The story of the 1925 Pottsville Maroons who were a dominant team in the fledgling NFL. Considering I love football's ancient history, the book hit all the right notes though the author gets a bit too descriptive with his prose considering he never set foot in 1925 Pottsville--a small mining town in Pennsylvania--during its heyday. Historically, it's tight but when the author tries to steer it into higher forms of non-fiction, it becomes a made-for-TV movie which I'm sure ESPN will make considering they published the book.
EDIT: Second read impressions.
It's better the second time around, though it very well could be that the circumstances of a ragtag team of overpaid, but loveable players both inspired by a miner strike and well-meaning owner who overspends for a winner because it matters not only to his own vanity, but to the small coal town that has offered up a NFL team for a fleeting moment resonates so much nearly 100 years later. Shady characters stealing crumbs away from the poor, unfortunate, and misaligned in the name of big business and big cities (to come). There are still too many deviations into the minds of players without any overriding evidence, but there's no denying the chutzpah and innovation of a team of firecracker college lads and a few of the coal regions finest miners-cum-players.