I love sports, and I really enjoy reading about the formative years of great athletes and how they reached the highest level of their sport. This book involves baseball, but it is more of a story of growing up in the inner-city with all of the pitfalls there and how sports can be a vehicle to great success or great disappointment. Most American sports fans don't associate Black athletes all that much with baseball, as the big money and opportunity generally lies in the NFL or the NBA. But, the 1979 Crenshaw High School baseball team in inner-city Los Angeles is arguably the most talented high school baseball team every assembled. Just about every starter on the team had the potential to play in the major leagues, but only two made it, the most well-known being Darryl Strawberry, who was drafted number one by the NY Mets where he became the toast of New York. But, despite his unlimited potential and opportunity, he fell prey to drugs, alcohol, and women almost immediately upon his arrival on the big stage. This is really not his biography though, as the author follows each player on the team from their youth days up to the present time. It is a terrific sociological study, and you will decide who really was the most successful in life on the team after you hear everyone's story.
The author has an easy flowing writing style, and he provides good background on how the Black community developed in Los Angeles as a starting point for this saga. You will enjoy reading about the coach, Brooks Hurst, a white former baseball player who was briefly in the pros, but couldn't handle the politics of working up through the minor league. He is essentially a real-life version of the "White Shadow," as he invests his entire being into developing this team. He truly loved these young men, and he was the last person who provided players like Strawberry with real discipline and called them out when necessary. He also got the pro scouts to come to Crenshaw, with so many coming to watch this extraordinary team that extra bleachers had to be erected. Once Strawberry got in the majors, he got a free pass for so many egregious actions until it all caught up with him down the road. All of the players dreamed of baseball in their future, but life had other plans for most of them. There is still a lot about baseball in this book, even though the stories of the individual players was my favorite part of the book. You will be surprised to learn that this amazing team lost in their chance to win the Los Angeles High School championship in a game at Dodger Stadium to a team from Granada Hills led by John Elway, the future NFL Hall of Fame quarterback.
I can highly recommend this poignant study of young men chasing their dreams, and the cautionary tale of what can happen when you aren't prepared for instant fame and lucrative benefits and everyone around you wants a piece of the pie.