To the average college football fan, there are two teams on the field every Saturday in the fall; they take turns on offense and defense, but the fans bleed orange, purple, crimson red, or even Maryland state-flag design. And every Saturday, those are the only two teams on the field, according to the average fan.
Ryan McGee is not your average fan.
McGee, a longtime ESPN journalist and host, makes the case that there's a third team on the field every Saturday, and while not too many people count themselves fans of this team, those that do bleed black and white stripes.
In "Sidelines and Bloodlines," McGee documents the almost forty years that his father, Dr. Jerry McGee, worked the sidelines as a college referee every Saturday, in locations wide and varied, but most at home in the ACC. With input from Dr. Jerry and Ryan's younger brother Sam, we get the full story of the McGee family's full-time immersion in college football from an earlier age (Sam even has a school picture from elementary school in one of his dad's black caps, which he refused to take off). Love of the game runs through the family bloodline, and with Jerry's decades-long "side hustle" as an official working the lines of dozens of college football games, his boys couldn't help but fall in love with every aspect of the game.
There are great stories here, like the time that Jerry became an unwilling part of a late hit on the field (the spin he took and the landing were so bad that Ryan, then working in the ESPN production truck, had to call his mom to let her know what had happened and that Jerry was okay). The book is a love letter to Jerry and to college football. To referee in any sport is almost always a risky adventure, but with the passionate fan base that college football attracts, especially in the South, is almost like running the bulls at Pamplona on a weekly basis. And Dr. McGee has heard it all, from legendary coaches who were perhaps "less than pleased" with the way he might call a play (but Jerry stands by his calls for the most part, save one or two he's sure he got wrong).
This is a fun, entertaining book, a great look at a family brought together by a shared love of football (and saved by it during the worst year of the family's life, 1999, when beloved matriarch Hannah McGee suddenly died and Jerry found solace working the sidelines that year). Sports has been in the spotlight this past year especially for not just giving us a break from COVID, but also for forcing us to pay attention to the wider world. "Sidelines and Bloodlines" helps make the case that sports can help make lives more meaningful and enjoyable, and they can also offer a respite from the stresses of everyday life and unspeakable tragedy.