Dennis Rodman. A great player, who couldn't care less about scoring but was interested in defence and rebounds, of which he has a record average (he was elected best rebounder 7 times over 7 consecutive seasons -1992-98...). An eccentric who dyed his hair, wore nail varnish, dressed up like a woman when he felt like it, and drove a pink Harley Davidson. A man who was 5 times NBA champion, twice with Detroit and three times with Chicago, a team he contributed to build the legend of alongside Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen. A glitz and glam celebrity too, he who dated Madonna and married Carmen Electra. Dennis Rodman is all of that wrapped into one: used to cause a stir, a character, who tells about himself here in an autobiography that spares no punches.
One could be forgiven to expect a deliberately shocking read just to sell (and the cover as much as the title don't help preventing against such bias...). Well, nope! Here is, in fact, a very sensible and smart book indeed.
Starting when, in 1993, the police found him in a pick-up truck, parked in a Detroit stadium and with a gun on his laps (his wife just divorced him, he barely saw his daughter, and his teammates had all been traded elsewhere) he retells his story. He talks about his childhood, in the poor Black ghettos of Dallas. He retells how, because he was good playing basketball, he was sent to a College
just to join their team. He talks about his friendship with another kid, White, who will have him to live with his family (farmers with whom he will stay for more than 4 years, an experience that will stay with him for the rest of his life). He talks about his divorce, his relationship with his daughter, his 'saga' with Madonna. He talks about his career as a player -Detroit and the powerful, aggressive play of the 'Bad Boys' (him, Isaiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, Bill Laimbeer), San Antonio, where neither the coach nor the other players could accept him for who he was, and, of course, Chicago, where, under the leadership of Phil Jackson his talent will fully blossom.
The style is crude, he has a big mouth, and he can be annoyingly wimpy at times (when he complains about his salary...). But he also uses the opportunity to smartly settle score: from the NBA, turned into a circus and where very young players are getting paid exorbitant salaries just to put on a show (dunks...) to denounces the hypocritical homophobia dominating sports (even though he is not gay himself), and, even, racial prejudices (remember his comments about Larry Bird: 'overrated because White').
It's more than about basketball. It's sensible, intelligent, and is a blunt outlook upon sports and the NBA by one of its most controversial veterans. A truly enjoyable read!