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Once a Giant

A Story of Victory, Tragedy, and Life After Football

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The inside story of the Super Bowl champion 1986 Giants, the extraordinary friendships that resulted—and stunning revelations about the hardships they faced, based on new interviews with Bill Parcells, Phil Simms, Mark Bavaro, and Bill Belichick.
The 1986 New York Giants are legendary. A championship team coached by Bill Parcells and his wunderkind assistant Bill Belichick, featuring future Hall of Famers and All-Pros like Phil Simms, Lawrence Taylor, Mark Bavaro, and Harry Carson. They were dominant on the field and formed a unique and lasting bond off of it. More than thirty years later, it's the friendships that have proved more important—a matter of life and death.
In Once a Giant, bestselling football writer Gary Myers tells the story of that team and what became of it. Gridiron glory eventually faded; chronic pain, addiction, and in some cases crimes have followed. Many football players face these harsh realities, but the Giants have confronted and survived them together.
With unprecedented access, Myers dives into such issues as Mark Bavaro's battle with injuries, the breakup and reconciliation of Parcells and Belichick, and Lawrence Taylor's struggles with sobriety. He creates a never-before-seen portrait of the team's run to the title, and their even more challenging fight to live after it ended.
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2023
      The inside story of the 1986 New York Giants. Myers, the author of Brady vs. Manning, has covered the NFL since 1978. He got off to a rocky start when he reported dissent surrounding newly drafted player Lawrence Taylor's salary, nearly causing Taylor to back out of the deal in solidarity with his fellow players; said the Giants owner to the 27-year-old journalist afterward, "My respect for you as a newspaper man has greatly diminished." Had Taylor walked, the miracle of 1986 might not have happened. Chalk that up to Taylor, Phil Simms, Mark Bavaro, and a disciplined and talented roster--and, of course, coach Bill Parcells, "who turned around four programs and always departed on his own terms, a rarity in the coaching profession, leaving players and fans wanting more." There's celebration in this story but also plenty of cautionary tale. As the author notes, the average career in the NFL is a mere 3.3 years, and until very recently, the NFL did nothing to help players adjust to life beyond the stadium. As a result, many of the players on that storied '86 team wound up in trouble. After he retired in 1993, Taylor developed a $1,000-per-day crack habit, an addiction so widely known that many voters sought to keep him out of the Hall of Fame. Other players became addicted, too, and often homeless. Several, by the author's account, admitted to contemplating suicide, one by driving off the old Tappan Zee Bridge across the Hudson River. Fortunately, as Myers writes, most have come out of the depths, some with Parcells' financial help, even though the Giants alums are now aging and suffer various football-related maladies decades after the fact--a grim but matter-of-fact conclusion to a tale that is seldom happy but that makes for urgent reading. That clich� about a football team being a family? As Myers shows in this absorbing book, it's true, dysfunction and all.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2023
      Sportswriter Myers chronicles how post-football life has been "heartwarming and heartbreaking" for the '86 Giants--the management, coaches, and players who took the 1986 New York Giants to a Super Bowl victory. As a decades-long reporter covering the Giants, Myers earned the Giants' trust and respect, making this book noteworthy because they spoke candidly about financial, medical, and mental-health issues they have confronted. Although NFL players seem to have glamorous lives, the average player's career is just three and a half years long! Since 1986, some Giants have remained healthy and successful. Others are experiencing difficulties, including symptoms of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (from hard-hitting physical contact), serious depression, thoughts of suicide, drug addiction, and homelessness. Myers notes that players and former coach Bill Parcells stay in close contact and help each other overcome problems. Readers interested in the challenges and opportunities former NFL players experience may, at times, find Myers' account a bit too detailed, but Giants fans and all readers interested in football will be fascinated.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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