Review
Silver’s book traces a lineage of modern day NFL offense, specifically the growth and evolution of Bill Walsh’s West Coast scheme under the influence of Kyle Shanahan and his assistants. Prominent characters include Mike & Kyle Shanahan, Mike McDaniel, Raheem Morris, Matt LeFleur, and Sean McVay, with numerous others playing significant roles throughout the book.
Written in three parts, Part 1 introduces the main characters with a chapter apiece of biographical overview, which is well done. Parts 2 and 3 trace the life events of these characters, both on and off the field. Silver depicts their distinct personalities, their dominant character traits, their problem-solving strengths, the conflicts between various coaches, and the collective competitiveness of the group as a whole, from the initial gathering of some of these characters in Washington under the Mike Shanahan led Redskins, through stints in Houston, Atlanta, Cleveland, and other teams through the end of the 2024 NFL season.
I’m new to this genre–Michael Lewis’s The Blind Side being the only other football book I’ve read–but I’ll keep my eyes and ears open for other reads about the NFL and its players that could add to my football knowledge or offer a compelling narrative.
Personal commentary
After a lifetime of following only my hometown team, I’ve been following the NFL closely for three or four years.
After my hometown franchise drafted a good QB, suddenly the team was being covered in nearly every segment on every national NFL show. The upshot: I began to have more interest in the league in general, and following the reality show that is the NFL led to collateral surface-learning about roster building, offensive and defensive schemes, salary cap challenges, and etc.
In a similar way, over a decade ago I transitioned from a lifelong hometown-team-only baseball fan to a fan of the whole MLB when I joined a fantasy baseball league. I began to learn more about players across the league, the ins and outs of player development, and the usefulness of analytics. Now, like many other baseball fans, I have favorite players who have never played for my hometown Royals, but of course the Royals, favorites since I was about five–several years before I followed any other major sports franchise–still dominate my heart when it comes to fandom.
My following of the NFL has born a different fruit: for starters, I quickly had to discard my preconceptions of NFL players and of football players in general. As a casual fan I had even developed prejudice against professional football players as a group. The mainstream media primarily catches only the perceived headline-worthy stories, whether it’s on or off-the-field related, and some of those headlines exist because poor decisions have been made, decisions that can ultimately damage a reputation or reveal the need for character growth.
When I began to consume NFL media beyond the mainstream–players’ and coaches’ pressers, analytical podcasts, etc.–I quickly realized my preconceptions should be thrown out whole hog. I misunderstood the work ethic–both physical and mental–that is required even to be in the NFL, much less to have success in the league and also as a team.
The players in the NFL are much more than athletic freaks, and some of the players who succeed aren’t even freaks from an athletic standpoint. But they all have committed themselves to a demanding schedule, high personal expectations, and brutal wear and tear on their bodies for seventeen weeks–if they’re lucky–every season. Oh, and the players have to be smart too. Work ethic can go a long way but it can’t do everything; depending on one’s position, studying for hours per week at home is part of the job. Mental preparedness, coping methods for different situations, dealing with the media: these things are all part of the job too. Are ee ess pee ee see tee.
And since Silver’s book is specifically about coaches, I’ll close by mentioning that success as a head coach seems to require something close to clinical workaholism.