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The Jordan Rules - by Sam Smith (Paperback)

The Jordan Rules - by  Sam Smith (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 15.59 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Named "the best sports book of 1991" by The New York Times, this blockbuster bestseller about the Chicago Bulls' 1990-91 championship season has been updated with new material that takes us up to the minute in the fascinating life of Michael Jordan--including his minor league baseball career.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>Sam Smith's seminal, <i>New York Times </i>bestselling "eye-opener" (<i>The San Diego Union-Tribune</i>) on Michael Jordan and the 1990-1991 Chicago Bulls team--perfect for fans of ESPN's hit documentary series <i>The Last Dance. </i></b> <p/>This is the book that changed the way the world viewed Michael Jordan, while delivering nonstop excitement, tension, and thrills. <p/><i>The Jordan Rules</i> chronicles the season that changed everything for Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls. After losing in the playoffs to the "Bad Boys" Detroit Pistons for three consecutive years, the Bulls finally broke through and swept the Pistons in the 1991 Eastern Conference Finals, on the way to their first NBA championship. <p/>Celebrated sportswriter Sam Smith was there for the entire ride. He reveals a candid and provocative picture of Michael Jordan during the season in which his legacy began to be defined, and seeks to figure out what drove him. <i>The Jordan Rules</i> covers everything from his stormy relationships with his coaches and teammates and power struggles with management--including verbal attacks on general manager Jerry Krause and tantrums against coach Phil Jackson--to Jordan's obsessions with becoming the leading scorer, and his refusal to pass the ball in the crucial minutes of big games. Jordan's teammates also tell their side of the story, from Scottie Pippen, to Horace Grant, to Bill Cartwright. And Phil Jackson--the former flower child who blossomed into one of the NBA's top motivators and finally found a way to coax Jordan and the Bulls to their first title--is studied up close. <p/>"Smith takes us into the locker room, aboard the team plane and team bus, and seats us on the bench during games. Sometimes, books reflecting on a team's success don't reach the personal level with the people who made it happen: <i>The Jordan Rules</i> does" (Associated Press). <p/>Discover the team behind the man, and the man behind the living legend, in this intense, fascinating inside story of the incomparable Michael Jordan.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>"The Jordan Rules ... </i>might be the best sports book since <i>Season on the Brink</i> about Bob Knight."<br> - <i>Chicago Sun-Times</i> <p/>"Jordan boasts a wicked tongue, and not just when it's hanging out as he dunks ... [He] manages to blurt out enough in Smith's book to reveal his own narcis­sistic, trash-talking, obsessively competitive side."<br> - <i>Newsweek</i> <p/><i>"The Jordan Rules </i>entertains throughout, but the most fun comes from just hanging out with the players. Smith takes us into the locker room, aboard the team plane and team bus, and seats us on the bench during games. Sometimes, books reflecting on a team's success don't reach the personal level with the people who made it happen: <i>The Jordan Rules </i>does."<br> - <i>Associated Press</i> <p/>"A riveting account ... what you want in a sports book: the behind-the-scenes stuff, a peek at the private side of the players, their hobbies and politics and religion, the way they get along or don't ... It's fair to compare <i>The Jordan Rules </i>with the campaign books that appear after every presidential race ... The difference is not only that <i>The Jordan Rules </i>explains more persuasively than most of the campaign chronicles how the winner was decided--it's that it does so more interestingly and with more understand­ing of the human heart."<br> - Fred Barnes, <i>The American Spectator</i> <p/>"Revealing ...with often-evocative glimpses of players, coaches and on-court tactics."<br> - <i>Chicago Tribune</i> <p/>"Thorough and funny and engaging ... Anecdotes and asides ... give a true flavor of life with a professional sports franchise."<br> - <i>Philadelphia Inquirer</i> <p/>"Author Sam Smith shows you the other side of Jordan without malice, the side that is not slickly commercialized, or dramatically canonized according to hang time. Smith's book doesn't make Jordan out to be a bad guy or a tyrant. It simply makes him out to be mortal."<br> - <i>Orlando Sentinel</i> <p/>"In some ways, reading this book made me like Jordan more. Beyond the pull of his puppeteers, he is revealed as being human. He grows and is humbled ... "<br> - <i>Sports Illustrated</i> <p/>"Revealing and controversial ... Smith takes you through the championship season that, as it turns out, was a truly rocky journey."<br> - <i>Chattanooga Times</i> <p/>"AN EYE-OPENER."<br> - <i>San Diego Tribune</i> <p/>"Taking advantage of daily access to the Bulls, Smith takes the reader beyond the press-conscious statements usually heard through the media .... An excellent documentary on the Bulls' championship season."<br> - <i>Kansas City Star</i> <p/>"An engaging, sometimes cruelly funny behind-the-scenes look at the Bulls' tantrum-and doubt-filled but finally triumphant journey to the NBA title."<br> - <i>New York Newsday</i> <p/>"In context, Jordan actually comes off as a sympathetic mortal, which is no easy trick given his supernatural powers and Fort Knox bank account."<br> - <i>People</i> <p/>"<i>The Jordan Rules</i> tells the story of how a pro basketball team overcomes the handicap of having the greatest individual virtuoso in history as its centerpiece player. Even a Michael Jordan must learn how to pay attention to team dynamics."<br> - <i>Boston Globe</i> <p/>"You know it's gotta be certifiable, reliable, verifiable, authentic and every other synonym when Bulls GM Jerry Krause labels Smith's work 'mostly fiction.' That's a sure sign the writer has the drop on the situation ... There's nothing more controversial than the truth."<br> - Peter Yecsey, <i>USA Today</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Sam Smith</b> was a reporter for the <i>Chicago Tribune</i> during the Chicago Bulls' 1991 championship season. He is a Brooklyn, New York, native with degrees in accounting from Pace University and in journalism from Ball State University. He has worked for Arthur Young and Co., the <i>Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, </i> and States News Service in Washington, D.C. This is his first book.

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