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The Gipper: George Gipp, Knute Rockne, and the Dramatic Rise of Notre Dame Football [Hardcover]

Jack Cavanaugh
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 10, 2010

The incredible story of how a small Indiana Catholic school emerged as a college football powerhouse.

Win one for The Gipper. Has there ever been a better-known and widely-used exhortative phrase in sports? Not likely. But who was the “Gipper,” this mythical-like sports figure whose nickname has aroused, in turn, awe, wonderment, curiosity, and amusement since the second decade of the twentieth century, and why is his story important? Answering those questions is the formidable task taken on here by veteran sportswriter Jack Cavanaugh, whose Pulitzer Prize-nominated biography of boxing legend Gene Tunney was referred to as “impressively researched and richly detailed” by Sports Illustrated.

More than eight decades after his death, George Gipp is still regarded by football historians as Notre Dame’s best all-around player. And it was Gipp and his legendary coach, Knute Rockne, who were largely responsible for putting the small Midwestern all-male school on the map.

Like Cavanaugh’s other critically acclaimed books, The Gipper is also a period piece, with a considerable focus on the era before, during, and immediately after WWI. It details the changes that the country underwent during that time, including the onset of Prohibition and the gangs that it spawned in the Midwest such as those active in the South Bend area and in nearby Chicago, headed by the notorious Al Capone. 25 black-and-white photographs

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The Gipper: George Gipp, Knute Rockne, and the Dramatic Rise of Notre Dame Football + Loyal Sons: The Story of the Four Horsemen and Notre Dame Football's 1924 Champions + 100 Things Notre Dame Fans Should Know & Do Before They Die (100 Things...Fans Should Know)
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

It's not surprising that the more one gets to know George Gipp, the less like a hero he seems. A high school drop-out, he spent much of his time at Notre Dame cutting class, playing semi-pro ball under assumed names, hustling pool, and engaging in high-stakes gambling. Cavanaugh organizes his research well and says what he can about Gipp's personal life, but rightly focuses on the young man's astounding athleticism. Nearly a century on, Gipp still holds the Notre Dame record for most yards per carry in a season, most career total yards for a non-quarterback, and the longest field goal; he never allowed a pass to be completed to the man he was covering (though as teams tended to have few passes per game in those days, this is less impressive than it might seem), and is regarded by most historians as the school's best all-around player. His death in 1920 at the age of 25 (having never completely recovered from the Spanish Flu pandemic of 1918) leaves Cavanaugh to fill out his effort with stories of Coach Rockne and Notre Dame's colorful early football days, all placed into the larger context of a country dealing with great tragedies.
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From Booklist

In November 1916, Knute Rockne, an assistant football coach at Notre Dame, eyed a young man in street clothes drop-kicking field goals from 50 yards out. He told the man to show up the next day for football practice. George Gipp did as he was told, and a legend was born. Gipp eventually became Notre Dame’s first football star, and his death a few years later was a national tragedy. Cavanaugh offers a textured portrait of Gipp and his influence on Notre Dame’s ascendance as a football power, but it’s no easy task, given the difficulty of sorting legend (“Win one for the Gipper”) from reality. This book is most interesting when Cavanaugh successfully looks behind the legend (Gipp was 21 when Rockne spotted him and had been surviving since he was a youngster by playing high-stakes pool and poker) and least interesting in its rehash of Rockne’s career and the rise of Notre Dame football (an oft-told story). Still, for Notre Dame fans especially—and there remain many of those—this is an entertaining look at one of college football’s enduring heroes. --Wes Lukowsky

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing (September 10, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1616081104
  • ISBN-13: 978-1616081102
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #812,040 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Notre Dame was a very respectable football program before Knute Rockne became the coach. In the ten seasons prior to Knute being named head coach, Notre Dame's record under four different coaches was 66 wins, 7 losses, and 5 ties, for a winning percentage of .878, which is just shy of Rockne's .881 winning percentage over 13 seasons. Notre Dame had already burst onto the national scene with its historic win over Army at West Point in 1913, which featured quarterback Gus Dorais throwing the ball to end Knute Rockne in a historical display of passing proficiency which truly changed the way football was played from that day forward.

But it was the ascendancy of George Gipp as Notre Dame's star player and the promotion of Knute Rockne from assistant to head football coach that took Notre Dame football to the next level. When Rockne first became Notre Dame's coach, during Gipp's second varsity season in 1918, a typical crowd at a big game would be 5,000 fans at standing-room-only Cartier Field. In Rockne's final season, 1930, Notre Dame opened a new 54,400 seat stadium on campus and played Army at Soldier Field in Chicago in front of a crowd estimated at 110,000 fans. And, of course, as the fame of the Fighting Irish grew, so did the reputation of the University of Notre Dame which has sought since Rockne to achieve recognition and respect for its academic accomplishments while it nevertheless embraces the fame and the financial rewards that accrue to its football team.

The Gipper covers what is known of George Gipp's life growing up in Laurium, Michigan and all his exploits as a Notre Dame football player and sometime student. Ample coverage is given to Gipp's very sporadic academic pursuits as well as his expertise as a billiards player, card player, and gambler. And the author tries to sort the fact from the fiction of Rockne's "Win one for the Gipper" speech and Gipp's tragic death. As amazing as Gipp's statistics and performance as a football player are, I was even more amazed by how easily it apparently all came to him. He rarely practiced football, and normally reported for the season at the last minute, if not a week or two late. He was a talented baseball player who was actively sought after by multiple major league franchises and was the best pool shooter in Northern Indiana. He broke a leg near the end of his first varsity season, and scored a key touchdown in his final game, against Indiana, after suffering a dislocated shoulder and a broken collar bone.

In addition to providing a real education about two Notre Dame legends, The Gipper offers real insight into what college football was really like in its infancy. The lax academic standards, the Sunday pro games played under assumed names, players playing at West Point for four years after exhausting eligibility in All-American careers at other schools. The 1918 season that was almost entirely canceled due to a nationwide flu epidemic. Michigan's campaign to keep Notre Dame out of the Western Conference (forerunner to the Big Ten) and to blackball Notre Dame from playing Western Conference teams. All are covered here in an entertaining, easy to read presentation that fans of Notre Dame will love, and that all fans of college football history will appreciate.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
THE GIPPER: GEORGE GIPP, KNUTE ROCKNE AND THE DRAMATIC RISE OF NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL provides a fine story of the legend of George Gipp, and comes from a veteran sportswriter and Pulitzer Prize nominee who shows readers what it means to 'win one for the Gipper'. Any library strong in baseball history needs this fine survey of a sports figure who moved from baseball to football and whose relationship with a coach transformed a small Midwest all-male school to a college football legend.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Data, NO Organization March 9, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I'm a graduate of ND, and was a student in Parseghian's first years, so I know something about football. This book, ostensibly about Gipp (apparently no one really called him Gipper), is full of anecdotes and stories - told and repeated, and repeated again, and re-hashed. There is no order - it's not by character, by chronology or even remotely by topic. The author has a nice style, easy to read, and has researched his topic. Almost to the "more than you really wanted to know" category. But it needs an editor to give the text some shape.

Perhaps the style is meant to disguise the fact that despite the title, only perhaps 35% of the book is actually about George Gipp. It's about football from 1910 to 1946, it's about ND and the tension between football and academics, it's about Rockne and anyone whoever played on any of Rock's teams. That's not bad if you love football and/or Notre Dame. But what could have been a great book really misses the mark.

A friend had highly recommended this and I was really looking forward to it. Nice - but by the halfway mark I felt I was listening to an elderly relative who keeps telling the same stories, without remembering that he has already told you how he met the President.
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