's passing was noted with the kind of reverence our country reserved for statesmen or military leaders, though Paul "Bear" Bryant had insisted for much of his life that he was "just a football coach." For millions he was much more, he was the greatest coach the game ever saw, the heir to the tradition established by Knute Rockne. He took his Alabama Crimson Tide teams to an unmatched six national championships. But to the players, journalists and fans whose lives he touched in his more than half a century as a player and coach, he was the last symbol of values that transcended football—courage, discipline, loyalty, and hard work.

To his critics, Bryant represented the dark side of big-time college football—brutality, fanaticism and blind adherence to authority. The real Bear Bryant was far more complex than either his admirers or detractors knew. While maintaining a public friendship with Alabama governor George Wallace, he continually sought ways to undermine the governor's segregationist policies, finally forcing a legendary football game in Birmingham with the University of Southern California that opened the floodgates to the integration of football at the University of Alabama, including its coaching staff. Old fashioned in his politics, he was nonetheless an admirer of Robert Kennedy, whom he planning to vote for in 1968.

Allen Barra's The Last Coach traces Paul Bryant's rise from a family of truck farmers to recognition as the most successful and influential coach in the game's history. The eleventh of thirteen children, Bryant was born in tiny Moro Bottom, Arkansas in 1913 and grew up in nearby Fordyce—where his legend was born when he wrestled a live bear on the stage of a local theater. Paul was raised by his mother, who barely managed to keep him out of trouble and on the Fordyce High School Redbugs long enough to get a football scholarship at Alabama, where he would meet and marry the love of his life, campus beauty queen Mary Harmon Black.

At the height of the Depression, football took Bryant to the Rose Bowl with Alabama's 1934 national champions and on to a career as an assistant and, finally, a head football coach, where he matched wit and grit with the greatest coaches of two generations, men like Tennessee's General Robert Neyland, Oklahoma's Bud Wilkinson, Notre Dame's Ara Parseghian, Ohio State's Woody Hayes, and Penn State's Joe Paterno. Along the way, he stirred controversy with his infamous "Junction Boys" training camp in 1954, during which almost two-thirds of the Texas A&M football team quit; his legal battle with The Saturday Evening Post over the accusation that he had conspired to fix a college football game, a trial which rocked the sports world; and his pursuit of Amos Alonzo Stagg's all-time record for college coaching victories.

Through it all, Bryant's influence has not only endured but prevailed as his former players and assistants continue to define the best in not only college but professional football. 32 pages of photographs.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. This meticulous, fascinating look at the life of the legendary "Bear" Bryant (1913–1983), longtime head football coach of the University of Alabama's fearsome "Crimson Tide," will further enhance the reputation of Barra (Clearing the Bases) as one of America's finest sportswriters. It begins with a powerful and unsentimental view of Bryant's difficult childhood in Moro Bottom, Ark., an area Barra describes as "the reality of which Al Capp's Dogpatch, the home of L'il Abner, was the hideous caricature." It ends with a moving description of Bryant's death, just 27 days after his final game and retirement, and the three-mile-long funeral procession viewed by an estimated quarter of a million people. In between, Barra covers Bryant's rise as a cultural and sports icon whose influence helped transform college football "from a game with a large cult following into the most lucrative spectator sport in the world." Among the many incidents Barra deftly explores are Bryant's hesitancy—followed by his thoroughness—in integrating the Alabama team (in 1971), and his visionary use of televised games in the early 1960s—which he accomplished with ABC sports broadcasting superstar Roone Arledge, then a 29-year-old rookie—to establish himself and his team (including flamboyant players such as Joe Namath) in the minds of a national sports audience. Throughout, Barra illuminates the complexities of what he sees as Bryant's legacies: "his intensity and will to win and his unshakable belief that these qualities, when applied to a higher purpose, can make you a better person." Photos.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Bear Bryant, who won more games as a college football coach than anyone except Joe Paterno, died in 1983, but he was recently catapulted back into national prominence via Jim Dent's best-selling Junction Boys (1999), an account of Bryant's first year at Texas A&M, and by the well-received HBO adaptation of Dent's book. Bryant was born in 1913 in a tiny Arkansas hamlet called Moro's Bottom. He was educated in nearby Fordyce, where he wrestled the vaudeville animal that earned him his nickname. Football got him into college, and he graduated to coaching, making stops at Kentucky and Texas A&M before moving to Alabama, where he earned his legendary status. Barra, a regular contributor to the New York Times and Wall Street Journal, meticulously researched Bryant's life, but his subject somewhat eludes him, perhaps because Bryant kept everything other than his public persona so well hidden. Still, anyone interested in the history of college football will want to read at least some of this book. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 608 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton (September 11, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393059820
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393059823
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (39 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #866,627 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

39 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (39 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant told in a Humanistic Manner, August 24, 2005
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This review is from: The Last Coach: A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant (Hardcover)
For those how have lived in the State of Alabama during the last half of the 20th Century, there is no escaping the presence of Coach Paul W. "Bear" Bryant. As a fan of the University of Alabama's sports programs, a graduate of the University, a football season ticket holder, friend of the author, and a person who assisted the author in obtaining a minor amount of the information that went into this ambitious undertaking, I am somewhat hesitant to publicly write anything about it. However, it is also with that particular knowledge, that I know what I say may mean more to others.

I have always had an interest in biographies. Whether they be of Eddie Rickenbacker, George F. Kaufmann or, even, Harpo Marx, biographies held my facination from an early age. With Coach Bryant, the books purporting to give one the "insight" into his persona could fill-up several shelves in ones bookcase. Some retell the story John Underwood undertook in the 1970's with Coach Bryant in BEAR. Others talk of specific instances and moments the author and Coach Bryant shared. Still, others discuss his humor, his quotations, his ______ (you fill-in the blank). With THE LAST FOOTBALL COACH, Allen Barra has taken a very complex man, who had values that he adhered to throughout his life, and has written as thorough a book on Coach Bryant as will ever be written.

As a biography, it is not a book that dwells on the Coach's life as one who is infallible, yet it does not shy away from those infamous qualities Coach Bryant's detractors were quick to bring-up: his brutal practices, his drinking, his mistakes.

Allen Barra, whom I have known since his days as the Entertainment Editor of the UAB KALEIDOSCOPE in the early 1970's, is a gifted writer, but I have to tell you, most of his stuff is complicated as heck. The comparison of this baseball player from this era with another player from another era. I mean, I understand him, but if I am going to be using that much energy understanding what I read, I might as well be picking-out stocks that will produce a 200% profit in two years. HOWEVER, and this is a big, in more ways than one, "however," with THE LAST FOOTBALL COACH, Allen Barra has crossed the threshold to being an author who will make a difference in other's lives: those young men and women who read this book, whether they be football players or not, will understand just a little bit better, what went into being the "Last Football Coach," a man not too big to climb down from his tower to show a guard or an end how to "do it right."

I would recommend this book to anyone who loves the college football game and would like to have a lot of insight into what made Coach Bryant click. As a bonus, well to me it's a bonus, you get to read how Coach Bryant gave one ten-year-old, me, a "try out," as I imagine he gave a thousand other boys try outs, with an intensity and focus that made one ten-year-old boy want to "do it just a little bit better for the coach."
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sports Book of The Year, October 22, 2005
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C. Paikert "C Paikert" (South Orange, New Jersey) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Last Coach: A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant (Hardcover)
The best book on football I've ever read, pro or college. The best sports book of the year.The photos alone are worth the price.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Portrait of a True Leader, October 7, 2005
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This review is from: The Last Coach: A Life of Paul "Bear" Bryant (Hardcover)
In the spirit of Dave Maranaiss' When Pride Mattered, The Last Coach isn't so much a football book as a portrait of a true American original. Barra presents a nuanced portrayal of a man who was loved and feared in equal parts, and who could have been Governor of Alabama-if he got tired of being King.

While there's plenty of artfully described gridiron action in these pages, at its core this is a book about leadership as it is practiced in the real world, not in those 13-Steps-to-Excellence books that weigh down the shelf at your local bookseller.

The Last Coach is not only a great book, it's an important one, as well.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE STATE OF ALABAMA owes much to Graham MacNamee. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
most famous football coach, junction boys, houndstooth hat, crimson tide, college football history, wishbone offense, unlimited substitution, national championship team, beaten opponent, championship football team, greatest coach, head coaching job, bowl bid, football power, college football coach
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Bear Bryant, Notre Dame, Paul Bryant, Mary Harmon, Rose Bowl, Penn State, Sugar Bowl, Southern Cal, University of Alabama, New York, Georgia Tech, Joe Namath, Orange Bowl, Frank Thomas, Bud Wilkinson, Michigan State, Sports Illustrated, Mickey Herskowitz, Ohio State, General Neyland, George Wallace, Moro Bottom, New Orleans, Cotton Bowl, North Carolina
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