Chris Serb is deputy district chief for the Chicago Fire Department. He is also a veteran Chicago freelance writer with almost thirty years of experience as a journalist. Serb's articles, concentrated in sports and history, have appeared in the Chicago Tribune, Chicago History, Writer's Digest, Chicago Athlete, and Men's Fitness. He is the author of War Football: World War I and the Birth of the NFL and Sam's Boys: The History of Chicago's Leone Beach and Legendary Lifeguard Sam Leone.
Description
List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgments Part 1. 1886-1903 1. Woodlawn 2. Pre-1900 High School Sports 3. Hyde Park High School 4. High School Superstar 5. High School Sports after Eckersall Part 2. 1903-6 6. The Recruit 7. Coach Stagg, President Harper, and Their University 8. Freshman Phenom 9. All-American 10. Champions of the West 11. Year of Reform 12. Maroon Football after Eckersall Part 3. 1907-30 13. The Myth of Frank Merriwell 14. Semipro 15. Sports and the World's Greatest Newspaper 16. The Scribe 17. The Official 18. The Sweet Science 19. Football Goes to War 20. The Sunday Game 21. Chicago Goes for Gold 22. Silver Skates and Golden Gloves 23. Color Lines 24. The Seedy Side of Sports 25. The Authority 26. The Friend 27. -30- 28. Legacy Appendix: Walter Eckersall's Football Record Notes Bibliography Index
"Chris Serb tells the compelling story of the first true superstar of Windy City sports: University of Chicago football legend Walter Eckersall. More than just a comprehensive retelling of an electrifying playing career, Serb's diligent work chronicles Eckersall's second act as the city's best-known sportswriter. Eckie provides a fascinating lens into the early years of what would become one of America's most sports-obsessed cities."-Dave Revsine, Big Ten Network studio host and author of The Opening Kickoff: The Tumultuous Birth of a Football Nation "Here is the stunning, sad, important, and exciting story of a man all but forgotten. Chris Serb writes with such passion that he makes Walter Eckersall come alive on the pages of this remarkable book, making the athlete turned sportswriter impossible to forget."-Rick Kogan, Chicago Tribune columnist and WGN radio host