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I Came As a Shadow
An Autobiography
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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November 15, 2020
The renowned Georgetown basketball coach looks back on a long career, interlaced with thoughts on the challenges of being Black in America. Coach Thompson, writes co-author and ESPN correspondent Washington, is a masterful student of "the game behind the game," both the intellectual challenges of the court and the psychological factors that influence and sometimes impede players. Basketball, Thompson adds, "became a vehicle for me to challenge injustices." Arriving at Georgetown in 1972, when Black coaches were few, he demanded that his players be students first, telling recruits that he expected them to spend more time in the library than in the gym. "You can kill people by saying that society is equal," he writes, "then starting a hundred-yard race with most white people at the fifty-yard line." Some of his more storied players, such as Patrick Ewing and Alonzo Mourning, overcame institutional and social barriers to become stars, but most athletes even at the college level are playing against the odds, with few standing a chance of going pro. (One standout episode in the book finds Thompson extracting Mourning from a clutch of drug dealers.) Sometimes the NCAA and other conferences put barriers in the way, as when the Southeastern Conference pushed through a proposition that forbade scholarships to students with GPAs lower than 2.0. Because opportunity for students is unequal, that meant that Black students would suffer--one reason, Thompson notes, for a change in the basic assumptions of student athletics: "Since the NCAA won't hold everyone accountable, paying players might as well be legal." Another pointed episode comes when Thompson, since retired, looks at the history of Georgetown, a Jesuit school whose founders were significant players in the slave trade, a fact the school has dealt with by offering reparations to the descendants of people enslaved at their hands. A readable sports memoir; more importantly, a strong contribution to the ongoing discussion on race and racism.
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January 1, 2021
Georgetown University's basketball team dominated the 1980s, and Coach John Thompson (1941-2020) led the Georgetown sidelines, with his daunting stature and trademark white towel. His autobiography (cowritten with Washington, senior writer for ESPN's The Undefeated) covers his childhood, college years at Providence, two years playing in the NBA, and nearly three decades as Georgetown's legendary coach. Thompson's experiences growing up Black in America were crucial to the way he shaped his players, such as Allen Iverson, as young men; Thompson writes that he "never had the luxury of being just a basketball coach." He was also instrumental in the birth and rise of the powerhouse Big East conference, and made his Georgetown team perennial contenders. Unabashed, direct, and deeply driven, Thompson's autobiography matches his characteristic intensity on the basketball court, as the life story of a man who saw opportunity as a challenge and never settled for less. VERDICT Thompson was the first Black coach to win a NCAA championship, and left an indelible mark on college basketball. His autobiography is an important American life story, highly recommended for all public libraries and sports collections.--Janet Davis, Darien P.L., CT
Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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