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E-grāmata: Hoop Crazy: The Lives of Clair Bee and Chip Hilton

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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Sport, Culture, and Society
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2013
  • Izdevniecība: University of Arkansas Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781610755290
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  • Formāts: PDF+DRM
  • Sērija : Sport, Culture, and Society
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Oct-2013
  • Izdevniecība: University of Arkansas Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781610755290

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Clair Bee (1896-1983) was a hugely successful basketball coach at Rider College and Long Island University with a 412 and 87 record before his career was derailed in 1951 by a point-shaving scandal. In the trial that sent his star player, Sherman White, to prison, the judge excoriated Bee for creating a morally lax culture that contributed to his players' involvement with gambling. To a certain extent, Bee agreed with the judge's scolding, concluding that coaches, himself included, had become so driven to succeed on the court that they had lost sight of the educational role sports should play. His coaching career effectively over, Bee launched an effort to reform the ills he saw in college sports, and he did so in the pages of the Chip Hilton novels for young readers. He began the series in 1948, but it was the post-scandal books that he used as teaching tools. The books mirrored some of the events of the gambling scandal and were Bee's attempt to reform the problems plaguing college sports. He used his fiction to posit a better sports world that he hoped his young readers would construct and inhabit. The Chip Hilton books were extremely popular and have become a classic series, with over two million copies sold to date. Hoop Crazy is the fascinating story of Clair Bee and his star character Chip Hilton and the ways in which their lives, real and fictional, were intertwined.

Clair Bee (1896-1983) was a hugely successful basketball coach at Rider College and Long Island University with a 412 and 87 record before his career was derailed in 1951 by a point-shaving scandal. In the trial that sent his star player, Sherman White, to prison, the judge excoriated Bee for creating a morally lax culture that contributed to his players' involvement with gambling. To a certain extent, Bee agreed with the judge's scolding, concluding that coaches, himself included, had become so driven to succeed on the court that they had lost sight of the educational role sports should play. His coaching career effectively over, Bee launched an effort to reform the ills he saw in college sports, and he did so in the pages of the Chip Hilton novels for young readers. He began the series in 1948, but it was the post-scandal books that he used as teaching tools. The books mirrored some of the events of the gambling scandal and were Bee's attempt to reform the problems plaguing college sports. He used his fiction to posit a better sports world that he hoped his young readers would construct and inhabit. The Chip Hilton books were extremely popular and have become a classic series, with over two million copies sold to date.Hoop Crazy is the fascinating story of Clair Bee and his star character Chip Hilton and the ways in which their lives, real and fictional, were intertwined.


Clair Bee (1896-1983) was a hugely successful basketball coach at Rider College and Long Island University with a 412 and 87 record before his career was derailed in 1951 by a point-shaving scandal. In the trial that sent his star player, Sherman White, to prison, the judge excoriated Bee for creating a morally lax culture that contributed to his players' involvement with gambling.

To a certain extent, Bee agreed with the judge's scolding, concluding that coaches, himself included, had become so driven to succeed on the court that they had lost sight of the educational role sports should play. His coaching career effectively over, Bee launched an effort to reform the ills he saw in college sports, and he did so in the pages of the Chip Hilton novels for young readers. He began the series in 1948, but it was the post-scandal books that he used as teaching tools. The books mirrored some of the events of the gambling scandal and were Bee's attempt to reform the problems plaguing college sports. He used his fiction to posit a better sports world that he hoped his young readers would construct and inhabit.

The Chip Hilton books were extremely popular and have become a classic series, with over two million copies sold to date. Hoop Crazy is the fascinating story of Clair Bee and his star character Chip Hilton and the ways in which their lives, real and fictional, were intertwined.

Recenzijas

[ T]his book presents a truly unique look at one of the greatest and most controversial college basketball coachesand one of the most popular authors of adolescent sports fictionof all time."" - Journal of Sport History, Spring 2015

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xiii
Chapter 1 The Extremes of Clair Bee: The Bad and the Good
1(16)
The Early Years: 1896--1931
Chapter 2 Grafton and Valley Falls: 1896--1920
17(18)
Chapter 3 Dick Dalton Goes to College: 1920--26
35(12)
Chapter 4 Professor Bee and Coach Bee at Rider: 1926--31
47(18)
Bee at Long Island University: 1931--52
Chapter 5 Making the Blackbirds Proud
65(18)
Chapter 6 Defying Hitler; Losing to Luisetti
83(16)
Chapter 7 The Innovator and the NIT Championships
99(22)
Chapter 8 Jim Crow and the Spit Bucket
121(20)
Chapter 9 Thanksgiving 1939: Ringers and Ambition
141(18)
Chapter 10 World War II, Postwar Boom, and the Creation of Chip
159(14)
Chapter 11 Chip Hilton and Race Relations
173(14)
Chapter 12 Sixty-Four Manhattans and a Few Wives
187(14)
Chapter 13 The Fix and the Fixers
201(20)
Chapter 14 Sherman White and Coach Bee
221(14)
Chapter 15 Journalist Bee Confronts the Scandal
235(14)
Chapter 16 Bee the Psalm Singer
249(18)
Chapter 17 Chip and the Scandal
267(22)
Life after Long Island University: 1952--83
Chapter 18 The Bullets and Beyond
289(16)
Chapter 19 Bobby Knight, Another Championship, and Blindness
305(14)
Epilogue 319(4)
Appendix 323(8)
Notes 331(46)
Bibliography 377(6)
Index 383
Dennis Gildea, a former sportswriter, is a professor of communications at Springfield College.