When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi by David Maraniss, D. Maraniss

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: September 2000
  • 544pp
  • Sales Rank: 12,269
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: September 2000
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 544pp
    • Sales Rank: 12,269

    Synopsis

    When Pride Still Mattered is the quintessential story of the American family: how Vince Lombardi, the son of an immigrant Italian butcher, rose to the top, and how his character and will to prevail transformed him, his wife, his children, his players, his sport, and ultimately the entire country.

    Annotation

    Finalist in Frankfurt eBook Award 2000, for Best Nonfiction work originally published in eBook form

    Sports Illustrated

    The best sports biography ever published.

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    Biography

    With an eye for bringing the mysteries of history to light and a knack for reportage that won him a Pulitzer for his work for The Washington Post, David Maraniss pens compelling works of nonfiction that give readers insights into larger-than-life figures, from Bill Clinton to Vince Lombardi, while illuminating major events in American history.

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    Customer Reviews

    Great book..ha..ha..by Anonymous

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    April 07, 2006: I believe VInce Lombardi was the greastest coach in the history of the NFL. The theme for the novel i read is 'if you believe in yourself you have the courage, determination, dedication,competitive drive and if you are willing to sacrifice the little things in life and pay the price for the things that are most important, you can accomplish anything'. THe reason why i chose this theme was because his whole life he had been through so many struggles and the only things that he had were his courage, determination, dedication competitive drive, and the will to sacrifice for the things that were most important. Vincent Thomas Matilda's five children. Vince was raised in a catholic faith and studied priethood for two years before tranferring to St. Francis prepartory High School where he was a star fullback on the football team. Vince was accepted at New York City Fordham University in 1933. After a year one the freshman team, varsity football coach Jim Crowley made Vince a gaurd on Fordham's strong offensive line, which was called the seven blocks of granite. he was successful off the field as well, graduating with a buisness major in 1937. For the next two years Vince worked at a finance company, took night classes at Fordham's law scholl and played semi pro football with Delaware's Willmington Clippers. In 1939 he took a teaching and coaching job at St. Cecilia High School in Inglewood, News Jersey Vince taught algebra, physics and chemistry and coached their football and basketball teams. He married Marie Plantiz in 1940 qwith whom he had a son Vince Jr. and a daughter Susan. Vince left St. Cecilia in 1947 to coach at Fordham University. he spent one year coaching Fordham's football team and in the next as an assistant coach for the varsity team. Earl Blaik, football coach for the united states military academy at west point[and considered the best coach in the county at the time, hired Vince to manage their Varsity defensive line in 1949]. Vince regularly woirked seventeen hours a day with Blaik whos expertis helped built up leadership skills, Blaik aught and Vince to stick with simple blocking and tackling players strives for perfect execution and conduct himself respectfully on the field. Vince left Westpoint in 1954 for assistant coaching positions with the New York Giants, under head coach, and former colleague Jim Lee Howell. Vince was in charge of offensive stratagy for the Giants while coach Tom Landry led the defense. Within three years of Vince's arrival, however, the Giants were a championship team. For each of the five years that Vince coached the Giants didn't have a loosing season. By 1958, Vince was tired of being an assistant. He accepted a chalenging five-year contract in Wisconsin as the general manager and head coach of the constant loosers, the Green Bay Packers. At the time, the Packers had won only one game the previous year and Vince saw them as a chance to prove himself and his coaching abilities. Vince held the first of his intense training camps to gear up for the 1959 season. 'Dancing is a contact sport' he told the Packers, 'Football is a hitting sport'. Vincce expected obedience, dedication, and 110% effort from each man, but he also made a promise to them if they obeyed his rules and used his method, they would be a championship team. Three years later, that promise became a reality. At Lambeau Field in Green Bay on December 31, 1961, Vince watched proudly as the Packers...

    Unbelievable!!!!!by Anonymous

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    July 07, 2004: This was by far, the best sports biography that I have ever read. I couldn't put the book down.


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