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The Genius

How Bill Walsh Reinvented Football and Created an NFL Dynasty

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
The Genius is the gripping and definitive account of Bill Walsh’s career and how he built a football dynasty from the rubble of a fallen franchise. David Harris gives a stellar account of the silver-haired sophisticate from humble working-class roots who was hired as head coach and general manager of the San Francisco Forty Niners in January 1979 and became the architect of what is arguably the greatest ten-year run in NFL history.
With unmatched access to players, fellow coaches, executives, the reporters who covered the Niners’ heyday, and Walsh himself, Harris recounts how Walsh, through tactical and organizational genius, created a football juggernaut. There were also the demons that pushed and haunted Walsh throughout his career: his clash with his former mentor, Paul Brown, who denied Walsh his first pro head-coaching job with the Cincinnati Bengals; Walsh’s struggle with self-doubt and criticism; the toll his single-minded devotion to football exacted on his family; and his complex relationship with the Forty Niners’ owner, Edward DeBartolo, Jr.
Walsh’s pre-Niners coaching odyssey was arduous–a longtime assistant coach, he developed his legendary and now-standard pass-oriented West Coast offense during stops at all levels of the game. Despite never having run a team’s draft before, Walsh, along with his right-hand man John McVay, quickly built the foundation for a dynasty by drafting or trading for a durable core of stars, including Joe Montana, Fred Dean, Hacksaw Reynolds, Dwight Clark, and Ronnie Lott. (Walsh would later restock the team with such players as Jerry Rice, Steve Young, and Charles Haley.) The key to Walsh’s genius perhaps lay in his keen understanding of his athletes’ psyches–he knew what brought out the best in each of them. But the scope of Walsh’s impact on the game extended well beyond the field and locker room. The Forty Niners’ life-skills counseling program, which Walsh spearheaded with the sports sociologist and activist Dr. Harry Edwards, and the internship program Walsh devised to bring minority coaches into the game have since been adopted by the NFL for all league franchises.
In the annals of sport, few individuals have had as great an impact on their game–or on its relevance to life outside the lines–as Bill Walsh. With knowledge, skill, passion, and a critical eye, David Harris reveals the brilliant man behind the coaching legend.
The vision Bill Walsh brought to all his pioneering efforts was a function of his perception of himself as someone who was far more than a football coach. He cherished his standing and participation in the larger world outside the NFL and nurtured them at every opportunity.
“Knowing Bill Walsh was kind of like the blind man describing an elephant,” one of the sportswriters who covered him observed. “We all knew just one little piece of him. But he had all these other areas we knew nothing about. He dealt with lots of people outside of football, outside of our scope entirely. He was able to deal with politicians, people who were intellects in other areas. They were impressed by him.”
–from The Genius
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 7, 2008
      When Bill Walsh took over coaching duties for the San Francisco 49ers in the late 1970s, the team was arguably the worst in the NFL—and he was stuck trying to shake a rep that he lacked what it took to lead a pro team. Within two years, the 49ers had won the Super Bowl (against Walsh’s former employers, the Cincinnati Bengals, no less) and were well on their way to becoming the “team of the ’80s.” Harris’s biography is grounded by extensive interviews with Walsh, but the players and others who were there bring nuance to the portrait, revealing that the “Genius” who was admired for his confident demeanor on game day could also be a brittle, insecure personality off the field. While game highlights do appear, equal attention is paid to Walsh’s team-building skills, with lengthy analyses of his selections from the college draft pool—including Joe Montana, an underappreciated college quarterback who became one of the game’s all-time greats. Harris clearly knows his football, but the personal drama of Walsh’s career is told with such verve that even nonfans will be riveted.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from September 1, 2008
      Harris's "The League", which examines the business of pro football, was a best seller in 1986. Now he returns to the game with a biography of influential strategist and multifaceted coach Walsh. It is also a thorough examination of that team of the Eighties, Walsh's San Francisco 49ers. While Walsh's personal life is fully chronicled, special emphasis is placed on his ten years coaching the 49ers, as he first built a dynasty and then retooled it each year to remain competitive. Harris makes a special effort to appraise the effect of the cerebral Walsh's innovations on the evolution of the game itself. Recommended for all libraries.

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2008
      Before Bill Walsh became head coach of the San Francisco 49ers in 1979 and led the team to three Super Bowl victories, he had earned a reputation as an innovative offensive coordinator with an ability to develop quarterbacks. Consideredsoft-spoken and something of an intellectual, he was also considered an oddity among the NFL coaching fraternity. Harris, a former contributing editor at the New York Times Magazine and Rolling Stone and author of 10 previous books, conducted a series of interviews with Walsh in the year preceding the coachs death in July 2007. Those form the basis for the book but are fleshed out with other first-person interviews as well as detailed research from other print sources. The resulting portrait confirms much of the publics perception of Walsh: erudite, thoughtful, focused, brilliant, and compassionate. In addition, Harris illustrates Walshs incredible passion for the game, his competitive drive, and evenhis whimsical sense of humor. Walsh was one of the NFLs greatest coaches, and Harris book does him justice. Expect significant demand.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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