Synopses & Reviews
In the spring of 1957 the Boston Celtics, led by coach Red Auerbach, won a National Basketball Association championship for the first time. Auerbach had been building the team throughout the 1950s but was still missing what he considered an essential piecea single player in the middle who could hoist the team on his shoulders by doing the dirty work of rebounding and playing defense. That player was Bill Russell.
By blending unselfish yet talented players into a roster led by Russells unconquerable will, Auerbach and the Celtics put together an unprecedented run of championships rarely challenged before or since in team sports. Between 1957 and 1969, Boston won eleven titles in thirteen seasons. Only when Russell retired did the era of dominance end.
Written by Lew Freedman, an award-winning veteran sportswriter who personally witnessed many of the Celtics antics and special moments over the years, Dynasty is a celebration of the basketball team Auerbach melded into one of the greatest franchises in NBA history.
Freedman grew up attending Celtics games, from his first game as a boy in 1960 he befriended the players and the team management as an adult. In Dynasty, he draws on dozens of interviews as well as courtside observation to reveal dramatic moments both on and off the floor.
Half a century after the Celtics legendary first championship, here is a riveting
behind-the-scenes account of one of sports greatest franchisesa terrific book about a vibrant sports town, the greatest players in basketball, and one of professional basketballs best and most beloved teams.
Synopsis
The behind-the-scenes story of one of professional basketball's most respected and beloved teams.
Synopsis
The behind-the-scenes story of the glory years of one of professional basketballs best and most beloved teams I so admired Cousy and Russell as a kid, and I rooted from the depths of my heart for Tommy Heinsohn, Frank Ramsey, Tom Sanders, Jim Loscutoff, Bill Sharman, Sam Jones, K. C. Jones, John Havlicek, and all the others in green. I knew I was watching something special, but it wasnt until I was much older, when time provided perspective, that some of their feats seemed so incredible. . . . Year after year, the Celtics won, with essentially the same casta circumstance now impossible given the free agency of the modern eramen molded by a singularly wise master of the game, Red Auerbach. The Dynasty is a great sports story, but it is a story rooted in a transcending and tumultuous period in American history. . . .
The Celtics players were a diverse group of men from all corners of the country, but they had more in common than they, or anyone else, would have thought. Dramatic changes swirled about them . . . but none of those developments distracted the players enough to disturb their artistry on the court. All the Celtics did between 1957 and 1969while their nation changed foreverwas win.
from the Prologue
Synopsis
More than half a century after the Boston Celtics legendary first championship, here is a riveting inside account of one of sports greatest franchises—between 1957 and 1969, winners of eleven titles, including a record eight in a row starting in 1959.
In the spring of 1957, the Celtics, led by coach Red Auerbach, won a National Basketball Association championship for the first time. Auerbach had been building the team throughout the 1950s, but was still missing what he considered an essential piece, a single player in the middle who could hoist the team on his shoulders by doing the dirty work of rebounding and playing defense. That man was Bill Russell.
Author Lew Freedman, who grew up attending Celtics games and eventually befriended the players and team management, chronicles the teams glory years under Auerbach, Russell, and a legendary lineup of other talents. Revealing how he was swept up in dramatic moments both on and off the court, Freedman has penned a gripping book about a vibrant sports town, the greatest players in basketball, and an unprecedented run of championships rarely challenged before or since in team sports.
About the Author
Lew Freedman grew up in the Boston area as a Celtics fan. An author of thirty books, Freedman currently works in the sports department of the Chicago Tribune. He is a graduate of Boston University's School of Public Communications. Formerly on staff at the Anchorage Daily News and Philadelphia Inquirer, he has won more than 250 journalism awards. He is looking forward to the next Celtics championship parade through downtown Boston.