3.5 Stars
Lance Harper has just retired from the NFL. He’s getting a divorce from a manipulative woman and is generally fed up with having his life dictated by others, feeling like everyone around him is using him for personal gain. He’s also a closeted bisexual, a fact he can’t contain too long once he meets college footballer Beau Woodridge.
Beau is out and proud, playing football for the Eastshore Tigers, who, in recent years, have become a beacon for LGBT players and their supporters. Beau’s a good guy, but he perhaps parties a little too hard on the weekends — a backwards coping mechanism he has for dealing with the stress his alcoholic father puts him under all the time.
Lance and Beau meet by happenstance, which leads to Lance getting a great job opportunity as a new offensive coach for the Eastshore Tigers. Now, as student and teacher, the two work together in close proximity, eventually becoming friends and spending time together outside of football.
Eventually, Lance and Beau admit to a shared attraction and begin a physical relationship, which they need to navigate with some care, as not to shack up their positions with the team, but more importantly, as not to draw unwanted media attention towards Lance, who has no interest in becoming even more of a news sensation than he already is.
This was sweet and sexy, with only a few hiccups along the way to happiness for these footballers. With Lance’s celebrity status causing a buzz and with Beau’s increasingly worrisome party behaviour, these two have more than enough to overcome as a couple, but I did feel the way in which their story wrapped up was perhaps a little too easy in terms of some of the conflict resolutions that occurred.
In particular, I’ve noticed it’s become a thing in this series to have an extremely unlikeable, horribly behaving parent do a 180 in personality in the final act of the story. It annoyed me in earlier books and it annoyed me even more here. It felt wholly unrealistic to suddenly have Beau’s father be this regretful, loving man — I honestly would rather he stay horrible and his son never see him again, than he flip some switch that helps wrap the story up in a nice happy bow. It’s just too disingenuous for me, and the fact it’s a reoccurring phenomenon puts me off reading more, if I’m honest.
Ultimately, this addition to this M/M college football series was probably my least favourite of the bunch, but Lance and Beau — Lance more than Beau — made for some light, sexy reading to start my week.