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Swing Your Sword: Leading the Charge in Football and Life

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The legendary college football head coach tells his captivating story—from rural Wyoming to law school to the upper echelons of the SEC.

A New York Times Bestseller

Swing Your Sword is the first ever book by one of the most fascinating and successful coaches in sports. A maverick who took an unlikely path to coaching through law school, Mike Leach talks about his unorthodox approach to coaching and the choices that have brought him success throughout his career.

A lover of football who started creating formations and drawing his own plays as a kid, Leach took his Texas Tech Red Raiders to numerous bowl games, achieving the #2 slot in national rankings and being voted 2008 Coach of the Year before being unceremoniously fired at the end of the 2009 season. The scandalous nature of his dismissal created a media frenzy and began a personal battle between Leach and his accusers that remains unresolved.

"Mike Leach is a renaissance man through and through . . . He's a real maverick and an inspiration."―Peter Berg, filmmaker, director Friday Night Lights

288 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 27, 2011

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Mike Leach

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 150 reviews
Profile Image for H. P..
608 reviews36 followers
August 11, 2011
The only difference between the petty math teacher Leach discusses early in this book and the ESPN and Texas Tech powers-that-be is that the math teacher had the common decency to retreat when called on his BS.

I started this book with low expectations, even for an iconoclast like Leach. Coaches and other politicians seldom write interesting books. Leach quickly shows that he is an exception. Leach is one of those people with an incurable compulsion for telling it like it is and beating his own path—the bane of bureaucrats everywhere.

Leach did not follow a traditional path into coaching. He did not play college football. He has a law degree. He entered the field with no personal connections. He was willing to put academics above football. He never hesitated to chuck the conventional wisdom when in doubt of its actual wisdom. Despite this, or perhaps in part because of it, Leach became one of the most successful coaches in college football before his ignominious firing from the head coaching job at Texas Tech.

Leach covers the birth of his “pirate” reputation. A well read man, Leach is a particular aficionado of pirates. He leveraged this for a post-defeat team meeting, bringing in a sword as a memorable prop.

The book is written in a conversational, easily readable style. Leach is famously meandering in conversation which shows here, but it works by providing an easy way to insert insights into the traditional biographical structure and avoid the rut of merely reciting events. Leach’s erudition shows through, e.g., he uses “institutionalized” and “coaching caste system” in a single sentence, but it never becomes pedantic or results in overly dense prose.

Leach’s non-conformity is well demonstrated in the appendix covering his game week preparations. For example, he ran shorter practices to keep his players fresh, but he also tried to keep everyone moving and relied heavily on his graduate assistants to work with the third- and scout-teamers to maximize the time.

This book is not primarily focused on the controversy that embroiled Leach at the end of his tenure at Texas Tech, but it is covered at great length. Leach shows, with support from depositions and emails between key players, that the Adam James controversy was used as a pretext by a Texas Tech administration more concerned with petty politics than the best interests of the university. They were greatly assisted in this by a media conglomerate, ESPN, that was more than happy to present its employee’s side of the story as plain fact while ignoring the other side (reported by other news outlets) as “irrelevant.” Numerous inconsistent statements were made by administrators and the Jameses (Adam James essentially recanted his entire story when deposed), and a PR firm was hired to smear Leach.

ESPN writer Bruce Feldman helped edit this book. Despite signing off on his work in advance, the ESPN powers-that-be suspended Feldman shortly after it was released. They then reinstated him less than a day later after an outpouring of support via Twitter but, true to form, claimed that Feldman was never suspended.

As a college football fan, I fervently hope that Leach returns to the sidelines post-haste. As an N.C. State fan, I fervently hope that Leach does not return to the sidelines in the ACC.
Profile Image for Rachel.
738 reviews10 followers
October 12, 2011
This book is terrific.

I initially put this on hold for the laughs, which I figured would be in about a 60/40 with/at ratio. Crazy ramblings! Who can pass those up?

It isn't crazy ramblings, though. It's a genuinely interesting and informative autobiography/football book. The tone is extremely matter-of-fact, without any pomposity.

The first section is a retrospective on Leach's early days, from childhood to BYU to law school. My favorite part was about Leach's very brief foray into acting. He played a security guard in something called Grunt! The Wrestling Movie and an FBI agent in a miniseries about J. Edgar Hoover. "I didn't have a speaking part," he writes. "I just tried to look like an FBI agent." He's never seen that one, though, so he doesn't know whether he made it into the final cut or not. The book also provides a pull quote from his agent: "I represented that guy?! Holy smokes! That's wild."

In the second part, Leach details how he got into coaching and what it was like to be an assistant coach. This is where the book gets really interesting on a general football level. He talks about developing his offensive philosophy with Hal Mumme and about moving from school to school (and what went into the decisions about when and where to go). I think any college football fan would find it really interesting. My favorite quote in the whole book is in this section--Leach explains how once he decided he wanted to coach, he got a degree at a coaching school in Alabama, but that wasn't a ton of help: "It was impossible to become a graduate assistant at a Division I team because I had no connections. I hadn't been a player, and hadn't had any prior opportunity to build relationships with any coaches. They weren't going to take some slap-dick out of the Sports Academy."

The third section deals with Leach's time at Texas Tech. He makes sure to hit all the high points by talking about Wes Welker, his whole pirate thing, the win over texas in 2008. This is the longest part of the book, and about a third of it is dedicated to his firing from Tech. Thanks to extensive documentation (full emails from figures in the controversy are found at the back of the book), Leach does an excellent job of nailing Tech brass and ESPN to the wall. (That's why Leach's co-author, Bruce Feldman, used to work for ESPN, which is a whole huge controversy in itself.) The insight into university politics, particularly the way that the roots of Leach's firing go all the way back to Bobby Knight, is fascinating. Again, I think that anybody who was following college football at the time would be interesting in getting the fuller story.

Leach finishes up by discussing life since his firing (he really loves living in Key West) and, in an appendix, going through the day-by-day schedule of his football teams. The latter is the most football-wonky part of the whole book. General observations are sprinkled throughout the book, so you get a broad overview of Leach's Thoughts on Life. (Example: Michael Jordan playing baseball? He was for it!)

I can't recommend this book strongly enough. It's not just fun from a human interest perspective, it's probably the best sports book I've read.


Finally, here are the Kubler-Ross Stages of Mike Leach:
1. Annoyance: Who is this weird dude? And why does he keep beating my team?
2. Anger: No, seriously, WHY.
3. Grudging amusement: OK, admittedly, I do enjoy reading all his weird quotes.
4. Admiration: That weird guy really is a solid coach. (NOTE: this stage is expedited if he stops working for a team you hate)
5. Love: Yayyyyyyyy, Mike Leach wrote a book!!! [reads book] . . . I wonder what it would be like if Mike Leach coached my team.
Profile Image for Zoie.
102 reviews2 followers
January 4, 2023
4/5 - Mike Leach was a powerful storyteller. No doubt about it. I am not a football fan, but I am a people fan, and a fan of Mississippi State (the school itself, not just athletics lol). And Mike Leach was such an interesting person and was at Mississippi State, so I knew I needed to read this. Even as someone who only casually enjoys a football game here and there, I enjoyed reading about his coaching philosophy. It was so intriguing to read this and parallel some of the relationships with relationships that he could have had in Starkville. I really enjoyed the quotes from others with Leach’s response after it as well. The entire thing truly read as if he were speaking it. I’m glad that he was able to coach again after this book was written, I’m glad that he ended up at Mississippi State. -.5 star because the flow of the book sometimes seemed disjointed (and there were quite a few editing errors). -.5 for being a little too technical (may just be me not knowing football; I’ll admit it). We miss you, Coach Leach!!
21 reviews5 followers
August 17, 2020
As a Mississippi State fan, I really enjoyed learning more about Mike Leach’s life and coaching style. This book seems to confirm all I’ve heard about Leach—brilliant, eccentric, genuine, curious, creative, and endearing.
Profile Image for Ted Tyler.
233 reviews
December 28, 2022
'There's something to the expression, "ignorance is bliss," I might not have pursued a college coaching career after law school if I'd listened to most folks in the coaching world. I'm sure I wouldn't have even tried to do a lot of the things I've done in my life if I'd only listened to people who supposedly knew better. If you're not loaded down with reasons why something won't work, the reasons why it can work become much clearer." - Mike Leach (1961-2022)

The late Mike Leach was among the most fascinating people to ever coach football. In high school, I always made time to watch Texas Tech football games. I admired his willingness to do unconventional things: not have a playbook, throw the ball sixty times a game, recruit guys based on fit and character, not just speed and athleticism. His interviews were must-see TV. Leach is legendary for his rants on candy, wedding planning, college mascots, movies, etc. A great book written by one of the most interesting men to have walked earth.

Profile Image for Connie Haugneland.
177 reviews3 followers
January 18, 2025
The end of this book is WILD with tea. He talks about the events that led up to him being fired from Texas Tech in 2009. I learned a lot about football, play calling, game preparation and team atmosphere. I found it fascinating. Texas tech loves this man and I loved learning about his life. 🖤❤️
Profile Image for Walter Montague.
161 reviews2 followers
August 27, 2025
I knew I loved coach Leach before I read this Mike Leach autobiography. It was written a few years after the Adam James and Craig James BS and Tech firing. So not really anything on Wash St or Miss St. His origin story is pretty fascinating.

1. This guy was the best. I knew I loved him before reading this books. He legit had the best and simplest outlook on life. He gave little fucks, worked hard, treated people well and was always searching for knowledge.

2. Tech is a gross as shit program and university. It was my safety school and I always sort of rooted for them. But while Leach was there, Bob Knight overlapped. The whole place was gross and how they let him go was absurd.

3. Craig James needs to face the karma police. He is a horrible human being.


I wish coach wasn’t taken from this world. He was one of a kind.
Profile Image for Max Potter.
41 reviews1 follower
November 12, 2025
This is perhaps one of the most interesting and all-encompassing books I have ever read. It's basis is in football, sure, but Mike Leach takes us on a journey not only through his mind as it relates to football, but his perspective on life. It is a true shame that we lost him so early, I genuinely believe that this man might have been one of the greatest American philosophers of all time, and certainly the best and most memorable in the modern era. His thirst not only for life, but for impacting people is felt in nearly every page.

I found his perspective on life to be fascinating. He approaches every day with curiosity, and every person he met seemed to provide some different perspective to him. I think we could all learn from that way of living. One thing I found particularly entertaining was his commentary on the show Seinfeld (pg. 152-154). His understanding of what the show is looking to accomplish is incredible, and his translation of that into helping his team is uncanny. I think few other football coaches learned as much from society, current events and the world as he did - most I feel like exist within a bubble of football since it is so consuming.

His perspective on school and its value was also incredibly admirable. His commitment to excellence in the classroom for his student-athletes showed the value he put on knowledge and education for people and society. He should know, he was training to be a lawyer before he ever became a football coach. That speaks to the determination and grit that he possesses (and we all do) in that if you set your mind to something and pursue it relentlessly, you can do anything. Including changing careers from law to football... incredible!

I also love the namesake of the book and the idea of Swinging Your Sword. Do what you do best, confidently and in control. If you swing a sword too aggressive you lose control and become vulnerable, but if you stay within yourself, use your skills and make up your mind with clarity, then you are a force to be reckoned with.

Mike Leach was a great man, a great mind and a great football coach. I miss seeing his musings and opinions and thoughts frequently and the world was a better place with him in it. He lives on through this book and it has become an instant favorite of mine. If I can take away one thing from this, curiosity makes life worth living. Staying in your bubble, or being comfortable does not create fulfillment to the mind, body and spirit.

Notable quotes/thoughts:
"I loved how [Vince] Lombardi valued toughness and that nothing replaced the fundamentals. With him, execution was paramount: "We know what we're gonna do and you know what we're gonna do, but you know that we know that you know and you still can't stop it." There is something inherently powerful in that." (pg. 10)

"Being curious and inquisitive, you provide yourself with a lot of opportunity to study folks, to see what makes them tick. Maybe most importantly, you wonder what makes you tick." (pg. 11)

"I learned that they [adults] can screw you over if they feel like it. Or if you find yourself sideways to their agenda, right and wrong may not play into the equation." (pg. 13) - Leach discussing how he learned in grade school the politics of human life and how people can control outcomes for you based on nothing more than their feelings towards you.

"I realized that any problem I was faced with--whether it was money-related, academic-related, or anything else--only one person is gonna have the solution, and that was me. It was then that I realized that your choices come down to either ducking your head and running, or stepping up and attacking your obstacles aggressively." (pg. 22)

"I approached those debates thinking,'OK, he knows more about the facts that I do, but he doesn't know more about my own opinion than I do.' ... I just think it comes down to trusting yourself. I wasn't always prepared for the cases they might throw at me, but I trusted my instincts and my ability to focus on sorting out the details for a solution." (pg. 31) - Leach reflecting on law school at Pepperdine and how he trusted himself, his understanding of a situation, and his feelings about what was right then conveying that to people in a respectful manner. Being confident in who you are and what you know and what you think goes a long way towards your credibility.

"I've always thought that whenever someone challenges my opinions, I end up learning new things and I become even more focused in my thought process. Not everybody, though, likes to be challenged. That's unfortunate. I suspect many people shy away from challenges because of their own insecurities. But being open enough to engage in sometimes difficult discussions is a great thing. It prompts some level of the unexpected, and anything that provokes a response provides you the opportunity to generate ideas, which is hugely beneficial." (pg. 36)

"This was a guy that craved experience, wanted to test himself and see what else he could accomplish. Yet all of these people giddily point out that he didn't make it to the major leagues. So he wasn't successful? That's crazy. Just having the desire to be more, to do more, well, that's a big part of the reason why he is Michael Jordan, and that's why I think his baseball experiment was an incredible success." (pg. 44)

"You never know who you really are until you get out of your comfort zone." (pg. 44)

"It's easy to fixate on how the other team has better resources that you do. But it's more important to concentrate on maximizing your own resources instead of worrying about things you can't control. It's a challenge, obviously .. Regardless, you just can't spend a lot of time dwelling on what you don't have." (pg. 58)

"It's not that you should feel above 'tricking' them, but there's no long-term pay-off with that method. If the play works, it's usually a one-shot deal However, if the play is based on technique and execution, you can run it many times in the course of a game. Changing formations and motioning players helps disguise the same play. It'll look much different to the defense, but there is very little change for the offense, leaving them to focus on technique and execution." (pg. 73) - Doing what you do well, and committing to do that at a high level is the best way to impact outcomes. Gimmicks and tricks can work, but they don't provide a sustainable competitive advantage. Doing what you do best and being the best at that will always give you a chance.

"Athletics have done more to bring people together than any government or law. Nothing has done more for race relations than athletics." (pg. 77)

"The fact that someone coaches in the SEC doesn't mean that he's any smarter than someone who coaches at a small college or in high school. Yeah he might be smarter, but then again he might not be. If some sheer unadulterated moron gets hired in the SEC, that doesn't mean he's automatically a smarter coach, it just means whoever hired him made a big mistake." (pg. 79) - Success or ability is not defined by the logo on your shirt or the colors you wear. Just because someone is at a place or in a position doesn't make them automatically smarter or better than you. Prove that they aren't and you are the best.

"I wanted diversity, and not just in terms of the racial mix, but from an ideological standpoint as well. I wanted people from a variety of backgrounds so that as we shared ideas about relating to our players, we'd have a lot of the bases covered. I wanted smart people. I also wanted people who knew things that I didn't know." (pg. 114) - Having different backgrounds and different life experiences matter. it helps you connect with people and understand something that you may not know even exists.

"People would always come up and ask, 'How do you think you're gonna do against Texas?' The truth is, I don't care about Texas right now. The only team I'm able to beat this week is New Mexico or Iowa State or whoever we are scheduled to play that Saturday. We wanna just win one game a week. That is all." (pg. 122) - You can only do what is in front of you. Thinking too far ahead will actually set you back from excelling in the here and now. Focus on the present, you can focus on the future in the future.

"If you're not pushing and playing on the edge and trying to make things happen, you're probably not going to be very good, but if you're going for it you're going to get flagged now and then." (pg. 123) - Everyone is afraid of making a mistake, but you can't get succeed without making mistakes. Pushing the envelope leads to success, while staying in the background timidly will usually set you back further than if you pushed.

"Ego is so important. Ego doesn't help you when you win, but it protects you during the losses. ... ego allows you to stand up and say "I'm the guy that can make this happen." If you don't have that inside you, then the people around you won't respond with confidence. I have never met a great player tor an overachiever who does not have a big ego." (pg. 140) - Confidence in yourself and your abilities is key. Knowing you are the right person for the job will allow you to push on when things get tough.

"It's what you learn after you know it all that counts." -John Wooden (pg. 183)

"He's the person who taught me that it's always more important to worry about what you do, not what they might do. He's the one who said the thing that's going to impact the score is you doing the best you can, and if you want to change the score, change yourself." (pg. 183) - Leach on Wooden adages.

"Be more concerned with your character than your reputation." - John Wooden (pg. 183)

"You can control who you are and find satisfaction in knowing that you did your best. The most important question you can ask yourself is, is this the right thing to do? You can't let what somebody else thinks or might think cloud your own judgement." (pg. 184)

"Respect everyone but fear no one, make routine plays, play the next play, have a great attitude on the sidelines, make sure we have great body language, play with low pad level, don't try to do too much, play with a clear mind." (pg. 255) - Leach on his keys to each game, also a great way to approach life.
Profile Image for Mark Stoltz.
12 reviews2 followers
May 4, 2023
Mike Leach is the contrarian’s contrarian. This book is a cool look into how he rethought the game of football, using analogies from his law school days and passion for pirate history.
1 review
November 1, 2024
Mike Leach was a great man. Texas Tech needs to pay his family the money that he deserved. RIP and Wreck’Em.
Profile Image for MC Yeomans-Washington.
303 reviews19 followers
August 30, 2020
When your head coach has written a New York Time best seller, you have to read it, right? In all honesty, my mom is the reason this book ended up in my house. Once it was here, curiosity drove me to start it over other books I had been planning to read for much longer. With so much uncertainty about whether or not we are going to play the 2020 season, this book was a dive into football that helped make the start of Fall seem a little more normal.

Of course, Mike Leach is about a lot more than football, and this book really drives home that point. Aside from his unique and questioning mind, I was most intrigued about learning details of the Texas Tech case that led to his dismissal. I never paid much attention to the story, and heard rumors that he had mistreated a player. Other than that, I never much looked into it. Texas Tech and Washington State were teams that rarely affected my world in the SEC. After reading this book and the evidence in its Appendix sections, I am convinced that he really was screwed by Tech Tech higher ups and former ESPN analyst, Craig James. The older I get and the longer I work in athletics, the less faith I seem to have in humanity - outside of my small circle of family and friends, of course. This book emintated the feelings and frustrations I have felt myself, just on a much grander scale.

If I ever have the chance to ask Coach about his book, and I really hope I do, I want to know if he ever found out who the pirate man was he saw at a gas station in Key West. If anyone can track down a modern day pirate, its Coach Leach.
8 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2012
I was always intrigued by Mike Leach after first really hearing him on Sirius Radio on his daily show with Jack Arute. His perspective on life and his "don't give a damn" attitude quickly makes you gravitate towards him. After an interview with Kevin Calabro on a local radio show here in Seattle, I became even more interested in learning about him. After a quick plug on his book, I bought it convinced it would be good. It was.


There's so much relation when you read Mike's book. He explains why his personality is an off-the-cuff sort and really gets into why having an open mind can lend you to success in many different aspects of your life and not just coaching. His pride in maintaining the student in student-athlete is commendable and his commitment to execution is second to none. I really enjoyed his spacial awareness when it comes to drawing up the X's and O's. He makes you want to volunteer to coach because he makes it so easy.

He sways back and forth from football to life and gives colorful and fun examples of moments in his life that left a lasting impression on who he is. He also keeps perspective. Football is a game, but it's a game he loves and there's no reason in his life for him to not be involved in the molding of these young men.

Great read that gives a refreshing point of view of football and life.
Profile Image for CW.
227 reviews5 followers
November 18, 2012
This book is a must read for any sports fan. Love Mike Leach or hate him, I guarantee you will find the book interesting. I literally couldn't put the book down. I read it in just a few short hours. Being a former coach I have read several books written by or about coaches such as Vince Lombardi, John Wooden, Barry Switzer, Tony Dungy, Billy Martin, Bob Knight, Coach K, Dean Smith, Jimmy Johnson, Bear Bryant, etc., and this was by far the best "coaching" book I have ever read. It of course gave a little more insight into the events that lead to his firing, but it was primarily about his life. The book was mainly about him growing up in Wyoming, going to BYU, going to law school, rising through the coaching ranks, and building his program at Tech. This was the aspect of the book that I found most interesting, but I also enjoyed reading about the events that lead to his being fired and particularly enjoyed reading the emails between booster/regents and the notes from the deposition of Adam/Craig James.
Profile Image for Dick Hall.
17 reviews1 follower
July 21, 2011
Disclaimer: I consider Leach to be in the upper echelon of sports entertainment with Shaq. Barkley is a distant second to those two. Leach could have written a children's book, and I'd still read it.

Leach starts the book with a really bizarre story of him as a kid, but after that he brings it back around and it's pretty clear how smart this loony coach really is. He spends a little too much time outlining the unfortunate circumstances leading to his dismissal from Tech for me. It's understandable that it's at the top of his mind, but I was more interested to hear about his otherwise positive outlook and how he motivates people.

Final note for the recovering lawyers: Leach includes an honest explanation of why he ditched law and took a $3k per year coaching job, despite having student loans from Pepperdine to pay off.
Profile Image for Shannon Kimbriel.
77 reviews
December 5, 2022
More 4 stars, but I’m biased. Mike Leach is such an interesting person. I’ve head about that being true over the past few years, and got to witness it only once at an alumni luncheon.
Educated and well read. He believes in hard work and accountability. Most of us know about the Texas Tech ordeal but I’ve never looked into it. Leach “spills the tea” on the corruptness of the school’s administration that ultimately led to his firing.
Lots of football talk in here, but also some really cool name drops.
I wonder if he ever rereads what he wrote.
Profile Image for Matt Zar-Lieberman.
113 reviews17 followers
August 31, 2013
Mike Leach has always struck me as an interesting guy who possessed the courage to challenge football's status quo and the intelligence to really innovate the game. I started reading his memoir Swing Your Sword with the hope that he would provide a glimpse into his unconventional coaching methods and strategic philosophy in a readable package. And he certainly does offer up a good bit of insight into his views about football and running a program and it makes for generally entertaining fare. The book unfortunately veers from that subject matter halfway through and descends into a mess of damage control and finger-pointing regarding the Adam James incident that led to his ouster at Texas Tech. I found the book to be a worthwhile read despite its rather glaring flaws but the second half occasionally bordered on unreadable for me.

While Leach often takes an unorthodox approach to gridiron matters the book follows a rather tried-and-true template for coaching memoirs. He offers up some amusing anecdotes from childhood and college and describes how experiences such as coaching youth baseball fostered his passion for developing talent and creative strategies to outmaneuver more talented opponents. Leach's followed one of the more unlikely paths to football coaching, as he played rugby in college and entered Pepperdine Law School after graduating from Brigham Young University. He was likely the only member of his class at Pepperdine to pursue a football coaching job after graduating law school (though Rick Neuheisel and Marc Trestman are other coaches with law degrees) and he bounced around various small schools and even endured a stint coaching a Finnish team where players often smoked cigarettes on the sidelines.

Leach eventually ended up at Iowa Wesleyan under the tutelage of Hal Mumme and began to really establish the philosophical basis for his wide-open Air Raid offense at Texas Tech. He followed Mumme around various gigs and reached prominence after helping Tim Couch put up pinball numbers as offensive coordinator at Kentucky. He proceeded to run the offense for Bob Stoops at the University of Oklahoma before signing on as the head coach at Texas Tech.

Leach is refreshingly honest and open about most of his coaching experiences. His book is more insightful than other coaching memoirs I have read, and his musings on the game were definitely highlights for me. He mentions how coaches have more leeway to really stray from the norm in the lower levels of college football, where there is more freedom from fans and boosters, and he also makes a convincing case for abandoning common strategies such as having mirrors for all of your plays (players can specialize in and get more reps from having one responsibility on a play) and having receivers line up on both sides of the field (based on the benefits of specialization again. Maybe it is the economics major in me but Leach's argument certainly makes sense to me). Now Swing Your Sword doesn't contain any diagrams or get into the nitty-gritty of his scheme to the extent of something like Ron Jaworski's The Games That Changed the Game, which may disappoint some Leach fans, but I was impressed by the amount of strategic content offered by Leach for a memoir. I definitely learned more concepts about the game than I did from most other football books, such as how receivers on "go" routes are open several times during their route while those running "curls" and the like are only open at the end of the route.

Leach's chapters on his tenure at Texas Tech are initially fascinating. He outlines how he constructed his program and built his coaching staff. The coach put an emphasis on graduating players and ensuring reasonable academic performance through punishments such as "The Tower of London," where players would answer a gauntlet of scholarly questions while running around the school's campus carrying a cinder block over their head. He also occasionally played mind games against his opponents, such as intentionally dropping a fake play sheet on the field before a game against Texas. The chapters touch upon highlights such as the Red Raiders' 2008 upset victory over #1-ranked Texas and their 31-point comeback win against Minnesota in the 2006 Insight Bowl and such reflections make for decent reading.

Unfortunately, I read the pages with a sense of foreboding that is somewhat common in football memoirs. I had the same feeling reading recent books by Michael Strahan and Rex Ryan. I knew that at some point Strahan would discuss his divorce and probably regale me with tales about how horrendous his ex-wife was and that Rex would eventually stop telling his amusing anecdotes from his assistant coaching jobs (overall I really thought Play Like You Mean It was a fine read for the admittedly low standards of the genre) and draft Mark Sanchez, and then probably spend way too many pages justifying why his decision was the greatest thing to ever happen to the franchise. As Leach moved from the Kliff Kingsbury to Graham Harrell era I realized that there was still a good bit of dead tree matter between my current location and the back cover. Correctly assuming that Swing Your Sword did not contain a 150-page index, I braced myself for an inevitably exhaustive account of the Adam James affair and Leach's firing from Texas Tech.

I'm guessing you are at least somewhat aware of why Leach got fired if you are reading a review of the coach's book. Basically it stems from Adam Jones, a Red Raiders receiver and the son of Craig James claimed that he was put in a dark equipment closet after suffering from a concussion, which resulted in a media firestorm (at least on ESPN) that ruined many a campus meal at college dining halls across the country. According to Leach, the administration (who are not very scrupulous people) used the overblown incident to fire him and avoid paying him a completion clause and negotiating a new contract. Honestly it does appear that Leach got somewhat of a raw deal in the matter, and as a human being I sympathize with him for falling victim to university politics. But as a reader I do not want to slog through way too many pages outlining every reason why Leach is innocent, how Adam Jones is the worst person ever (except perhaps his father), and the pettiness of Texas Tech Chancellor Kent Hance. I can't imagine that my complaining about it all makes for very compelling reading material either. So unlike Leach, I'll show some restraint and just hope I've made my point. The book concludes with the fired coach discussing his life without football and excitement at obtaining a fresh start with Washington State, but Swing Your Sword's last 100 pages are mainly just him explaining how he was mistreated by Texas Tech.

In Sum

If you still haven't read the book at this point you probably aren't the biggest Mike Leach supporter in the world. You are more likely a football fan decently curious about whether his book is worth your time. And my answer to that is yes based on the strength of the first half, though you will be disappointed when it descends into damage control and complaining. Caveat emptor/library patron.

6/10
Profile Image for Nelson.
166 reviews14 followers
November 16, 2021
The bulk of the book contains Leach's memoir; the latter part the juicy details about his firing.

Funny anecdotes such as one about his crying when his dog peed on his baseball glove are peppered throughout the book.

Football is a beautiful and expansive game in which coaching encompasses both motivating players and a lot of strategy. Leach gives a glimpse about his coaching philosophy, including his weekly routine, details about some of his playbook. As a BYU fan dealing with BYU's modus operandi of conducting almost all business behind closed doors, this was mighty refreshing.

The last part of book contains details about his firing, including emails sent by the Texas Tech administration, Craig James, and others involved. He is a lawyer by training (he never played football himself), and it reads like a collection of all the evidence against Texas Tech.

Overall, a great great.
49 reviews2 followers
August 4, 2023
Mike Leach was one of the most interesting characters in college football in the last two decades. He completed law school but never practiced law. His passion was football, but he did not play in college at BYU where he attended. The principles he teaches here are sound: you are either coaching it or allowing it to happen. As head coach of Texas Tech, he achieved enormous success in the 2000s decade in both football and the graduation rate of his players. His firing there was quite controversial and the school was clearly in the wrong, as we all knew at the time. He possibly spends more time than is necessary making his case against the young man who got him fired. The book ends with his decision to get back into coaching at Washington State. All in all, it is a good book and I recommend it to sports fans who are curious to learn.
30 reviews
November 5, 2025
An entertaining but very thin autobiography by Mike Leach. Those looking for more insight into Leach as the forefather of 21st century football offensive strategy are going to be disappointed (try Chris B. Brown for starters instead); instead Leach talks about the experience of being a coach and what it takes to lead a group of young adults through the insanity that is the modern college football landscape, capping it off with an inside look at the faux-culture-war Craig James affair (which, of course, turned out to be about money, as all culture wars do). Some interesting and occasionally even countercultural insights on leadership can be found within, although it definitely reads as a more innocent, pre-NIL, pre-big-money view of college sports. Recommended for Leach fans but not many others.
Profile Image for Pete Springer.
312 reviews17 followers
February 9, 2020
Swing Your Sword follows the coaching life of Mike Leach. Written by Mike Leach and Bruce Feldman, this book is mostly for those who enjoy football. Leach comes across as a bit of a rebel, but there is a method to his madness. He is a scholar of the game, but he also isn't afraid to be a free thinker. Leach is more than a football coach; he is a student of life. Some of the most entertaining parts of this book were understanding some of the non-traditional methods Leach uses to grab his student-athletes' attention.

My only criticism of the book is that he dwells too long on his firing from Texas Tech. While I understand he wants to defend his reputation, that section went on too long for my tastes with numerous emails involving the Texas Tech administration.
Profile Image for Tom Horn.
167 reviews8 followers
December 12, 2025
Mike Leach is who got me started loving Texas Tech football. I've always been a fan of his playstyle and eccentric personality.

Coming into this book, there was a part of me that was concerned that Leach was going to think too highly of himself; that he (like many celebrities) would believe that he has some sort of sage wisdom he needs to depart to the rest of us.

However, the book wasn't that at all. It was very much focused on his professional career, with a special focus on lessons he's learned about running a football program, evaluating talent, and managing personalities. I particularly enjoyed the last segment where he talked about the debacle with Adam James that led to his firing.

Overall, I definitely recommend it to any college football fan.
Profile Image for Jbussen.
763 reviews4 followers
September 4, 2023
I like to read these books. As far as football books go this was away from the norm enough to be particularly interesting and fun. I especially liked the insight on why he was let go from Texas Tech when he was on top of the world. Ego, self interest, and university politics tops any type of common sense. Coach Leech died Dec 12th of last year. I hope his family keeps suing Texas Tech & ESPN on his behalf. And then I hope Texas Tech sues Larry Anders, former chancellor Kent Hance, president Guy Bailey, athletic director Gerald Myers, and Craig James for libel.

You can tell the worth of a man by the people who support him, and the people who try to take him down.
Profile Image for Tom Denker.
99 reviews2 followers
June 25, 2017
Mike Leach is probably my favorite coach who doesn't work for a team that I support. I love his attitude towards life and learning, as well as the fact that he coaches the same way I do when I play NCAA14. I strongly enjoyed about 80% of the book, and would love to read more about his time coaching at Washington State, which came after this was published.

However, the part of the book dedicated to his legal battles with Craig James and Texas Tech over his firing is absolutely brutal to read, and I say this as someone who was on his side throughout. I understand why he wrote it, but it really detracted from my enjoyment of the book when he continually went into subpoenaed emails and deposition testimony. The book was on the borderline of a 4 before I got to that section, but the legal issues section dropped it a low 3 in my book.
4 reviews
July 3, 2017
Outside the box

Coach Leach is a unique person, never mind football coach. His outsiders view of the game has made him successful wherever he has been. Sportscasters, writers, and football junkies have called him an out of the box thinker. My opinion is that Coach Leach has never been around the box As less in it. The one thing that sets him apart is his commitment to his beliefs, his character, and his application of seemingly unconnected information to the game of football. As a football coach, I found the book highly entertaining and very informative.
Profile Image for Kev Willoughby.
578 reviews13 followers
December 17, 2022
Excellent. This book is everything you hoped it would be. The same Mike Leach you see answering questions from sideline reporters and in press conferences also comes across so genuinely fascinating in the pages of this book. This guy is going to be missed for years to come, not just in college football but as a true national treasure. There’s so many great leadership thoughts and lessons shared by Coach Leach here that this book will keep anyone engaged regardless of their affinity for sports. A true must-read.
160 reviews2 followers
April 15, 2023
I enjoyed this book and Mike Leach’s approach to life (be curious, ask questions) and his, some might say, quirkiness. I am sad he is gone, I wish I had met him, or better yet, been his neighbor. I would have enjoyed chatting with him very much. I like his quote from John Wooden, “Be more concerned with your character than your reputation.” Also he quotes an acronym used by Rex Ryan … “KILL” - Keep It Likable and Learnable…good advice for a math teacher as well as coaches. I am glad I also got the full story about how and why he was fired. Texas Tech made a big mistake.
13 reviews
September 5, 2023
This book is a bit of a unicorn. Unlike many celebrity books, it's pretty light on biography, name-dropping, and inside baseball. It's really about coaching because thats what Coach loves. Every story, digression, and tangent really comes back to that. Bonus features include a breakdown of a game week schedule, lessons from law school, and peeing on the dog. Make sure you listen to some interviews before reading so that you can read in Coach Leach's voice; the book really doesn't work any other way.
10 reviews
October 30, 2017
Great story about Leach

My daughter is a freshman at WSU, so I figured this would be a good book to read about their head coach, who I heard was an interesting guy. I am not a huge football guy, but found the book very interesting. It had a great way of making the art of coaching apply to life, and not in a self help book type of way!

I have a whole new respect for Leach.

Will most likely read again.
Profile Image for Grant Garcia.
256 reviews12 followers
December 26, 2021
Mike Leach is one of the most interesting characters in the world. Not just in football: in the world. This dude marches to the beat of his own drum. His storytelling abilities are legendary. I most respect his ability to use logic, devoid of passion, when approaching any situation. Besides this ability, he has an uncanny knack that allows him to read people. He used it to motivate everyone from his high school baseball team to Michael Crabtree. I highly recommend reading his autobiography.
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