Draft by Wil Mara

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: August 2007
  • 336pp
  • Sales Rank: 197,697
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2007
    • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 336pp
    • Sales Rank: 197,697

    Synopsis

    It's draft time in the National Football League. For high-ranking team executives, this means long days and sleepless nights, endless negotiations, and determining which young men deserve to become millionaires and which do not. Careers will be made with the stroke of a pen, but mistakes are costly.

    Baltimore Ravens General Manager Jon Sabino has turned a weary, ragtag organization into a gridiron dynamo, culminating in two consecutive Super Bowl victories, and now they’re poised to make NFL history with a third consecutive championship. New talent is the last thing on Sabino’s mind, so this year’s draft will be little more than a formality.

    Or will it?

    With less than two weeks until draft day, Sabino receives crushing news---Michael Bell, the team’s starting quarterback, has been involved in a season-ending auto accident. Baltimore’s two backups cannot possibly fill Bell’s cleats, no other available free agents reach Bell’s skill level, and the Ravens’ volatile owner insists that he wants the third Lombardi Trophy above all else - even if it costs the team down the road.

    Publishers Weekly

    Off-field maneuvering takes center stage in the prolific Mara's tepid behind-the-scenes take on professional football. Jon Sabino, the general manager of the back-to-back Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens, is a front-office genius, but even he's stumped when the team's star quarterback is seriously injured in a car crash just two weeks before the annual college draft. Under pressure to capture a historic third consecutive Super Bowl title, Sabino has to put together a deal to secure the first pick in the draft and take the can't-miss quarterback from Michigan, Christian McKinley. Mara (Wave and many biographies) juggles several subplots a rival GM who hates Sabino and recruits a disgruntled employee to spy on him, a gifted young quarterback who spurns the NFL because of what once happened to his father's promising football career and a star receiver who's self-medicating to hide an injury that eventually merge into a sappy denouement. The novel has its moments of tension and drama, but they're undercut by uninspired prose (one character is "faintly aware" twice on the same page) and paper-thin characters. (Oct. 27) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography



    Wil Mara, a lifelong fan of the National Football League, is the author of more than seventy-five books. He has written both fiction and nonfiction, for both children and adults. He also wrote the 2005 disaster thriller Wave, which won the 2005 New Jersey Notable Book Award. The second book in his NFL Series, The Cut, brings readers into the ultracompetitive world of training camp and is due for release in fall 2007.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Great Book!by Anonymous

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    November 05, 2006: I love pro football, and I love reading books about it. There aren't many novels about football, so when I saw this one I thought I would take a chance and get it. This was one of the best books I've ever read. I loved the insider's view of the pro football draft, and the story kept my interest until the end. The character of Jon Sabino was great. I would recommend this for anyone who likes professional football. I read it in two nights.

    a reviewerby harstan

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    August 22, 2006: Baltimore Ravens General Manager Jon Sabino has been toasted as the latest genius as his team has won the last two Superbowls. He plans to make history with a trifecta and many professional football pundits make the Ravens the favorite the three-peat.------------------ During the off season, the star quarterback Michael Bell is injured in an accident that leaves him out for the season and the team without a strong player at the key position as neither the back up nor free agency provides the leadership needed to go all the way. Jon knows the best chance lies with the upcoming college draft by taking a chance on a rookie adapting to the NFL right away, which he believes Wolverine Quarterback Christian McKinley can as he has the talent and played well in the major bowls and Big Ten games. However, without him the Ravens go nowhere. To get him means working a deal with San Diego who has the first draft pick and is willing to sell the rights to the highest bidder of the McKinley Sweepstakes. Sabino plans that to be him at all costs.---------------- Though the intrigue elements (industrial espionage and a quarterback thinking of passing on the pros) seems more like a forced throw into coverage, NFL fans will enjoy the look behind the scenes of a successful professional football franchise. When the plot focuses on Sabino?s efforts to insure an opportunity for the historical third ring, the tale is fast-paced and fascinating when the story line focuses on other characters like a rival General Manager, it becomes time to punt. Still since much of the tale centers on Sabino trying to keep from being sacked, football fans will enjoy THE DRAFT especially with its parallels to Brady (Michigan QB) and Roethlisberger (bike accident).------------- Harriet Klausner