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A carregar... Loose Balls: The Short, Wild Life of the American Basketball Association (edição 2007)por Terry Pluto (Autor)
Informação Sobre a ObraLoose Balls: The Short, Wild Life of the American Basketball Association por Terry Pluto
![]() Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. The ABA’s life was short. It was wild. It made a difference. In Loose Balls, Terry Pluto has assembled an oral history of the league by going to its actors: the athletes, coaches, owners, general managers, referees, members of the press, etc. Since the league’s games received little TV coverage, these are the people who can testify to its crazy history and its claim to be remembered. Where the NBA was hidebound, the ABA was colorful, a trait symbolized by its trademark red, white, and blue basketball. The ABA introduced fans to 3-point shots, All-Star slam-dunk contests, and Dr. J. It made official such stats as offensive rebounds, individual turnovers, steals, blocked shots, team rebounds. It was the league of innovation and financial chaos, and at the same time a financial boon to players in both leagues because of the competition for top talent that it created and because of the expanded opportunities for capable players needed to fill those extra rosters. The teams that came into the NBA when the ABA expired (the Spurs, Nuggets, Pacers, and Nets) proved their play was of NBA caliber. Despite its near invisibility in the media and the often precarious financial stability of its franchises, by its end the ABA was a “major” league on the court itself. One ABA innovation deserves special mention. At the time, collegiate underclassmen and recent high school graduates weren’t free to begin professional careers as players in a major basketball league, in marked contrast to baseball or individual sports such as golf and tennis. It was as if freely pursuing one’s goals in basketball, as one could do in almost any other paying endeavor, was an un-American abomination. That changed when the ABA signed Spencer Haywood, an underclassman at the University of Detroit and already a great player. The signing of Haywood was revolutionary and controversial. The NBA was mad and the NCAA was mad. It also demonstrated the hypocrisy of collegiate big-time sport: “Johnny Dee of Notre Dame was the head of the NCAA Basketball Coaches Association and he If you love basketball, find this book and enjoy. Some of it could be a rough journey. As one eloquent witness attested: “You almost had to present your X-rays to get a free throw.” [Jim Murray, LA Times columnist] A remarkable in-depth look at the ABA, the little-brother basketball league that changed the face of the NBA. Three-point line? Slam dunk contests? You think the NBA invented those? Think again. This book collects interviews from hundreds of people involved with the ABA, from players to coaches to sportscasters (Bob Costas got his start as an ABA commentator!) and much, much more. What's more, this gives you a great look at the 1970s and some of the fashions and trends of the day -- what was popular among the young and newly rich athletes in 1972? Find out here. sem críticas | adicionar uma crítica
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"Loose Balls" is a collection of oral histories about the ABA. Those oral histories, told mostly by businessmen, although a few coaches and players make contributions, are sometimes a little dry. The owners talk quite a bit about the deals they made, their Spartan front offices, and their thoughts about merging with the NBA. The anecdotes from the coaches and players really shine, though. They are much more interesting than the self-congratulatory businessmen.
The book follows a very loose chronological order. There are no details about specific games or championships. There are no insights into the minds of specific players or the logic behind decisions. Stories about locker rooms, outrageous players, and amazing athletes give the book interest. (