Jeff Karzen is a sportswriter who has covered basketball recruiting for twenty years. He is the author of Homer: The Small-Town Baseball Odyssey.
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Description
Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Anatomy of a Basketball Town Chapter 2. Prince of Peoria Chapter 3. Mayor of the South Side Chapter 4. Legends, Titles, and University of Illinois Pipeline Chapter 5. How the Seeds of Struggle Were Planted Chapter 6. Tragedy of Mud Chapter 7. Finding Oscar Mack Chapter 8. First Family of Peoria Central Chapter 9. Shaun Livingston and the Burden of Expectations Interviews Index
"You can't tell the story of basketball in Illinois without telling the story of Peoria basketball. Jeff Karzen's history is full of colorful characters, with deep backstories of their own, and the book does a terrific job of both uncovering these stories and telling them in an entertaining fashion. Heading into this book, I knew a little about Peoria basketball. Now I feel connected to it."--Will Leitch, author of How Lucky: A Novel "It's hard to explain how dominant Peoria basketball came to be during that period in the 1990s and 2000s. With a population around 200,000, Peoria produced one of the most overpowering high school basketball teams in U.S. history--and Manual High was not the city's only elite team. Once you read about the manic competition that surrounded former star player Tom Wilson's transfer from one school to another, you'll be hooked through to the final chapter about the often heartbreaking but ultimately triumphant story of NBA champion Shaun Livingston. The idea for this book was wonderful, but the execution beats it by double-digits."--Mike DeCourcy, senior writer, The Sporting News