I was always one of the last kids picked in gym class. I am nowhere close to being good at sports, and yet, I love John Feinstein's books. That should say something about his ability if he can reach a non-athlete like me.
His latest book tackles the controversial issue of girls playing on boys teams. When Coach Johnson agrees to let Andi try-out for the boys' soccer team, no one realizes that he has no intention of picking her. Most of the boys know she is clearly one of the better players, but Johnson has decided girls don't belong on boys' teams. Period. Jeff, being one of the worst players picked, convinces his journalist father to write a story about it. Not an easy task since decisions about what stories to publish are based on how many internet hits they will generate. Turns out, Andi's story generates a huge following and Johnson is forced to let Andi on the team. He talks a big talk about the players treating her like a teammate, but chooses to play her the bare minimum, even after she makes winning plays. By the end, the team turns its losing season around, thanks to Andi, and both the skeptical team captain, Arlow, and the coach, genuinely change their tunes.
There's A LOT of play by play game scenes. There were times that this got tedious, even for me. I would say this is mainly a book for soccer fans. I loved kid journalist, Stevie, from Feinstein's sports mystery series making a cameo. I did not love the politics. Can't stand it when authors inject their political opinions into their books. Still a much needed soccer book in a genre flooded with football and baseball.