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≫ PDF Free The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland

The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland



Download As PDF : The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland

Download PDF  The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland

Kentucky's new football coach in 1962, Charlie Bradshaw, a Bear Bryant acolyte, put his team through a brutal conditioning and practice regiment, thinning the squad from eighty-eight players to just thirty. Over the course of the fateful year, the players would survive not just brutality on the football field, but sex and gambling scandals off it that involved Rock Hudson and the fixing of a Kentucky game. Based on extensive research, including over 100 interviews, The Thin Thirty is a detailed account of this fateful season, providing intimate portraits of the key participants, from the coaches to the players to the corrupting predators off the field. This is the true story of a football team that overcame the darkest of scandals to become forever known as legends. They were the Thin Thirty.

The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland

Every parent who has kids playing football should read this book. A college football team should have 55 players and the University of Kentucky got down to 30 (actually 26). 15 of the thin 30 are still living. The lessons of the book are many; abuse, no oversite / involvement by athletic director and president of university, and how the remaining players survived.

Product details

  • File Size 3982 KB
  • Print Length 372 pages
  • Publisher Set Shot Press; First edition (December 6, 2011)
  • Publication Date December 6, 2011
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B006IYGMYA

Read  The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland

Tags : Buy The Thin Thirty: Read 28 Kindle Store Reviews - Amazon.com,ebook,Shannon Ragland,The Thin Thirty,Set Shot Press,SPORTS & RECREATION Football,SPORTS & RECREATION Sociology of Sports
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The Thin Thirty eBook Shannon Ragland Reviews


Very dry and sometimes incomplete. Started off very well and then dragged on and on by half way. Tends to focus on a couple players!
Who among the male sports fans reading this has not at some time subscribed to the Bear Bryant/Vince Lombardi school of coaching, or thinking? We have all done it.

It goes something like this

Part One - Be tough on the kids, break em down physically and mentally.
Part Two - Build them back up as a team, encourage them, reward them.

Ever wondered what would happen if Part One was overdone, and Part Two was ignored?

Well, that's exactly what occurred at Kentucky University in 1962, and that is what The Thin Thirty is about.

The book gets its name from the fact that in the winter of 1961 KU had 88 men out for football, but after the brutality of the "conditioning program," spring practice, and finally fall practice, when the first game rolled around in 1962 only 30 players were left on the team.

The "thin" part of the title refers to the fact that among the 30 survivors most had gone from hefty guys down to scrawny, thin, weakened young men.

And the abuse did not stop there. Scholarship players who quit because of the insanity and physical abuse (wait till you read about the coach that slugged a player, knocked a tooth out and then demanded he continue with no interruption) were badgered into signing a waiver giving up their scholarships - a clear violation of the scholarship contract.

This is about a coaching staff and supportive administration that ran amok. And more importantly it is about dozens of young men who were forced to choose to endure the label of quitter for finally throwing in the towel on the KU version of the Bataan Death March.

Richly researched and told in a vivid style of writing, this is a book about what was nothing less than a concentration camp masquerading as a football program. And the stories of how the survivors eventually built solid lives for themselves in spite of the experience will bring tears to your eyes.

Bryant and Lombardi were masters. But they remembered Part Two of their formula. The "Bryant wannabees" at KU in 1962 forgot Part Two and became sadists in classic Lord Of The Flies fashion.

There is a message there for all of us.

PS This book deserved to be printed and distributed by a large publisher. Instead it seems to have been printed by a vanity press - so be prepared for some typos and errors in grammar - but don't let that put you off - this is a great book and we hope to hear more from this author.
Not worth the money or the effort! Very disappointing writing and the quality of the printing was atrocious! A lot of words were missing all together while some words and sentences were scrambled.
5 star rating because I know a lot of the players on that team. Attending the games of that period was definitely a "TIME OF THE LOCALS LIFE. Anyone interested in a TRUE hardtimes football team should read this account.
if you want to know about playing football in Ky in the 1960's this is the book. i knew, played with and against several of the guys in the book and can tell you at least 40% of the stuff related there was common, maybe 20% was questionable but the rest was definitely over the top. no water during practice was the rule. you ate 5 or six salt tablets to compensate and consumed a galleon of water after practice to re-hydrate. 5-6 lbs weight loss in summer practice was expected.
Not sure I would like it at first, but once I got into it, I read all of it. It was a bit slow in the history of every player who started practice for this team, but it did show how much talent was wasted by a coach who seemed oblivious to what he was doing to his players. Others in the supporting cast knew, of course, but it shows what happens when nobody will speak-up about what is wrong with what is going on. A tragedy in more ways than one. It hurt so many young men and, for many who came from very poor backgrounds, it was the end of any dream they had to attend college and better themselves and their families. The follow-on biographies at the back show the overall effects of and out-of-control, win-at-any-cost mentality which was present here. And there is much more than that involving people with famous names that anybody will immediately recognize.
Detailed telling of a story that most people who lived in Lexington in the 60s knew at least a little about. I'm still waiting for a good book to tell us about the rest of the many peculiar people that made up Lexington society and culture in the 60s. Three stars instead of four because of the miserable binding.
Every parent who has kids playing football should read this book. A college football team should have 55 players and the University of Kentucky got down to 30 (actually 26). 15 of the thin 30 are still living. The lessons of the book are many; abuse, no oversite / involvement by athletic director and president of university, and how the remaining players survived.
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