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The Kids Got It Right: How the Texas All-Stars Kicked Down Racial Walls

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Jim Dent, the award-winning, New York Times bestselling author of The Junction Boys, returns with a powerful Texas story which transcends college football, displaying the courage and determination of one of the game’s most valiant players.

Freddie Steinmark was an under-sized but scrappy young man when he arrived in Austin as a freshman at the University of Texas in 1967. Despite the pronouncement by many coaches that he was too small to play football at the college level, Freddie was a tenacious competitor who vowed to start every game as a varsity Longhorn.

By the start of the 1969 season, Freddie was making his mark on the college gridiron and national stage as UT’s star safety, but he’d also developed a crippling pain in his thigh that worried his high school sweetheart, Linda. Despite the increasingly debilitating pain, Freddie continued to play throughout the season, helping the Longhorns to rip through opponents like pulpwood. His final game was for the national championship at the end of 1969, when the Longhorns rallied to beat Arkansas in a legendary game that has become known as “the Game of the Century.”

            Tragically, bone cancer took Freddie off the field when nothing else could. But nothing could extinguish his irrepressible spirit or keep him away from the game. Although his struggle with cancer would be short-lived, Freddie’s fight would inspire the nation as well as thousands of cancer victims, earning him a special citation from President Richard Nixon. Today, a photo of Freddie hangs in the tunnel at Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium, where players touch it before games en route to the field. With this moving story, a Brian’s Song for college football, Jim Dent once again brings readers to cheers and tears with a truly American tale of resolution and bravery in the face of the worst odds.

320 pages, Paperback

First published August 20, 2013

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Jim Dent

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5 stars
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40 (34%)
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24 (20%)
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for John Yingling.
700 reviews16 followers
January 6, 2015
I respected the author's main reason for writing this book, and its affect on sports in general, and specifically to sports in Texas in the 1960s. However, what brought my review down to 3 stars is his blatant bias toward the Texas football team during the Big 33 games from 1964-1967. I might, emphasis on "might", have understood his one-time use of the term "coalcrackers" to refer to the Pennsylvania team, but when it is repeated dozens of times, I got pretty disgusted, and I am not from Pennsylvania. Then, his obvious homerism really began to irritate me. It seems, to this author, that no insult or derogatory terms towards the Pennsylvania team on the part of the Texas team was too mean-spirited. Underage drinking, stealing the Pennsylvania team members girlfriends, and wild parties all got a free pass from the author. I appreciate his bringing to life a time when the color of one's skin determined one's place in life and in sports, but his undisguised rooting for one side over another really detracts from the story.
Profile Image for Don LaFountaine.
468 reviews9 followers
May 13, 2017
This was a pretty good book about the preparation for the Big 33 football game of 1965 between the best high school football players between Texas and Pennsylvania.

In 1964, Pennsylvania challenged Texas to a football game to determine which state had the best high school football team. The date that Pennsylvania anointed for the game was the same day as the Texas East/West game. This meant that the best Texas players were unable to make the trip to Hershey, Pennsylvania. The winner of that game was Pennsylvania. As the Texas coaches and players were walking off the field, the fans taunted them by accusing them of killing President Kennedy and asking if they wanted to have a rematch.

When Pennsylvania challenged them again in 1965, it so happened to be again on the same date as the Texas East/West game. Was it intentional? Well, the Penn guys said no, but the Texas guys said yes. So, the coaches of the Texas team went to the Governor and asked to have the East/West game moved up by a week. This happened and the 1st stringers went to Hershey that year.

An interesting side bar to the story was that an African-American wide receiver named Jerry LeVias was named to the team. The problem was that in 1965 racism was prominent, especially in Texas. So when asked, star player Bill Bradley said yes to having LeVias as his roommate. This was the beginning of a lifelong friendship. It was also the combination of quarterback and receiver that allowed the Texas team to overcome a 10 – 0 deficit to win the 1965 game.

This was a pretty good book, though not what I had expected. The title implied that the book was about overcoming racism and integrating Texas sports, specifically football. While there was discussion about how rampant racism was during that time, and how Jerry LeVias and other African-Americans dealt with everything they faced, the book was mostly about the football game. Not being a football fan, had I known that the sport was what it was mostly about, I probably would not have read it. While I probably will not re-read the book, I did enjoy it and would recommend it to anyone who likes football, especially high school football.
Profile Image for Teri Scott.
62 reviews
August 29, 2021
My brother-in-law (BIL) went to college with Bill Bradley at the University of Texas. When Bill came to the Eagles, he roomed with my BIL in Radnor, PA. (Our family is from PA). This past month, Bill was in town for an Eagles game and he contacted my BIL to join him as his guest. Just as stated in the book, Bill and my BIL picked up where they left off 50 years ago! When I heard about this book , I just had to read it. Not just because my sister and BIL know Bill, but also because of the story. Jerry LeVias is the true hero of this story. His choice to keep his commitment to SMU realizing just how lonely and difficult his journey would be as the ONLY black man on the team let alone on campus is truly heroic. The hate he dealt with is unpalatable. Everyone should read this book and put yourself in Jerry’s shoes.
Profile Image for Deb.
278 reviews7 followers
July 20, 2020
Another great book about Texas football from Jim Dent. Jerry Levias from Beaumont was the first black player in the Southwest Conference. He played at SMU for Hayden Fry who wanted to recruit black players and end the "gentlemen's agreement" among Texas coaches not to recruit them. The stories of the friendships of Jerry Levias and Bill Bradley as well as Bobby Layne and Doak Walker (who played for Rusty Russell at Highland Park) are heartwarming and powerful. Good read if you are a Texan whether or not you like football.
4 reviews1 follower
December 15, 2021
Dry read but interesting if you are interested in Texas high school football history.
Profile Image for Deborah Dibble.
136 reviews
May 23, 2022
Fabulous true sports story! I listened to it on audible.com, glad I did!
124 reviews
September 3, 2025
I didn’t remember why I added this book to my wishlist, but I’m glad I did. Learned a lot
176 reviews10 followers
October 7, 2013
First off, I have to disclose that I won this book in a Goodreads giveaway. This in no way impacts how I rated the read.

Jim Dent tackles another football tale in The Kids Got It Right. A large portion of the story follows this huge game between Pennsylvania and Texas, known as the Big 33 Football Classic. I find the synopsis of this book a little misleading. I was led to believe that the majority of the story would follow the friendship between Bill Bradley and Jerry LeVias and how LeVias had to overcome being one of the very few black men who were allowed to play at the time. This is incorrect to an extent. The Kids Got It Right goes off into a lot of tangents. While these divergences from the heart of the story still have to do with football, it seemed like the story was more about former quarterback and coach of the Texas Big 33 team, Bobby Layne and his efforts than LeVias.

I've seen rave reviews for this book and how moving it is and how it's such a feel-good story, but I just did not have the same reaction. The lives of these people do not go well. In some cases, their lives are quite sad, so as far as using the word uplifting to describe this story, I would probably have to disagree. LeVias suffered from the abuse people put him through, and it was just very sad.

That aside, I enjoyed this read, and, as star-ratings on Goodreads are kind of different from other sites, the three stars is that I liked the read. I didn't find it extraordinary or overly moving. The writing style is easy, and I'll have to bring up a huge negative for me. I received an advance reading copy. It was just full of easily fixed grammatical and technical errors; some portions of the story had several sentences in a row that were full of errors and which were also hard to read because of the sheer volume of mistakes present. After using Amazon's Look Inside feature, it looks like some of the errors were fixed. I definitely couldn't go back and check them all, but if the book had been published as-is from what the advance reading copy was (and I don't believe it was), that would have been very bad. This did not impact the rating.

A note: if you're coming into this read with little to no knowledge of football, some of the play-by-play narrative might leave you totally confused and lost.

Overall: I expected to enjoy this story more. It's not the best thing I've ever read, and I also didn't find it very moving or even as moving as other readers seem to feel. It could be an excellent read for football fans or fans of any of the players present in the story. Again, for those not familiar with football, it might be difficult to understand what's going on during games.
Profile Image for Tom Gase.
1,076 reviews14 followers
November 18, 2015
I had mixed feelings about this book. I like the author because he wrote one of my favorite books of all time, 12 Mighty Orphans, but this book seems like it was written almost as if the author was hoping it would be made into a movie and he didn't care if he bent the truth a little in order to make the story better. A lot of this book just seems...unbelievable. And not in a good way. Mostly with dialogue. How could someone, who wasn't there, know exactly how things were said over 50 years ago? And like another reviewer of this book said, the author keeps referring to the Penn team as their nickname, "the coalcrackers." Okay, maybe once or twice use the nickname, but throughout the whole book? Come on. And it's soooo obvious the author is bias with the Texas team. You can almost hear him laughing in the background everytime a Texas player acted kind of like an arrogant jerk and would steal Penn's players girlfriends. If the Penn players were also acting like jerks or being racist, okay I can see that, but I didn't get that feeling. I did however like the story in the book dealing with Bill Bradley and Jerry DeVias' friendship during the Civil Rights era. That stuff was moving and very interesting. How much of it I believe? That's another question. If you like books on high school football or just football in general, you'll like this. Just know that it reads like a fiction book.
Profile Image for John Gold.
7 reviews
November 4, 2015
Well written book that I found very interesting. I am absolutely biased as I grew up in Palestine, TX which is where several of the characters in this book are from. Nonetheless, interesting historical account of integration of high school football in Texas. Jim Dent does a great job painting the picture of what it was like at the time and the social dogmas that existed in Texas in the 1960s.

Great story...quick read...if you're interested in sports history, I highly recommend!
Profile Image for Kenneth.
77 reviews5 followers
September 6, 2013
Tremendous story and an engrossing read. I read this one cover to cover in just three days and I am not a fast reader by any means!

The hardships faced by some in the 60s is hard for me to fathom. I would love to meet LaVias one day. The actions of Bradley were inspirational as well.

First The Junction Boys and now this. I think I've found my new favorite author in Jim Dent.
Profile Image for Byron Wade.
10 reviews8 followers
February 25, 2014
I thought this was a good read on the integration of high school football in Texas back in the 1960's. The annual Big 33 game with Pennsylvania and Texas must have been huge back in the day!! I also thought the stories of Jerry LeVias and Bill Bradley were ones that made the book. Good read and I definitely recommend it.
23 reviews5 followers
November 10, 2013
Fantastic story and a wonderful look into a piece of history. I particularly enjoyed reading about the friendship between Bradley and LaVias.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews