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| | Description | An inspiring portrait of the extraordinary high-school football team whose quest for perfection sustains its hometown in the heartland The football team in Smith Center, Kansas, has won sixty-seven games in a row, the nation’s longest high-school winning streak. They have done so by embracing a philosophy of life taught by their legendary coach, Roger Barta: “Respect each other, then learn to love each other and together we are champions.” But as they embarked on a quest for a fifth consecutive title in the fall of 2008, they faced a potentially destabilizing transition: the greatest senior class in school history had graduated, and Barta was contemplating retirement after three decades on the sidelines. In Smith Center—population: 1,931—this changing of the guard was seismic. Hours removed from the nearest city, the town revolves around “our boys” in a way that goes to the heart of what America’s heartland is today. Joe Drape, a Kansas City native and an award-winning sportswriter for The New York Times, moved his family to Smith Center to discover what makes the team and the town an inspiration even to those who live hundreds of miles away. His stories of the coaches, players, and parents reveal a community fighting to hold on to a way of life that is rich in value, even as its economic fortunes decline. Drape’s moving portrait of Coach Barta and the impressive young men of Smith Center is sure to take its place among the more memorable American sports stories of recent years. |  |
| | Product Details | | Author: | Joe Drape | | Hardcover: | 288 pages | | Publisher: | Times Books | | Publication Date: | August 18, 2009 | | Language: | English | | ISBN: | 0805088903 | | Product Length: | 8.3 inches | | Product Width: | 5.6 inches | | Product Height: | 1.1 inches | | Product Weight: | 0.9 pounds | | Package Length: | 8.4 inches | | Package Width: | 5.8 inches | | Package Height: | 0.9 inches | | Package Weight: | 0.9 pounds | | Average Customer Rating: | based on 74 reviews |
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| | Customer Reviews | Average Customer Review: ( 74 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 found the following review helpful:
One of the Best Sports Stories in American History Jul 23, 2009
By Christopher J. Martin Our Boys is an amazing tale about the high school football team from tiny Smith Center, Kansas. As of the 2000 census, the town had just 1,931 people with most of them living in town or near it on family farms. Despite having such a small town to draw athletes from, the Smith Center High School Redmen football team prior to the 2008 season had won four consecutive Kansas 2A titles and boasted a record winning streak of over 50 games.
Joe Drape, a reporter for the New York Times, a Kansas native, originally discovered the Redmen and Smith Center after the team set a high school scoring record, scoring 72 points in one quarter. Drape moved his entire family to Smith Center at the beginning of the 2008 season in order to chronicle the Redmen's drive for their fifth straight 2A state football title and their pursuit of the all-time winning streak record of 66 wins in a row. This book is the result.
The book's over 250 pages, and I read it in a single day. That's how good this story is, and how much I as a reader cared about Head Coach Roger Barta, his assistants, the players, and everybody else in the town of Smith Center that Drape writes about.
This isn't "just a sports book," although the game action described by Drape is very well done. The point of the book, and according to Coach Barta, is it's not about the wins and losses, one just needs to focus on getting better each day. That's a good life lesson for all of us. Barta knows that his players aren't going to go on to play in the NFL, (although one of his former players already has) he wants to make them better people while they're playing football and having fun. He also teaches his players about the value of hard work, which is, I have no doubt, why, as Drape writes, so many of his players go on to have successful careers at whatever they choose to do in bigger cities.
After I finished the book, I found myself using the Internet to find out more information on all of the team's seniors. That's how good Drape is at writing about this team and the players on it. As a reader, I really cared about the players by the end of the book. I really hope every one of them is successful in what they chose to do after high school.
Drape also does a great job at writing about the community of Smith Center, and how the high school is such a big part of that community. He also portrays why small town life is so wonderful to so many people, because everybody cares about everybody else. Everybody in Smith Center cares about the players, and not just because they're football players and won games, but because they're the town's kids. There's a tendency, I think, from many people to think kids like the ones Drape writes about are "too perfect" but Drape does touch on their mistakes and misjudgments at times. They're definitely real kids, just ones with the mindset that they want to do the right thing off the field, and win in sports with class and dignity. That's a real good antidote to those of us who live in major metropolitan areas and see so much on the news about kids who don't do the right thing.
Drape also writes about his personal experiences in Smith Center, especially about how his young son Jack immediately took to the town, its people, and especially the football team. I'm originally from Nebraska, and some of Drape's writing about being surprised at how much e-mail, texting, social network web sites, and other technology has permeated the teenage culture in middle America I had to laugh at. Middle America isn't the Moon, the kids there in many ways are no different than the kids in New York City, Boston or any big city in America. I had to laugh when Drape writes about being shocked by this, it's a good description of how our society has preconceived notions about different areas of the country. I give Drape credit for being bold, and secure, enough to include that in his book. He's also quite complementary of the town in general, writing in at least two places about how good the food is, and how he couldn't get meals that good for those prices in New York City. He doesn't overlook the shortfalls and problems of the town though, noting that it's losing population and the vast majority of the people still living in Smith Center won't be alive 20-25 years, or even less, from now. Drape doesn't go as far as he could have though in writing at least a little bit about the decline of small towns in Middle America, which I find profoundly saddening.
As a historian, I wish he'd written about more of the town's history though. Drape doesn't even mention that silent film star Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle was born in Smith Center. He quotes NFL linebacker Mark Simoneau who played for Barta, but he doesn't even mention, much less quote, former NFL special teams standout Steve Tasker, who's also from Smith Center.
This story from Coach Barta on down to his players and the community shows, as another reviewer wrote, what is right about America.
Unfortunately, I can't lavish the same praise for the book's editing and that's what keeps this book from being five star material. I counted no less than a dozen errors of spelling, grammar, punctuation and facts in the book. Most of the errors were simply due to bad, or lazy, editing by the publisher. I really hope they're all corrected before publication because they mar an otherwise outstanding book. Drape also gets his facts wrong on a couple of occasions. He writes about an assistant coach who joined the staff in 1990 as being the newest assistant on Coach Barta's staff, when on the same page just a few paragraphs before he wrote about another staff member who he says joined the Smith Center coaching staff in 1993 immediately after graduation from the school. Drape also makes a statement about a player being good at "Mario Kart on the XBox." Sorry Joe, Mario Kart isn't on the XBox and never has been. Your editor should have caught that.
If the errors weren't there, or are corrected before publication, this book has the potential to be another Friday Night Lights. I can say without reservation that I'm now a Smith Center Redmen fan and I think anyone else who reads this book will be too. It's a feel good story that you won't be able to put down.
Go Redmen!
9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
An Absolute Gem!!! Jul 03, 2009
By Michael DENNISUK
"cc coach"
This is one of the best books I have read on high school sports since reading "Friday Night Lights" 20 years ago. The author, Joe Drape, moves his wife and son Jack to Smith Center, Kansas to follow the exploits of the town's high school football team. The Smith Center Redmen are riding a 4 year winning streak that has culminated in 4 state titles. In 2008 they are seeking to continue the streak and break the state record.
This is an amazing story about love, family, commitment, small town America and football. I have been around high school sports and young people most of my adult life. We are often blinded by mega sports stars,free agent contracts, performance enhancing drugs and professional extravaganzas. The pure essence of sport is embodied in the high school athlete who sacrifices and works hard for the benefit of the lessons learned.
Mr. Drape gets it absolutely right. Coach Barta and his staff impart life wisdom to the group of remarkable young men you will come to love as you read this book. This book is an ABSOLUTE GEM!!!
6 of 6 found the following review helpful:
It takes a community to raise a child... Jul 17, 2009
By Jason Whitt
"Whittmeister"
The best service I can do for "Our Boys" is to say that, despite the photo on the cover, this is not a sports book so much as it is a book about the power of community, family and the inherent rewards of hard work.
Joe Drape's first hand account tells the true story of one high school football team's run for history in the small, rural Kansas town of Smith Center. At first blush it would be easy to dismiss this book as yet another "Hoosiers" tale with helmets and cleats. But readers will find that "Our Boys" isn't just a story about a group of kids striving to do what no one (including themselves) thought they could. This book is about something much bigger than "winning the big game".
The Smith Center Redmen were known throughout Kansas and the country for their incredible winning streak that had spanned 4 seasons and counting. Pressure was mounting to eclipse the win record held by another school. "Our Boys" allows us to be a fly on the wall to observe that journey, a journey taken by the entire town.
Joe Drape integrates himself and his family into the community and indeed becomes a part of it. And while a fair share of the book is about what takes place in the games, the vast majority of the book is instead devoted in great detail to the people of Smith Center. Those who built it up and continue to keep it alive and breathing. These are simple but smart farm folk with old fashioned values. They still teach "yes sir" and "yes ma'am". Yes, their kids go to school and play ball, but also tend their farms along side their parents.
At its' core, Our Boys, and in fact the entire town, illustrate that the unprecedented success of the Smith Center football program is more a by-product of the values they instill in their children rather than the end goal. Coach Barta, his assistants, the townspeople and local business all join together in one common goal. That is to teach their children that success is "to strive to get a little bit better every day".
There is no question that sports fans will love this book. But a love of sports is far from a prerequisite because this is not a story about wins and losses. It's a story about the things we don't hear enough about these days, a story about what is right in America.
7 of 8 found the following review helpful:
Instant Replay Jun 24, 2009
By Bicycle Day Author Joe Drape penned a trifecta of critically-acclaimed books on Thoroughbred racing before tackling the turf of high-school football in rural Kansas in Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains with the Smith Center Redmen (August 2009; Times Books: Henry Holt and Company, LLC).
When Drape first became acquainted with the Redmen in November 2007, they were on the cusp of capturing their fourth straight Division 2A state championship, with the current senior class about to finish their four years by winning an incredible 54 games in a row. But Drape hurdles past the statistics to get to the heart of a dynasty when he returns with his wife and young son the following summer to explore a true foundation that's built on community - the Smith Center population is less than 2,000 - and teamwork in a 165-member student body.
"I tell our boys it's about the journey," says long-time head coach Roger Barta, whose 2008 squad was shooting for state records in consecutive wins and most consecutive state titles. "What we do around here real well is raise kids. None of this is really about football."
Drape picks up the pre-season drills as June is about to give way to July and weaves an oftentimes tragic history of the region - dust storms of the 1930s, recent economic woes - with well-paced and placed sketches of coaches, players and residents. There is the battle between the core values found in the heartland with some perilous dangers in the fast-paced first decade of the new century; juvenile abuse cases on the rise and methamphetamine labs being found in abandoned farmhouses. Through it all, writes Drape, "...the Redmen were proof that hard work and accountability still meant something."
The Redmen have support through a booster organization, cheerleading squad and dance team, with student clubs working the concession stands and a student broadcast team covering the season with a professional flair. Each senior player and cheerleader has a trading card issued which carries a pledge to be alcohol- and tobacco-free. If there is a violation the individual is kicked off the team/squad, has the card revoked and must go to the elementary school to explain to students why the severe penalties were issued.
And there are the players who have been molded in a system that stresses "execution over innovation," but, as Drape writes, "....they (the seniors) were known mainly for following orders and riding the coattails of the class ahead of them."
With any team, there is drama leading to the first coin flip under the stadium lights. A 350-pound lineman - who is the state weight-lifting champion and has the potential to play at the major college level - is emotionally hurt by not being named as one of the team captains and has briefly abandoned the summer workouts. One of the four captains, who is hoping to receive at least a partial athletic scholarship to a small college, is trying to prepare for the season while juggling two jobs from 7:30 am to 6 pm - plumbers' assistant, trench-and-grave digger - and is called upon by the coaches to motivate teammates who are not taking the pre-season work seriously.
From the Second Cup Café, Buckshot Inn, Jiffy Burger, to the state-of-the-art library, community center, Smith County Hospital and an end run back up Roger Barta Way to the Hubbard football complex, Drape lives the dream of the players and the hopes of a town where sprayers and tractors keep rolling for fewer and fewer family farmers and pheasant season brings an invasion from the big cities. But fall brings new meaning to the regulation goal post in the front yard of a home - where the gridiron glory begins for many youngsters - and becomes a fitting symbol for players who are poised to rewrite the state record book, if the breaks of the game go their way.
"When I told Coach Barta that I intended to relocate to Smith Center and write a book about the town and the Redmen's 2008 season," Drape writes, "he chuckled as he had during our first conversation by phone."
After a discussion on the chances of the team to continue its winning and championship streaks, with Drape telling a pessimistic Barta that a loss may be better for the book's narrative, the coach finally replied, "We look forward to seeing you back here and I promise you'll have the run of the place."
Barta did not let Drape down and the chronicle of the season for the Smith Center Redmen is a winner, on and off the field.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
A perfect season...a wonderful book!! Sep 08, 2009
By Mark Hennicke I cannot recall the last time I was so taken by a story like the one told in Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains with the Smith Center Redmen, by New York Times reporter & noted author Joe Drape. Perhaps it was the films Hoosiers or Rudy or the wonderful book Six Good Innings: How One Small Town Became a Little League Giant, the true story of which took place basically in my own backyard, down near the Jersey Shore. None of those experiences, however, were as engaging as this story of the Smith Center High School Redman from Kansas. On the face of things , this delightful book is about a small Kansas high school foootball team & their coach, Roger Barta, pursuing yet another undefeated season & state championship trophy. It is, however, about so very much more. It's about friendship & caring about others & hardwork & determination. It is about challenges taken up & challenges met. It is about becoming a little better everyday & respecting opponents, but not fearing them ( both are pearls of simple smalltown wisdom from Coach Barta.) Any reader could not possibly fail to become totally engrossed in this wonderful narrative. Our Boys: A Perfect Season on the Plains with the Smith Center Redmen is a book I happened upon by chance, but is one that I will also treasure for many years to come. It is one of the finest stories about working to make your dreams come true that I have read in many years. I cannot recommend this excellent book highly enough.
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