I never thought I'd read this book, but picked up a free copy a little while back and whizzed through it in a couple of days. This is an "as told to" biography written by someone else (more about that later). It is an entertaining, though light, read. Switzer seems to be honest in the book, insofar as it goes. However, he does not really delve into what Oklahoma did, or failed to do, to earn its well-deserved outlaw reputation in college football. Perhaps Switzer declined to address that subject, or perhaps he simply lacked the thoughtfulness and introspection needed to seriously delve into his own conduct and areas where he may have fallen short.
Near the end of the book, in discussing his decision to resign as Oklahoma football coach, Switzer identified several other prominent college football coaches who retired at relatively young ages. One of these coaches was Bo Schembechler, who, according to the book retired as head coach for Michigan State University at age 60. As any reader who knows anything at all about college football knows, Schembechler coached the University of Michigan, not its arch-rival Michigan State. This groaner makes it clear that Switzer never read this part of the text, as he would have caught the mistake in an instant, and makes one wonder whether he read any of it at all. Just another lesson on the importance of proofreading . . . .