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Crashing the Borders: How Basketball Won the World and Lost Its Soul at Home - Hardcover

 
9780743280693: Crashing the Borders: How Basketball Won the World and Lost Its Soul at Home
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The game of basketball has gone global and is now the world's fastest-growing sport. Talented players from Europe, Asia, South America, and Africa are literally crashing the borders as the level of their game now often equals that of the American pros, who no longer are sure winners in international competition and who must compete with foreign players for coveted spots on NBA rosters. Yet that refreshing world outlook stands in stark contrast to the game's troubled image here at home. The concept of team play in the NBA has declined as, in the aftermath of the Michael Jordan phenomenon, the league's marketers and television promoters have placed a premium on hyping individual stars instead of teams, and the players have come to see that big-buck contracts and endorsements come to those who selfishly demand the spotlight for themselves.Even worse, relations between players and fans are at a low ebb. Players are perceived to be overpaid, ill-behaved, and arrogant. Fans, paying hundreds of dollars for tickets, often act boorishly and tauntingly. This tension boiled over on the night of November 19, 2004, at the Palace of Auburn Hills, Michigan, during a Detroit Pistons-Indiana Pacers game, when players brawled with fans as much as each other in what was, in fact, a racial skirmish. When the Pacer players entered the stands throwing punches, they had truly smashed an altogether different kind of border.In the aftermath of that sorry spectacle, regular-season television ratings declined for NBA games. Playoff-game ratings plummeted. Sales in NBA-licensing products sagged by a reported 30 percent. For the millions of Americans who cherish basketball, the love affair has reached a state of crisis.Few people care as deeply and know as much about basketball as Harvey Araton, the highly literate and well-traveled sports columnist for The New York Times. For many a season, Araton has observed "the ballers," as the players call themselves, at college tournaments, the NBA, and the Olympics. He has enjoyed a pressbox seat while watching the great 1980s rivalries of Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, the transcendent career of Michael Jordan, and the slow unraveling of the game through the 1990s until the present season, as newly arrived players and league officials misunderstood and misapplied the mixed lessons of Jordan's legacy. Calling on his many years of watching games, of locker-room interviews, of world-hopping reportage, Araton takes us to scenes of vivid play on the court and to off-camera dramas as well.In this taut, simmering book, the author points his finger at the greed and exploitation that has weakened the American game. And with uncommon journalistic courage, he opens a discussion on the volatile, undiscussed subject that lies at the heart of basketball's crisis: race. It begins, he argues, at the college level, where, too often, undereducated, inner-city talents are expected to perform for the benefit of affluent white crowds and to fill the coffers of their respective schools in what Araton calls a kind of "modern-day minstrel show." It continues at the pro level, where marketers have determined that "gangsta" imagery provides for a livelier entertainment package, never mind the effect it has on the quality of team play. And where, moreover, players themselves, often both street smart and immature, decide to live up to the thuggish stereotypes.Harvey Araton knows the players well enough to see beyond the stereotypes. He knows that for every clownish Dennis Rodman there is also an admirable David Robinson. For every Ron Artest, there is a Tim Duncan. Combining passion and knowledge, he calls on the NBA to heal itself and, with a hopeful sense of the possible, he points the way to a better future.Unflinching, timely, and authoritative, Crashing the Borders is the beginning of a much-needed conversation about sport and American culture. For those who care about both, this book will be the must-read work of the season.

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The catalyst for this book by an award-winning New York Times columnist was the November 2004 Detroit brawl in which Indiana Pacer basketball players went into the stands in pursuit of cup-tossing fans, and the fans spilled onto the court in search of arrogant, multimillionaire players. Araton sees the brawl as symptomatic of the racial and economic divide that currently characterizes professional basketball. Mostly black, multimillionaire players perform in all their cornrowed, tattooed glory before emissaries of corporate America, in attendance because their companies provided tickets. The spectators often aren't real fans but are increasingly antagonistic in berating the players. Araton points out the obvious: a disconnect between players and fans is bad business for any sport. Araton gives the college game a beating, too, from coaches who ride the backs of great players to a better job elsewhere to universities that focus on income generation rather than academic integrity. This is an intelligent overview of a sport losing fans in droves by a fan who wants the bleeding to stop. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review:
"Harvey Araton has that rarest of virtues among sports writers: the ability to think critically about a game he loves. Then again, "Crashing the Borders" isn't really sports writing. Sure, Araton knows what makes basketball beautiful. But he also understands how the sport intersects with race and money. As Dick Vitale might say, 'It's America, ba-bee!' But now it's Argentina, Italy, and Croatia as well. This book captures the game's culture and its contradictions with just the right mix of outrage, affection, and intellectual rigor."-- Mark Kriegel, author of "Namath: A Biography"

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  • PublisherFree Press
  • Publication date2005
  • ISBN 10 0743280695
  • ISBN 13 9780743280693
  • BindingHardcover
  • Number of pages224
  • Rating

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