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Charley Rosen

Personal Information

Born January 1, 1941
Died January 1, 2025 (84 years old)
Also known as: Charles Elliot Rosen
8 books
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2 readers

Description

American sports journalist, author, basketball player, mentor and coach.

Books

Newest First

Bullpen Diaries Mariano Rivera Bronx Dreams Pinstripe Legends And The Future Of The New York Yankees

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"Baseball is also the only American sport where the defense has the ball. So begins an inside look at baseball's most scrutinized group of players - relief pitchers -- and life in the most intriguing bullpen of all, that of the New York Yankees"--

Chocolate Thunder

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The former NBA star, celebrated for outrageous acts on and off the basketball court, writes about his life in the NBA and about the people and places visited along the way.

Perfectly Awful

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"During the 1972-73 season, the Philadelphia 76ers were not just a bad team; they were fantastically awful. Doomed from the start after losing their leading scorer and rebounder, Billy Cunningham, as well as head coach Jack Ramsay, they lost twenty-one of their first twenty-three games. A Philadelphia newspaper began calling them the Seventy Sickers, and they duly lost their last thirteen games on their way to a not-yet-broken record of nine wins and seventy-three losses. Charley Rosen recaptures the futility of that season through the firsthand accounts of players, participants, and observers. Although the team was uniformly bad, there were still many memorable moments, and the lore surrounding the team is legendary. Once, when head coach Lou Rubin tried to substitute John Q. Trapp out of a game, Trapp refused and told Rubin to look behind the team's bench, whereby one of Trapp's friends supposedly opened his jacket to show his handgun. With only four wins at the All-Star break, Rubin was fired and replaced by player-coach Kevin Loughery. In addition to chronicling the 76ers' woes, Perfectly Awful also captures the drama, culture, and attitude of the NBA in an era when many white fans believed that the league had too many black players, most of whom were overtly political and/or using recreational drugs. "--