The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game
by Michael Lewis
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| Blindside: Highly Readable Football Book! | 2 | 01/13/2008 08:33AM |
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Read in January, 2007
This is the most unusual sports book. Michael Lewis, the author of books like Moneyball, has written two stories, intertwined with each other to illustrate his point about how football has radically changed since the rise of what is known as the "West Coast Offense" and its secondary reaction, the rise of fast, large defensive players, and the final reaction, the rise of particularly the Left Tackle position, now the second highest paid position in the NFL.
Lewis begins by telling t...more
Lewis begins by telling t...more
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Read in October, 2007
Hoop Dreams detailed the machine built around taking poor black athletes from the inner city and sticking them into primarily white school systems that only cared about those athletes to the extent that they would help their sports teams win. The Blind Side concerns itself with a similar story, except Michael Lewis tends to pause breathlessly and exclaim isn't this great? He admits that the father, Sean, "had been born with a talent for seeing the court, taking in every...more
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Read in May, 2008
The Blind Side is essentially a larger story with a smaller essay woven into it. The main part of the book concerns Michael Oher, an exceptionally gifted young black athlete with a childhood spent with a drug-addicted mother, not attending school, and bouncing between homes. Through a series of amazingly fortunate events, Michael ends up attending a private Christian high school named Briarcrest and living with the Touhy family, wealthy whites who become his legal guardians. The Touhys ca...more
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The Blind Side, written by the author of Moneyball and Liar's Poker, tells two stories. The first is about the evolution of the game of football and the increased importance of the position of the left tackle. The second story is about an enormous African-American kid named Michael Oher who appears seemingly out of nowhere, and is taken in by a wealthy white family on his road to becoming the nation's top college football recruit - and who plays the position of left tackle. I don't know much abo...more
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Read in November, 2007
What did Lawrence Taylor do to the game of football? As outside linebacker for the NY Giants, LT destroyed quarterbacks. He reveled in making his opponents fear him - having ended the career of Joe Theismann, every quarterback entering the field against LT knew the danger of getting hit snd finish a game, a season, or even a contract on the sidelines.
Because of LT, offenses changed to compensate - with a focus on protecting the blind side. With the advent of free agency and salary caps, organi...more
Because of LT, offenses changed to compensate - with a focus on protecting the blind side. With the advent of free agency and salary caps, organi...more
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Read in August, 2007
This excellent book explores the series of developments that lead to a dramatic appreciation in value of the left tackle position on professional and college football teams. This change happened to occur at just the right time to benefit Michael Oher, a young black football player from Memphis, Tennessee, who was born to play left tackle.
The story of Michael Oher is a marvel. One of 13 kids of a crack addict, Michael grew up fending for himself in the gang-plagued projects of Memphis. Throu...more
The story of Michael Oher is a marvel. One of 13 kids of a crack addict, Michael grew up fending for himself in the gang-plagued projects of Memphis. Throu...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
football fans
On the merits of the story alone, I enjoyed this book. Lewis is a very good writer, and he is able to tell a compelling story and educate the less knowledgeable without coming off as condescending, which is more difficult than it sounds. The story of Michael Oher is compelling (and ongoing), and it's hard not to root for him.
That said, I have my suspicions about the altruism at the heart of the story. There are too many questionable motivations floating about, although, to Lewis's credit, he...more
That said, I have my suspicions about the altruism at the heart of the story. There are too many questionable motivations floating about, although, to Lewis's credit, he...more
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Read in June, 2007
Many of you who know me would probably be surprised to learn that I enjoy reading about sports. When I was younger, I avoided participating in and watching any type of sports. I was very uncoordinated, and being bad at sports in junior high and high school meanted that one period every day was reserved for a special kind of humiliation. Also, I much preferred reading. Reading didn't make me sweat, or give me stitches in my side. Books didn't yell at me to "read better, stupid!" S...more
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Read in December, 2007
Great book. Two stories here - one is about a kid from the wrong side of town in Memphis who does good (Michael Oher) - that was excerpted a NYTimes Sunday magazine story. The other is about football and the emergence of the left tackle (who protects the QBs blind side) as an important position. Good writing as always by the author.
Here is an excerpt I liked because I often run into people who disparage strategy and strategy consultants. While strategy is not everything, it is important and...more
Here is an excerpt I liked because I often run into people who disparage strategy and strategy consultants. While strategy is not everything, it is important and...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommends it for:
young adults (11+) and adults
I am, at best, a casual sports fan. I freely admit that I'm a fair weather fan of my local teams. This was one of those "broadening my horizens" selections. That said, I found "The Blind Side," about the life of Michael Oher, considered now to be one of the most promising prospects for the NFL, a good read. True, some of the technical football stuff sailed over my head like a place kick (just what is a four-four forty, anywho), but anyone can follow and appreciate the story. ...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
creative minds
This book already has 765 ratings, what can I add? :>
Michael Lewis is probably my favorite living author.
About 1980, Tracey Kidder wrote "THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE".
A book about how a bunch of employees at a computer company
designed a new computer against restraints of time and money.
I think this was probably the first book that took an
inside look at organizations and how they work to produce
something "new".
Michael Lewis has glommed on to this...more
Michael Lewis is probably my favorite living author.
About 1980, Tracey Kidder wrote "THE SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE".
A book about how a bunch of employees at a computer company
designed a new computer against restraints of time and money.
I think this was probably the first book that took an
inside look at organizations and how they work to produce
something "new".
Michael Lewis has glommed on to this...more
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Hmm. I'm still thinking. I actually liked the football stuff in this much more than I thought I would, even though I'm pretty sure I'll continue to only have a secondary interest in football. (It's not baseball. The rhythms are different, and I like baseball better. I just do.) Lewis is simply a really good sports writer, regardless of the sport. As for the story of Michael Oher: obviously, Oher is a wonderful, funny, charming, kind, talented person, and his story is a remarkable one. I'...more
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Read in January, 2008
This book can be found in the Sports section of bookstores across the country. That is a comically incorrect classification of this book. Shallowly, this book follows the life of Michael Oher, a mountain of a man who will one day make millions as an NFL Left Tackle. It describes the evolution of the game of football, and how increasingly, one of the most important (if not the most important) position on the field is the Left Tackle that protects the blind side of right-handed quarterbacks. In re...more
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Read in February, 2008
Really interesting read. Two parts to the book that are interwoven. One part discusses the evolution of the left tackle position from that of just another OL to the most important and highly-paid position in professional football - next to the QB. The other part is about Michael Oher. A young man "raised" by a mother who had at least 10 children and disappeared from the 1st to the 10th of every month to spend her welfare check on crack. He has been passed through the educational s...more
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About 100 pages into The Blind Side, I was putting the book down for the night, and noticed that the library had tagged it as "B - Oher" (Biography section, subject's last name Oher). I thought it was a bit odd, since the author was really just starting to talk about Michael Oher, the phenom left tackle prospect from Memphis, Tennessee. But it ended up being very accurate. Only two or three of the chapters are devoted to examining how football evolved from the reliable run-first off...more
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Read in November, 2007
Lewis writes two stories here. One is interesting. The other is mildly intriguing and probably not as a big a story as it seems.
When telling the story of Michael Oher, a poor black kid from Memphis adopted by a loaded white family and the journey he takes from uncommunicative, unschooled, untrusting child to a succesful lineman starring at Ole Miss it's a good story.
When writing about the emergence of the left tackle position in the NFL it was hard not to skip passages.
Left tackle is...more
When telling the story of Michael Oher, a poor black kid from Memphis adopted by a loaded white family and the journey he takes from uncommunicative, unschooled, untrusting child to a succesful lineman starring at Ole Miss it's a good story.
When writing about the emergence of the left tackle position in the NFL it was hard not to skip passages.
Left tackle is...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
socially concious football fans
Michael Lewis pretty much hits all the notes in This one. Making us understand what Michael Oher's life would've been like if not for all the white people in his life who are there, of course, mostly because of his physical gifts. Only at the the end does Lewis state the obvious: "Sports was the closest thing in America to pure meritocracy, the one avenue of ambition widely thought to be open to all. (Pity the kid inside Hurt Village who...more
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Read in December, 2006
Story about the importance of the left tackle in the modern game of football told through the incredible story of Michael Oher. Michael Lewis really knows how to write.
As all good football fans know, the ability to rush/protect the quarterback is quite simply the most important element in determining success. Quite frankly, I cannot think back to a successful college or pro team that could not effectively rush the passer. The ability to protect the passer became much more important with t...more
As all good football fans know, the ability to rush/protect the quarterback is quite simply the most important element in determining success. Quite frankly, I cannot think back to a successful college or pro team that could not effectively rush the passer. The ability to protect the passer became much more important with t...more
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Read in September, 2007
3.5 stars.
A real shame that the second half is phoned in. The first half is brilliant; at once a wonderful, heartbreaking story about a real person, and a clean, clear look at the evolution of the passing game and the roles of pass rushers and left tackles. And I know what the West Coast offense is now!
In the end, I wanted more football. Without taking anything away from the story of Michael Oher, which was great, I wanted Lewis's crisp, clear style to explain the intricacies of this ...more
A real shame that the second half is phoned in. The first half is brilliant; at once a wonderful, heartbreaking story about a real person, and a clean, clear look at the evolution of the passing game and the roles of pass rushers and left tackles. And I know what the West Coast offense is now!
In the end, I wanted more football. Without taking anything away from the story of Michael Oher, which was great, I wanted Lewis's crisp, clear style to explain the intricacies of this ...more
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Read in February, 2008
I only wish a fraction of the novels I read were as gripping as this nonfiction account of Michael Oher, a teenage "freak of nature." Oher's freakishness manifests itself in his physical nature -- a combination of size and speed -- that makes him the most prized high school football player at his position, left tackle. But perhaps even more gripping is the freakishness of his personal nature -- a boy with a life so thoroughly broken that the defenses he's built around himself cause him...more
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