Showing posts with label Buccaneers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buccaneers. Show all posts

Monday, June 16, 2025

Review of "The Players' Coach"

Having read this book as part of a Goodreads challenge, I found this to be okay.  There was a lot of name dropping by the author as well as some great stories, and some may really enjoy them.  Here is my review of "The Players' Coach."


Title/Author:

The Players’ Coach: Fifty Years Making NFL’s Best Better – From Bradshaw, Manning, Brady and Beyond” by Tom Moore with Rick Stroud

Rating: 

3 ½  of 5 stars (okay)

Review:

Tom Moore is a person who would be considered a football “lifer.” He proclaims himself to be one in this memoir co-written with Rick Stroud.  Even though he never was named as a head coach of any team, college or NFL, one cannot say that he has not had a successful and interesting career.

Moore shares many stories about himself as well as some of the great players that he has coached.  After getting his first college coaching job at Iowa after graduation, he went on to be an assistant at several colleges, including a rival of Iowa, the University of Minnesota (a place where he considered becoming a head coach before they hired Lou Holtz in 1984).  From there, he transitioned to the NFL in 1977, becoming an assistant to Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Chuck Noll.  After a successful stint in Pittsburgh that included two Super Bowl victories and a promotion to offensive coordinator, he held similar roles for several other NFL teams, including the Minnesota Vikings, Detroit Lions, New Orleans Saints (he talks very little about his time there in this book), Indianapolis Colts, New York Jets, Tennessee Titans, Arizona Cardinals and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.  He won two more Super Bowls – one with the Colts, one with the Buccaneers, and coached in another with the Cardinals.

With a resume like this, it naturally follows that Moore has coached some of the greatest players in this era of football and three of them are in the subtitle.  He has good stories about each one of them, and even better stories about some who were very good but not at the legendary level of these three.  There is a great story on Vikings wide receiver Jake Reed on the assistance Moore gave him when it was discovered a vision problem was hindering his ability to catch passes.  Moore also has kind things to say about his quarterback in Detroit, Scott Mitchell.  When Moore talks about some of these players, those are the best sections to read.

Unfortunately, the rest of the book didn’t hold my interest as much as these stories as the talk about his moves, the X’s and O’s and other parts of his career just didn’t seem to have the same level of enthusiasm and intangibles. I use that word for this description – just like when an athlete has something extra that can’t be described so it is said that person has “intangibles”.  In this case, those chapters and sections LACK those “intangibles” to make them must-read areas.

That aside, any reader with an interest in a football coach with a lengthy and successful career despite never holding a head coaching position will want to read this book.  If nothing else, read it for some good stories on some of the legendary players in recent NFL history.

I wish to thank Diversion Books for providing a copy of the book. The opinions expressed in this review are strictly my own.

Link: The Players' Coach: From Bradshaw to Manning, Brady, and Beyond: Moore, Tom, Stroud, Rick: 9781635769852: Amazon.com: Books

Monday, June 20, 2022

Review of "A Season in the Sun"

Figuring it was time to start picking books out of the BOTTOM of the pile for those needing reviews instead of the top, I read this one on Tom Brady's first season in Tampa Bay and it was about what I expected - which meant it was good.  Here is my review of "A Season in the Sun." 

Title/Author: “A Season in the Sun: Bruce Arians, Tom Brady and the Inside Story of the Making of a Champion” by Lars Anderson

Rating:  4 of 5 stars (very good)

Review:  There were few people who expected Tom Brady to leave the New England Patriots, but after the 2019-20 NFL season, there were some indications were shown that his time with the Patriots and their head coach Bill Belichick were coming to an end.  How the Tampa Bay Buccaneers convinced Brady to sign with them and then lead them to their second Super Bowl championship is described in this very good book by Lars Anderson.

Unlike many books that are about one particular season (no matter the sport), this one doesn’t spend a lot of time with game-by-game accounts nor does it spend a great deal of time discussing other issues of the time such as social issues or politics.  Given that this book was about a season (2020) during a global pandemic, one would expect that more of this would be discussed, but Anderson sticks with strictly matters affecting the Buccaneers, Brady or head coach Bruce Arians. If the pandemic is mentioned, it is how it affects the football team, such as not being able to conduct face-to-face meetings.  The best of these references is a well-known story in which Brady goes to the wrong house soon after signing to pick up the Tampa Bay playbook from the offensive coordinator Byron Leftwich.

Most of the text in this book would be considered character-driven if this were a fictional novel as there are plenty of stories and information about people.  The main two characters are in the subtitle – Tom Brady and Bruce Arians. Readers who did not know a lot about the personalities of these two men will get to know them well by the end of the book.  Anderson also does a terrific job of telling the reader how the relationship between quarterback and head coach evolved, including Brady’s relationships with his teammates and his other coaches.  Leftwich was a quarterback who faced Brady several times in his career, but that was put aside and Brady made sure to listen and learn from his offensive coordinator.

The 2020 season for Tampa Bay is reviewed and important games are described in detail.  Of course, these include the victories in the playoffs and Super Bowl, but also some key defeats as well, such as the 38-3 loss to the New Orleans Saints that left the Buccaneers at 7-5 and in danger of missing the playoffs.  From there, the reader is taken on a great ride of success and hard work to achieve the ultimate goal for any football team.  It should be noted that Brady is praised by many, friends and opponents alike, for the amount of work he did during that season.  It didn’t matter that he already had six championships, he made sure to put in the work he felt was needed to get his seventh and first one outside of New England.  This is a book that pro football fans will enjoy no matter their rooting interest or even their admiration or loathing of Tom Brady.

I wish to thank William Morrow and Custom House for providing a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

Link:  Amazon.com: A Season in the Sun: The Inside Story of Bruce Arians, Tom Brady, and the Making of a Champion: 9780063160200: Anderson, Lars: Books

 

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Review of "The Yucks!"

While it is generally true that fans love a winner, there are some losers who become well known and loved.  Examples of teams that achieved this status are the 1962 New York Mets, the 1974-75 Washington Capitals and the 1976-77 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The latter of these lovable losers is the subject of this terrific book by Jason Vuic. Here is my review of "The Yucks!"


Title/Author:
“The Yucks!: Two Years in Tampa With the Losingest Team in NFL History” by Jason Vuic

Tags:
Football (American), professional, history, Buccaneers

Publish date:
August 30, 2016

Length:
256 pages

Rating: 
5 of 5 stars (outstanding)

Review:
The Tampa Bay Buccaneers entered the National Football League in 1976 and immediately became a nationally-known team. Not because of their excellent play, but because they put together an incredible losing streak by losing all 14 of their games in 1976 and the first 12 games of the season in 1977.  When they finally ended the streak by defeating the New Orleans Saints, it was such an embarrassment that the Saints fired head coach Hank Stram. It was a road game, so when the Buccaneers returned home that evening, over 8000 fans were at the airport to greet the team. Their Bucs had been a national punch line for so long, they were just happy that it was finally over.

The adventures of this beleaguered team and the stories behind the losing are captured in this often hilarious, always entertaining book by Jason Vuic. His previous work was about the Yugo, probably the worst car ever sold in the United States, so it just seemed natural that he would follow up with a book on the worst football team in the history of the NFL. The 1976-77 Bucs were considered even worse than the 2009 Detroit Lions who also went through an entire season without a win.

The book chronicles the arduous route taken for the Tampa area to secure an NFL franchise and the expansion draft that left very few talented players for the Bucs to build their team.  Much of the humor in the book comes from the caustic first coach in Bucs history, John McKay. McKay was a successful college coach, winning national championships at the University of Southern California, but even he couldn’t take this rag-tag collection of players and produce a win from them in that first season. There are many quotes from McKay that will leave the reader laughing hard, even if it is the one hundredth time he or she has heard that one. One of the more famous quotes (in which the book raises doubt to its origin to McKay) is when asked about his team’s execution, McKay replied “I’m all for it.”  

There are also many stories about owner Hugh Culverhouse, who was notoriously cheap – he would make players put money in a vending machine for sodas and had the walls of the team’s training facility painted white in order to avoid buying a projector screen. It was one of the reasons given that the team was so bad, but no amount of money could have bought the publicity that the Buccaneers had when the losing streak lasted into 1977 and was often the subject of many jokes from late night television legend Johnny Carson. 

It was at this time when the team became a beloved group of losers in much the same manner as the 1962 New York Mets. The country started paying attention and the tension mounted within the team to finally break the streak.  Readers of the book will feel the same tension, even if they were already familiar with the history of the team and the streak.  Even though I remember the game well, I was cheering with joy when they beat the Saints and ended the streak and the jokes.

This book is best for football fans or readers familiar with the lingo of the game as it is full of this type of text. However, the humor in the book will make any reader laugh loud and long and for that reason alone, this book is one that every football fan should add to his or her library.

I wish to thank Simon and Schuster for providing a copy of the book via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Book Format Read:
E-book (Kindle)

Buying links (pre-order at time of posting):