How Football Explains America

How Football Explains America

by Sal Paolantonio
ISBN: 978-1-60078-046-2
240 pages
5 x 8, Hardbound
pub date 09-2008
1-color; photos throughout
 Item #
 Product
Price 
 978-1-60078-046-2
 How Football Explains America
Price: $24.95
Quantity  
 
Email this Page  send to friend  Print  print   Add to Wishlist  add to wishlist  
 
Using some of the most prominent voices in pro sports and cultural and media criticism, How Football Explains America is a fascinating, first-of-its-kind journey through the making of America’s most complex, intriguing, and popular game. 
Leading up to the Super Bowl the Global Post takes a look at How Football Explains America.
Sal Pal sits down with Steve Sabol and NFL Films to go into detail on How Football Explains America.
How Football Explains America appears on Muse Machine as part of "Three Books Try to Figure Us Out."
Peter King of Sports Illustrated includes How Football Explains America on his holiday book list.
Sal Paolantonio talks to the LA Daily News about How Football Explains America.
Sal Pal stops by NPR to talk about How Football Explains America.


Sal Pal appears on Between the Covers on National Review Online to analyze How Football Explains America.


Sal Pal appears on Morning Joe on MSNBC to discuss his book How Football Explains America.
Sal Pal stops by The KFBK Afternoon News to talk about How Football Explains America.
Jerry Greene of the Orlando Sentinel, talks to Sal Paolantonio and endorses How Football Explains America.
Sal Pal stops by NFL Gridiron Gab to talk about the writing process of How Football Explains America.


Sal Pal joins Sportsline with Steve Davis on WBAL to talk the NFL and How Football Explains America.
Read the great review of How Football Explains America from the North Star Writers Group.
Sal Pal joins DJ and PK on KFAN to talk about How Football Explains America and when the sport became a national obsession.  
Ralph Vacchiano of the NY Daily News gives a terrific review to How Football Explains America.
Sal Pal stops by Mike & Mike to talk the early NFL season and the background of How Football Explains America.


The Philadelphia Inquirer examines Sal Paolantonio's How Football Explains America.
The Courier Post takes a look at Sal Paolantonio's How Football Explains America and the connection between the sport and American history.
Sal Pal covers a wide-range of topics On the DL with Dan Levy, including his new book How Football Explains America.
How Footbal Explains America

There is an extremely powerful connection between football and America. Football is America’s mythology. Americans hunger for action, heroes and a thrilling narrative. When the quarterback limps onto the field in the fourth quarter, he is our gladiator. He is an American warrior and his upcoming drive down the field will represent the quintessential American ideal: “Hold and advance. Or surrender.”

 

This September, Sal Paolantonio’s “How Football Explains America” (Triumph Books) explores just how crucial football is to understanding the American psyche. ESPN’s Paolantonio presents an intelligent discourse on America’s game that goes far beyond the icons, great plays and x’s and o’s and earnestly peers into the heart and soul of a game that has captured our collective imaginations since the days of Walter Camp, Amos Alonzo Stagg, and Harvard vs. Yale. Interspersed with memorable images from the climax of Super Bowl XLII, Paolantonio tackles varying American themes from Manifest Destiny to “fourth and one” as he goes deep in order to answer the age-old question: “Why does America love football so much?”

 

Written as the American response to Franklin Foer’s How Soccer Explains the World, Paolantonio’s HOW FOOTBALL EXPLAINS AMERICA is not a history of football. It’s an unabashedly celebratory explanation of our love affair with the game and the men who make it possible. Paolantonio also sheds light on:

 

·                     How the pioneers and cowboys helped create a game that resembled their march across the continent.

·                     Why rugby and soccer don't excite the American male like football does.

·                     How rule changes are continually made to enhance the dramatic action and create a better narrative.

·                     The eternal appeal of the heroic quarterback position.

·                     The original play-by-play call: The “Miniature Gridiron” of the Philadelphia Inquirer of the 1890s.

·                     How President Teddy Roosevelt saved football.

·                     The military lineage from General Douglas MacArthur to the New York Jets’ head coach Eric Mangini.

·                     How television needed football as much…or more…than football needed television.

·                     How the burgeoning medium of television identified and exploited the NFL’s great characters: Lombardi, Landry, Unitas, Namath and others.

·                     The beauty of the huddle: “sanctuary in the middle of a maelstrom”.

·                     The game’s current day myth-making partners: ESPN and Fantasy Football.

 

America is about the freedom to compete and be successful on a level playing field….

You can look at football and see the heart of America.”—NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell

 

As the football season approaches, HOW FOOTBALL EXPLAINS AMERICA offers an explanation for our heart-pounding devotion to our teams. It is a must read for anyone interested in more fully understanding not only the game but also the nation in which it thrives.

 

 

How Football Explains America Review

Gridiron Nation

by Jeffrey Marlett, 1/31/09, First Things

At least 60 percent of Americans will join in the festival, some with detachment, others ecstatically. On few other days will stores and restaurants be so empty and only on Thanksgiving do Americans eat more food. Every year the Internet buzzes with petitions demanding recognition of the Monday afterward as a federal holiday.  Super Bowl Sunday is the highest of high holy days in the church of the NFL.

For over thirty years professional football has drawn more fans—in both stadiums and living rooms—than baseball, the purported “national pastime,” basketball, auto- or horse-racing, soccer, or hockey. It generates astonishing amounts of money, an independent television network, and an ever-widening audience acting as ersatz coaches in internet fantasy leagues. NFL officials negotiate television contracts exceeded only by recent federal bailout plans.

ESPN correspondent Sal Paolantonio’s recent book, How Football Explains America (Triumph Books, 2008) provides a bracing assessment of the connections between American life and its favorite sport. The offensive huddle embodies the constitutional right for free association. With its complex shifts in rhythm and emphasis, the “west coast offense” parallels the Monk and Coltrane jazz classic “Straight No Chaser.”

Following World War II the nation satisfied its need for strong yet understanding leadership not only by electing Eisenhower but by celebrating the Cleveland Brown’s groundbreaking coach, Paul Brown. The Sixties’ convolutions were reflected by two popular quarterbacks: the quiet, dutiful Bart Starr of the Green Bay Packers and the New York Jets’ flamboyant, rebellious Joe Namath.

Paolantonio makes the provocative claim that football’s proactive attitude towards integration upsets the mythological stories of Jackie Robinson’s entry into baseball. Robinson’s bravery with the 1947 Brooklyn Dodgers appears even in literature for first-graders. Few Americans remember that the preceding football season had witnessed the return of black players after a fourteen year hiatus. Pro football lacked a singular prophetic figure like baseball’s Branch Rickey, who carefully orchestrated his sport’s integration, and its integration occurred with far less fanfare but far more success.

Football explains America, Paolantonio argues, through its fashioning in light of national experience. In the nineteenth century, soccer and rugby came to be regarded as boring holdovers from the pre-Revolutionary era. Yale’s Walter Camp developed football as a violent but nonetheless rational game orchestrated by one man—the quarterback. The quarterback would direct his teammates in the acquisition of the opponent’s territory, and failure to make progress (with four downs to go ten yards) meant surrendering the ball. He envisioned the position as a contrast to the brute strength dominating rugby and the fluid unorchestrated movement of soccer.

Football emerged in America just as the frontier closed. Thwarted from pursuing the real thing, American men ever since have turned to the field to replay a myth of struggle and conquest. Thus quarterbacks stir the American imagination: Johnny Unitas, Roger Staubach, Joe Montana, and the Manning brothers, Peyton and Eli, who have won the past two Super Bowls.

Originally, football was envisioned as a vehicle for moral improvement. It reflected America’s purported Protestant character and embodied both individual and communitarian values like teamwork, individual effort, manliness, and integrity. But problems arise when violence is glorified instead of merely accepted. Some insist that football canonizes everything wrong in American life. George Will’s quip comes to mind: football combines the two worst features of America—violence interspersed with committee meetings.

Even Paolantonio confirms this when he offers the Snoop Dog rap song “Who Am I (What’s My Name)?” as a celebration of football’s competitiveness, but his own narrative suggests that the sport’s creators and heroes such as Giants and Packer coach Vince Lombardi and Army coach Red Blaik would distance themselves from Snoop Dog’s claim that “you’ll say my name when I’m through with you.” Obviously Lombardi wanted to win; after all, he coined the phrase, “Winning isn’t everything. It’s the only thing.” But he, a devout Catholic, sought victory through team effort and bravery (and the occasional motivational speech), not the denial of the opponent’s humanity and dignity.

A football discussion seems an awkward place to mention John Paul II’s defense of the culture of life. Nevertheless, the intrinsic dignity of the human person permeates football’s value system, past and present. Professional football punishes excessive celebrations and taunting as unsportsmanlike conduct. While lots of dirty play escapes penalization, outright brawling brings expulsion and other harsh penalties. A veteran himself, Paolantonio distinguishes between football’s violence and its use of military metaphors like “the bomb” and “the blitz.” Many football players and coaches are devout Christians and view playing football as an opportunity to glorify God. Earlier this year the college football championship featured two teams—Florida and Oklahoma—quarterbacked by devout evangelical Christians. This is the sort of mythic leadership Paolantonio describes.

Indeed, religious themes lurk throughout his assessment of American football. The sport offers a compelling, almost mythical scene: two teams, clad in helmets and body armor like medieval knights, engage in a lengthy series of short, intensely violent clashes to control both an object (the ball) and territory. Every autumn, high school boys and college men reenact this battle, but pro football attains levels of spectacle previously reserved for religious or gladiatorial spectacle.

Unlike baseball’s long leisurely season, football’s short season offers no second chances. Thus each game possesses its own biblical finality; win and celebrate with tambourine and dance, lose and it’s Lamentations. Autumn Sunday afternoons have become a set of sixteen services where believers, clad in their teams’ color and insignia, often carrying its relics, gather to celebrate their team’s performance and join in the drama of its liturgy.

Still, the interweaving of football and religion requires further exploration. George Carlin’s contrast between baseball and football captures something about the nation: “Baseball begins in the spring, the season of new life. Football begins in the fall when everything is dying.” Perhaps we need football for the decline of the year, as the days shorten and grow colder, and a slower, pastoral diversion for hot summer days, each game with its own beauty. While football might explain something about America, it might not always fulfill it.

Several years ago at an academic meeting, I overheard a Lutheran theologian joke that he loved both the Eucharist and the Minnesota Vikings, but not to the same extent. Americans follow their football religiously, but this devotion has yet to unseat beliefs even more deeply held.

New book offers insight on football, America

by Jerry Greene, Orlando Sentinel, 11/5/08

On the day after our presidential election, there can be no better time than now to sit down with a small book titled: How Football Explains America (Triumph Books, $24.95) Granted, it demands some literacy, but it's an illuminating read for anyone who loves football and is willing to go beyond "See Brett pass -- Pass, Brett, pass!" Sal Paolantonio wrote it. You see him frequently on ESPN, but don't hold that against him. He's far more than just another pretty face.

Washington Post columnist George Will once wrote: "Football combines the two worst things about America: It is violence punctuated by committee meetings."

Paolantonio believes football represents nearly everything good about America from Manifest Destiny to how our love and respect of head coaches goes back to TV's Father Knows Best. Understand our football, understand our land.

*OK, explain this, Sal: Why are football movies so bad?

Sal: "That's easy -- NFL Films.They capture the spirit of football so well that fake football doesn't have a chance."

*If football is so interwoven into our psyche, can it go sour here?

Sal: "The only way football will die here would be if it kills itself from within. That's why I applaud the way Mike Singletary handled his players in San Francisco. You need gatekeepers that will stop those who would spoil the game. People who say, 'Not on my watch.' "

*Considering your last answer, will we see Mike Vick in the NFL again?

Sal: "He will play somewhere in the NFL in 2009. There is strong sentiment that he has suffered enough."

*Here's the intellectual question we all want answered: Who's in the Super Bowl?

Sal: "Tennessee or Pittsburgh in the AFC, Dallas or the Giants in the NFC."

Read the book, although I couldn't find an explanation as to why Paolantonio still thinks Dallas may get into the Super Bowl. But he does answer why football is the only sport in the world with a huddle. You need to know that.

The Blue Screen

by Ralph Vacchiano, NY Daily News, 9/27/08

By the way, if you've already finished my book, here's another you should add to your in-season reading list: How Football Explains America, by Sal Paolantonio. It's an incredibly intelligent, well-written, well-researched history of American football that does exactly what the title promises: It explains why this sport is so woven into the fabric of our society. It traces the roots of its rules and strategy all the way back to the American frontier, and ties some very famous Americans directly and indirectly to the way the game is still played today. And if you're wondering why this is appearing in a Giants blog, it's because he focuses a lot of attention on the Giants, Super Bowl XLII and even the great Bill Parcells/Bill Belichick days of the franchise. The book takes you to many places in American history that you never expected to be while thinking about your favorite sport. It's a fascinating and incredibly smart book, and nothing like any other football book you've ever read. If you read it, you won't ever look at football quite the same way again.




Adding to bag...
close x
 

Login to Your Account

Easily manage your shipping addresses, order history, and wish lists.
Username 
Password 
 
 Keep me logged in for 2 weeks
 Login
 Forgot your password?

Retrieve Password

Create a New Account

With your new account you can easily manage your shipping addresses, order history, and wishlists.
First Name
Last Name
Email Address
Password
Confirm Password
 
 Keep me logged in for 2 weeks
Register
Additional step required.
To add this item to your wish list, please login or create account.
You will not leave this page.
Continue Shopping