Full description not available
D**S
Stand Behind The Gymnasts!
How does a world-class, gold medal winning Olympic rower get his fifteen minutes of fame? Stand behind the gymnasts, wherever they go, counsels Brad Lewis (1984 Double champ with partner, Paul Enquist), that’s where the cameras will always be! David Halberstam did it again ... capturing the real pain, complete commitment, the competition and camaraderie among America’s best rowers in the events leading towards selection of the 1984 U.S. Olympic Rowing Team and through the competitions. Each of the principals receives personal care in Halberstam’s hands, as do their coaches and the relationships among them all. Well-told, engaging, awe-inspiring. The book is sensational - an amazing story told in David Halberstam’s inimitable way! A real pleasure to read!
P**A
Amazing stamina
Rowing has never been one of the most popular sports, and to be honest, I had never thought twice about it. In this book, the author tells us of the struggle of 4 young men to win a place in the Olympics in 1984. Their situations are different; for example for one of them, this is his last chance, after losing hiss opportunity when there was a boycott to the Games and he could not go. The four of them will compete to win the place as the single sculler, and this battle will be fierce among them. In this book, we learn of the terrible training sessions they have to endure, the crippling pain they feel during races, always feeling they will never do it. This sport is so demanding that those who pursue it must really feel deep love for it and be willing to sacrifice their personal and social life. This book was an eye-opener. I would have never imagined everything involved in this sport. It is always interesting to learn something new, and the author managed to convey it in this extraordinary book through these amazing athletes. A true story.
S**T
Brilliantly written book!
This is easily one of the finest books written about a sport. That it was written about a sport I love made it all the better. If it was possible to give 6+ starts I would have!
R**N
Intrinsic motivation at its best
I picked up this book after reading and loving Daniel Pink's book Drive about motivation and rewards. The Amateurs was one of the titles listed in Pink's book to read for more about intrinsic motivation. Rowing is not an attention-grabbing sport, especially in 1984 when the story takes place between athletes vying for the Olympic team. Overall this was a great story with considerable drama as the book winds down. Early chapters tended to get a bit tedious while learning the main characters but it came together in the second half of the book. Highly recommended for sports fans who long for the purer days of competition and drive to excel that seem lacking with today's athletes so often.
J**N
Immense pressures (3.5*s)
This interesting, but very narrow and highly dated, book follows several post-college rowers as they attempt to qualify for the 1984 US Olympic team and possibly medal at the Los Angeles Olympics. Details of rowing are necessarily part of the author's story, but the psychology, pressures, and interactions among the rowers and coaches are of far more interest to the author.At least at the time of this book, the early 1980s, rowing remained an elitist sport conducted at elite Eastern schools like Harvard and Yale with some West coast schools also participating. As is made clear throughout the book, rowing is very difficult, requiring fitness levels at or above other sports with long hours of lonely training. Rowers come to rowing differently: some are rejects from other sports, but many are following in family traditions. But it is also a sport that has virtually no public appeal. Rewards for any rowing success primarily come from within which increases internal pressures immensely.Because the rowing community is so small, the smallest details involving rowers, performance, coaching techniques, etc are immediately known throughout the community. The pressures to conform, as well as to excel, are immense. Even so, there are different ways of looking at rowing. A main point of contention is the relative importance of good rowing technique compared to more emphasis on power and endurance. Both types of rowers are represented in the book.The selection to the US rowing team was a somewhat nebulous process with the results from the selection camp being subject to overturning at a later training camp. It is in this selection process where the emotions of the rowers are ratcheted up considerably. The author and the rowers examine the racing strategies and strengths of the rivals in past events and attempt to project those details into performance at the trials. The intensity is over the top as every run seems like a life and death occurrence. And there are surprises. Some thought to be almost automatic selections do not make the team. On the other hand, an almost complete outsider forces his way onto the team. The lead-up to the Olympics is so dramatic that the performance at the Games seems almost anticlimactic. In some sense, the author wears one down with the constant tension. Joy is in short supply in this interpretation of rowing.It's hard to say what can be gained from this book thirty years after its writing. The names are forgotten. While not an emphasis of the author, the book is a story of privileged kids, who knowing their futures are secure have the liberty to indulge in practically obsessive-compulsive behavior over an activity. In fact, two of the principals were on their way to medical residencies after the Olympic. It is also a story of the difficulty of cracking rowing's inner circle beyond the difficulties of actually rowing. The book abruptly ends. The reader is asked to be engaged emotionally with these individuals, but the curtain summarily drops. And one is left to wonder if the book remains representative of rowing today.
M**N
Gold Fever
A well written account of young men in quest of a Olympic medal in the 1984 Olympics. The challenge that they faced was to beat out the others seeking to represent the USA in rowing single sculls. While the winner of the competition fails to medal in Olympic finals (he comes in 4th), one of the others ends up with a gold medal in the two-man boats. An intriguing story of the trials and tribulations of these men as they struggle with both physical and mental anguish in their pursuit.A more recent book on rowing, The Boys in the Boat, written about the Washington 8 man-crew heading to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, has both the drama of the rowing but also several other parallel sub plots. It is a well written and compelling story whether you are interested in the sport of rowing or just like great books.
H**O
Rudern macht süchtig
Für Leistungs-Ruderer ein Muss, für andere eine interessante Erfahrung über den wenig publikumsträchtigen Ruder Leistungssport.Davod Halberstam beschreibt die jungen Leistungsträger mit großem Einfühlbermögen
J**I
Libro interesante
Me ha gustado el libro porque es motivador
日**ー
ボート競技者必読の書
ピューリッツァー賞受賞ライターが上梓した至宝のスポーツドキュメンタリー。ボートという極限のアマチュア競技において、スカルという個の極限の能力が問われる種目の虜になった競技者や関係者の、ロスオリンピックに向けた人間ドラマ。
A**Y
Really good book taking you through the trials and frustrations of ...
I picked it up after i read Rahul Dravid had it on his reading list . Always looked up to Dravid and again the belief was upheld.Really good book taking you through the trials and frustrations of the professional athlete and brotherhood formed with your contemporaries . If you are training for your own personal marathon pick this up. It will help you through on those dark days to commit to your training .
K**P
Row row row UR boat
To start I respect all sports both team and individual. This book gave me a great insight to the under publicized sport of 'rowing' and how demanding on the body and the mind it truly is. Very well written combining published and behind the scenes facts. Describing the commitment required and decisions made and lives touched. A real good read that will have the reader come away with a real dose of respect for the sport, buy.../
Trustpilot
1 month ago
5 days ago