Saturday Rules: A Season with Trojans and Domers (and Gators and Buckeyes and Wolverines) | 
| Author: Austin Murphy Publisher: Harper Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $5.70 You Save: $19.25 (77%)
New (29) Used (24) from $4.97
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 342317
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 6.4 x 1.2
ISBN: 0061375772 Dewey Decimal Number: 796.33263 EAN: 9780061375774 ASIN: 0061375772
Publication Date: September 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: GREAT BUY, NEW BOOK, FREE BOOKMARK (OLYMPIC GAMES BEIJING 2008)
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Product Description
Austin Murphy knows a thing or two about football. His twenty-three years at Sports Illustrated include six covering the NFL and a decade chronicling the college game. In Saturday Rules, Murphy leaves no doubt as to which beat he preferred. Does the NFL have better athletes? Yes. Does it entail more direct flights? Undoubtedly. Which game is better, more entertaining, less predictable? It's not even close—college football wins by two touchdowns. With rich traditions and deep passions—marching bands and menageries of living, breathing animal mascots; arm-long lists of ancient blood grudges—college football is far more captivating, fan-friendly, and, frankly, more fun than the corporate, clinical, risk-averse, imitation-intensive, hermetically sealed game they play on Sunday. No two programs are more storied than Notre Dame and USC, headed by those ex-NFL rivals and philosophical (and physiological) opposites Charlie Weis and Pete Carroll, perhaps the biggest names in the college game. With the inside scoop on these top-ranked teams, Murphy closely follows their arcs through the 2006 season, up to their late-November showdown in the L.A. Coliseum. He puts you in the field, in the meeting room, and in the huddle as both teams fight to keep alive their national title ambitions. Between trips to South Bend and Los Angeles, Murphy ranges repeatedly into Big Ten country, hooking up with Michigan and Ohio State, whose November 17 collision in Columbus constitutes one of the book's most memorable chapters. He ventures into the proud SEC, bearing witness to Florida's single loss of the season (and the ensuing "rolling" of Toomer's Corner). He is in the Rose Bowl for the season's most stunning upset (UCLA 13, USC, 9), and is in that grand old bowl a month later, as the Trojans are born anew. Murphy is on the field after the national title game, asking the Gators how they pulled off the upset. ("This is a fast . . . ass . . . team!" replies linebacker Brian Crum.) And he makes it his business to drop in on the Boise State Broncos after their miraculous, trick-play-intensive upset of Oklahoma in the Fiesta Bowl. Whether hanging out with members of the Ohio State marching band (including the senior sousaphonist, who will "dot the i" in the Buckeyes' famed cursive Ohio), or sampling the frighteningly potent "Gator-Killer punch" at TGFKATWLOCP (The Game Formerly Known as the World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party), or staying up past his bedtime to witness Notre Dame's midnight drum circle, Murphy is the perfect guide for this rich and raucous celebration of the pageantry and tradition, the talismans and rituals, that prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that when it comes to football, Saturday rules.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Austin Murphy Delivers Again June 5, 2008 The run up to the NCAA national championship always has many stories about the difficulties and travails of the athletes, coaches and fans who all seek the elusive Number One ranking. There may be a few souls out there that know more about the X's and Os of college football but none of them can match Austin Murphy's dry wit, keen insights and the human stories behind the scenes. This book explains that we don't need a Playoff System because we already have more than enough drama. Like everything that this veteran SI Road Warrior puts out there, we have laughed more and are a bit wiser than before we started. Keep it coming!
Great read... December 18, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Great running commentary on the 2006 season, mostly from the perspective of USC and ND, but great insights into Ohio St, Michigan, and Florida. I would definitely enjoy reading a similar book about any season.
not his best December 5, 2007 Not the most fascinating subject but Murphy's writing rises above the fairly mundane topic. The premise that the college game beats pro football ignores four hour bowl games that carry into mid-January. That said, Murphy finds the humor in anything and has a real knack for people that comes across in his writing. His earlier books are five star efforts so this is, as they say, wide left.
Average book at best, boring at worst October 21, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The book is not great and I lost interest in it near the half way point. If you want to read good books on College Football, go with Dixieland Delight by Clay Travis or Bowls,Polls, and Tattered Souls by Stewart Mandel. Leave Saturday Rules at the store. It is not worth it.
An Average Book From a Great Writer September 25, 2007 Much like college rankings, Murphy takes half of the chronicled season before the book begins to feel coherent. While I'm a longtime Sports Illustrated reader familiar with Murphy's weekly college football coverage, there's something lost in the translation from magazine page to "Saturday Rules"--the play-by-play coverage of games drags on forever, and fails to bring the season alive. The behind-the-scenes access that Murphy has makes this book required reading for Notre Dame, USC, Michigan, Florida, and Ohio State fans (all of which are covered in-depth). Most other fans can pass on this one.
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