Brian Kinchen was a thirty-eight-year-old husband, father of four, and seventh-grade Bible teacher whose professional football career had been over for three years when the New England Patriots called on December 15, 2003. With the Patriots riding a ten-game winning streak and the playoffs only a few weeks away, they needed a fill-in for the obscure but vital job of snapping the ball for their punter and kicker—a long snapper. Brian had received similar invitations to tryouts that yielded only disappointment—the teams always went with a younger guy. But could he really turn away from the chance of a lifetime?
The Long Snapper chronicles Brian's remarkable journey as he and the Patriots seek the ultimate trophy. Unfortunately, the dream come true turns into a personal nightmare as Brian struggles both on and off the field, and the pressure to perform on the biggest stage in professional sports nearly causes him to walk away. Seven weeks after leaving the classroom, however, Brian overcomes his greatest fear and snaps the ball on the historic game-winning field goal with only seconds left in the Super Bowl.
As told by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jeffrey Marx, The Long Snapper is the story of a man who finally achieves the success he has always wanted. Brian Kinchen's championship ring is a powerful status symbol for all to see. But his journey forces him to reexamine what really matters, and he realizes the true measure of a man has nothing to do with status: life is not about prestige; it is about passion and purpose. It is about impacting the lives of others.
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In late 2003, Brian Kinchen did not seem destined for Super Bowl greatness. This retired NFL player was 38 years old, a father of four whose days were devoted to church and teaching at Baptist middle school, not practicing snaps to punters and field-goal kickers. When the New England Patriots called him unexpectedly on December 15th to be an emergency replacement for their injured snapper, "old man" Kinchen was perplexed about what to do, so he let his seventh-grade Bible students decide. Perhaps predictably, they voted that their mentor answer the Patriots' call. A few weeks later, he was at San Diego's Qualcomm Stadium, snapping the ball for the kick that decided the Super Bowl. This book, penned by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jeffrey Marx, is the story of what happened before and after that fateful moment.
Publishers Weekly
Second chances rarely come in professional sports, especially for athletes out of the game for some time. But former NFL player Brian Kinchen defied those odds, as Marx shows. Having played pro football for 12 years (including with the Dolphins and Panthers), Kinchen hung up his cleats and turned to teaching. Yet more than two years after his final play in football, Kinchen received a call from the New England Patriots to become the team's long-snapper-a player who excels at snapping the ball for field goals and punts. What followed was a seven-week journey that would challenge him both physically and spiritually. From a miscue at his first tryout to his subsequent flubs at Patriots practice, Kinchen became increasingly uneasy about playing on football's biggest stage. And as New England's hopes of winning the sport's greatest prize became more realistic, "the mere thought of messing up in the Super Bowl, of maybe even becoming the unforgettable goat of the game, simply horrified him." But just as the pressure of failure becomes too crushing, Kinchen uses his Christian faith and the confidence others had in him to capture a missing piece from his football career. Marx is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist, and it shows in his vivid recreation of events long after the fact. That, in tandem with his ability to connect with Kinchen on a very human level, allows him to show a side of professional athletes rarely seen on Sunday broadcasts. It's an inspiring read for anyone who has ever wanted one last shot at their utmost dreams. (Sept.)Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Bob Ley
Jeffrey Marx captures a remarkable story, and reveals a very human athlete with faith, doubt, and an underappreciated skill. The Long Snapper would be marvelous fiction; that this account is the ultimate truth is its great joy.
Frank Deford
Don’t we all long for one last chance? Don’t we all dream to do it over again? Anybody who has ever had those pangs will love Jeffrey Marx’s beautiful and uplifting story about a guy who had opportunity dropped into his lap.
Rick Telander
Jeffrey Marx has done it again, only better than ever. The improbable story of Brian Kinchen blooms in Marx’s gifted hands. Thoughtful and inspiring, The Long Snapper is a quite simply a joy to behold.
Vinny Testaverde
A great story.
New Orleans Times Picayune
The Long Snapper is an inspirational and compelling tale of New England Patriot Brian Kinchen’s journey from seventh grade Bible studies teacher to Super Bowl champion.
Philadelphia Inquirer
A moving-right-along recounting of one of those odysseys that screams to be made into a movie. It is much, much more than your conventional “sports book.”
Sports Illustrated
Jeffrey Marx tells Kinchen’s story with wit and grace, spotlighting a position often lost in the NFL trenches.
Fellowship of Christian Athletes
The book is a lesson about achieving your dreams, and realizing that what you’ve sought all along was right in front of you the whole time.
Houston Chronicle
A compelling read.
Chicago Tribune
A page-turner that succinctly captures the true-life story of football player Brian Kinchen.
Booklist
A real-life inspirational story of a young man .... Kinchen’s unexpected opportunity was wonderful on its own but more so because it clarified what was truly valuable in his life: marriage, family, and teaching. Nicely done, with plenty of insider football action.
Cincinnati Enquirer
You’ll find yourself asking some core questions about what matters and what doesn’t...Marx tells the tale with simple eloquence.
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