Basketball Books
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Perfect Book of Facts and InformatonReview Date: 1999-12-16


GreatReview Date: 2001-08-06

On free markets an winning teamsReview Date: 2004-04-26
After perusing all eight books, I looked up the first five players drafted in every year back into the late seventies. Lo, I found that unless your team had one of the first three players taken in the entire draft your team did not win the NBA title. Furthermore I concluded that, after 13 years of holding season tickets for the Bullets, the teams that won most often have 8-9 good players vs those that lose who have only 3-4 good players. But, the pivotal player who carries the team must be present for ultimate success to be realized.
To draw a comparison, I learned years ago that there were one million high school football players. These reduced to 70,000 college players and then condensed further to 1200 NFL players. These remaining players averaged 3-4 years in the league, but the top 100-125 played for 10-15 years. The team who had the most of these head-and-shoulders better players won the championship. I believe this model holds true in all sports at all levels. It fits with a basis tenet of chaos theory and also with Mike Hart's book "the 100: A Ranking of the 100 most influential people in history." Thus I maintain that it's a model for how free markets and their unfettered, spontaneous ordering arrange civilizations. This leads into why western civilization has succeeded in raising living standards more for the common man in contrast to command and control economies.
Too bad Rick B. and Jordan Cohn stopped after the '97 season. It was great stuff for contemplative fans.
Used price: $1.77

Rick at his incisive bestReview Date: 2004-04-26
After perusing all eight books, I looked up the first five players drafted in every year back into the late seventies. Lo, I found that unless your team had one of the first three players taken in the entire draft your team did not win the NBA title. Furthermore I concluded that, after 13 years of holding season tickets for the Bullets, the teams that won most often have 8-9 good players vs those that lose who have only 3-4 good players. But, the pivotal player who carries the team must be present for ultimate success to be realized.
To draw a comparison, I learned years ago that there were one million high school football players. These reduced to 70,000 college players and then condensed further to 1200 NFL players. These remaining players averaged 3-4 years in the league, but the top 100-125 played for 10-15 years. The team who had the most of these head-and-shoulders better players won the championship. I believe this model holds true in all sports at all levels. It fits with a basis tenet of chaos theory and also with Mike Hart's book "the 100: A Ranking of the 100 most influential people in history." Thus I maintain that it's a model for how free markets and their unfettered, spontaneous ordering arrange civilizations. This leads into why western civilization has succeeded in raising living standards more for the common man in contrast to command and control economies.
Too bad Rick B. and Jordan Cohn stopped after the '97 season. It was great stuff for contemplative fans.

Used price: $16.39

Wow! I loved this bookReview Date: 2006-04-13

Used price: $0.90

Tamika Whitmore's ReviewReview Date: 2002-07-29


"Pleasure trip" To The Silver-mines Of NevadaReview Date: 2007-10-03
So, that is library stickers and marks and official making normally include.
Recorded books, unabridged, 11 audio cassettes, 16 hours, narrated by Norman Dietz are in plastic case.
But, case has been seen cracked tapped and dirt.
But, still listenable condition."
[from the experience]
"Roughing It: A Personal Narrative by Mark Twain.
Unabridged Narration by Norman Dietz.
"I had grown wonderfully fascinated with the curious new country, and concluded to put off my return to 'the States' awhile.
I had grown well accustomed to wearing a damaged slouch hat,
blue woolen shirt,
and pants crammed into top boots,
and gloried in the absence of coat,
vest,
and braces.
It seemed to me that nothing could be so fine and so romantic.
"If there is any life that is happier than the life we led on our timber ranch, it must be the sort of life which I have not read of in books or experienced in person.
We did not see a human being but ourselves during the time,
or hear any sounds but those that were made by the wind and the waves,
the sighing of the pines,
and now and then the far-off thunder of an avalanche.
The forest about us was dense and cool,
the sky above us was cloudless and brilliant with sunshine,
the broad lake before us was glassy and clear.
The eye was never tired of gazing,
night or day,
in calm or storm;
it suffered but one grief,
and that was that it could not look always,
but must close sometimes in sleep,"
[from Roughing It]
"Two American originals, Mark Twain and the West,
come face-to-face in this documentary of the author's seven-years
"PLEASURE TRIP" TO THE SILVER-MINES OF NEVADA.
Twain had originally planned the trip should last only three months:
his journey,
like this book,
has a way of taking ever-unexpected turns and prolonging itself to the reader's delight."
[from the case and tapes]

Most innovative book on the sport in many years.Review Date: 1997-08-30

Used price: $6.33

Courtesy of Teens Read TooReview Date: 2007-05-19
Unfortunately, Mackey gets involved in the "dark" side of basketball (game fixing), and as a result he may have been responsible for the fatal stabbing of his friend, J.R. Determined to make things right, Mackey starts the final tournament game intending to win it for J.R. no matter the consequences. But between his feelings of guilt, the pressure from the "dark" side, and the fact that J.R.'s own father is the long-time referee for the tournament, Mackey has everything he can do to play the game and not fall apart.
Paul Volponi demonstrates his knowledge of basketball in RUCKER PARK SETUP. The entire story revolves around the one tournament game. Readers are artfully filled in on the background information of Mackey's family and J.R.'s death through the use of flashbacks and the tormented thoughts of young Mackey. Colorful characters, top-notch players, and streetwise vocabulary help make the reader feel a part of the non-stop action. Fans of Volponi's Black and White (Speak) and Rooftop will not be disappointed.
Reviewed by: Sally Kruger, aka "Readingjunky"
Used price: $1.64

Sacramento Kings(Inside the NBA)Review Date: 2000-08-22
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