Adam Lazarus is a member of the Professional Football Writers of America and the author of three previous sports books, including Best of Rivals: Joe Montana, Steve Young, and the Inside Story Behind the NFL's Greatest Quarterback Controversy. His writing has appeared in ESPN The Magazine, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Bleacher Report, and USA Today. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia, with his wife, Sarah, and sons, Aaron and Benjamin.
Hail to the Redskins: Gibbs, the Diesel, the Hogs, and the Glory Days of D.C.'s Football Dynasty
by Adam Lazarus
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9780062375759
- Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
- Publication date: 09/01/2015
- Sold by: HARPERCOLLINS
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 384
- File size: 4 MB
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At last, the definitive account of the Redskins’ championship decade
Based on more than ninety original interviews, here is the rollicking chronicle of the famed Washington Redskins teams of the Joe Gibbs years—one of the most remarkable and unique runs in NFL history. From 1981 to 1992, Gibbs coached the franchise to three Super Bowl victories, making the team the toast of the nation’s capital, from the political elite to the inner city, and helping to define one of the sport’s legendary eras.
Veteran sportswriter Adam Lazarus masterfully charts the Redskins’ rise from mediocrity (the franchise had never won a Super Bowl and Gibbs’s first year as head coach started with a five-game losing streak that almost cost him his job) to its stretch of four championship games in ten years. What makes their sustained success all the more remarkable, in retrospect, is that unlike the storied championship wins of Joe Montana’s 49ers and Tom Brady’s Patriots, the Redskins’ Super Bowl victories each featured a different starting quarterback: Joe Theismann in 1983, the franchise’s surprising first championship run; Doug Williams in 1988, a win full of meaning for a majority African American city during a tumultuous era; and Mark Rypien in 1992, capping one of the greatest seasons of all time, one that stands as Gibbs’s masterpiece.
Hail to the Redskins features an epic roster of saints and sinners: hard-drinking fullback John Riggins; the dominant, blue-collar offensive linemen known as “the Hogs,” who became a cultural phenomenon; quarterbacks Williams, the first African American QB to win a Super Bowl, and Theisman, a model-handsome pitchman whose leg was brutally broken by Lawrence Taylor on Monday Night Football; gregarious defensive end Dexter Manley, who would be banned from the league for cocaine abuse; and others including the legendary speedster Darrell Green, record-breaking receiver Art Monk, rags-to-riches QB Rypien, expert general managers and talent evaluators Bobby Beathard and Charley Casserly, aristocratic owner Jack Kent Cooke, and, of course, Gibbs himself, a devout Christian who was also a ruthless competitor and one of the sport’s most adaptable and creative coaching minds.
A must-read for any fan, Hail to the Redskins builds on Lazarus’s interviews with key inside sources to vividly re-create the plays, the players, the fans, and the opponents that shaped this unforgettable football dynasty.
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Coached by Hall of Famer Joe Gibbs, the Washington Redskins of the 1980s were second only to the San Francisco 49ers for sustained excellence on the gridiron during that decade. Lazarus (Best of Rivals) offers a guided oral history of the Washington football dynasty that lasted from 1981 to 1992; the narrative is punctuated by scores of quotes from leading participants. The primary focus is Gibbs, a quietly insistent strategic wizard who, with general managers Bobby Beathard and Charley Casserly, built and continually reshaped the team, enabling it to stay near the top throughout his tenure. It was a team of big personalities—Joe Theismann, John Riggins, and Doug Williams—and colorful nicknames: the Hogs, the Fun Bunch, the Smurfs, the Posse. Aside from Gibbs and Riggins, Williams—the first African American quarterback to start in the Super Bowl—receives the most attention. Lazarus chronicles the team's exploits year-by-year, but the reader doesn't get a complete sense of what enabled Gibbs's Redskins to win three Super Bowls with three different starting quarterbacks. More attention should have been devoted to Washington's strong NFC East rivalries that dominated each season, as well. VERDICT Despite this book's problems, its rich subject will be of interest to football fans.
Hail to the…well, Washington, back in the days when its football team's management made better decisions and its players turned in better results. Before their decadeslong doldrums and an ongoing controversy over their unseemly name, the Washington Redskins delivered an "unprecedented championship run," as freelance sportswriter Lazarus (Best of Rivals: Joe Montana, Steve Young, and the Inside Story behind the NFL's Greatest Quarterback Controversy, 2012, etc.) puts it. That run, lasting from 1981 to 1992, was the result of several perfect-storm forces that included a notable roster of players, exemplified by the 1991 team, which lost only 2 of 19 games, and then not by much, with a 16.94-point average scoring differential that no other championship team has matched. Another contributing factor was the presence of legendary coach Joe Gibbs, who accorded his players respect while demanding their best. "The 1991 Washington Redskins," Lazarus exults, "were Joe Gibbs's masterpiece: a team with a stellar passing game, a brutal running attack, the best offensive line in history, and a defense that sacked, stripped, or suffocated the opponent every week." One of Gibbs' contributions was to break the unsubtle color line that kept African-American players from the captain's position. As Lazarus observes, up to 1977, only one African-American player had started a postseason game anywhere in the NFL. Another was to de-emphasize the money aspect of the game, and though of course money figures prominently in professional sports, Gibbs spent it uncommonly wisely, not throwing lavish sums at big-name free agents but instead building a roster from the ground up. "I'm a very average person who loves what I do and works hard at it," Gibbs said with characteristic modesty in a line that might serve as a rebuke to the players, managers, coaches, and owners who have followed. Lazarus' solid, unflashy reporting is celebratory without being worshipful, and his study of what made a winning Washington team click will inspire both nostalgia and yearning among fans.