
Playing to Win
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Narrated by:
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Michael Lewis
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By:
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Michael Lewis
About this listen
When New York Times best-selling author and journalist Michael Lewis got involved in his kids’ local softball league, it all seemed so wholesome and simple. Ten years later, his family looked back to find that they had spent thousands of dollars - not to mention hours - and traveled thousands of miles in the service of a single sport.
All over America, families are investing blood, sweat, tears, and retirement savings in their children’s sports careers, all with the ultimate goal of…what exactly? A college scholarship? A professional contract? Simply the taste of victory?
Through the lens of the highly competitive world of girls’ softball, Lewis reveals the youth sports industrial complex that has arisen to aggressively monetize after-school pastimes. The major players aren’t the ones on the field - they’re the ones stripping the pockets of unwitting parents to the tune of billions of dollars a year, creating an arms race of amateur athletics and enabling the Varsity Blues scandal. So what’s in it for the parents - or, for that matter, the kids themselves? This from-the-bleachers portrait of our national obsession with youth sports explores the consequences of high-stakes play for families, communities, and the kids in the game.
©2019 Michael Lewis (P)2020 Audible Originals, LLC.Looking beyond the game
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Have enjoyed Lewis' other books (Moneyball and The Big Short) so expected good things from this bite-size audiobook. Did not disappoint - a brutally honest eye-witness account of the kids' sports-industry in the USA.
Appreciate the author's aim was to give an account rather than a commentary, but felt the book lacked a conclusion. There was much to horrify about the way American families sacrifice so much for child sports, but little by way of constructive suggestions for what needs to change. Won't spoil your enjoyment of book, but is what holds me back from giving a 5 star review.
Eye-opening but lacks conclusion
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heartbreaking and honest
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A look at Junior Sports Industrial Complex
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Was not what I was expecting, but still a nice insight into youth softball in the USA.
Enjoyable easy listen.
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Excellent yet heartbreaking
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The problem is that the listener isn’t particularly motivated to care much about any of it. Mr Lewis even says as much - in as far as that if you don’t have a child in that sport system, you won’t be able to anchor yourself to any opinion of it.
I can’t blame him for his opinions on the youth sports industrial complex, because how it is tied to college, admissions and scholarships seems like a crooked game.
The subject probably deserves a much longer form piece of work being done on it, which I’d like to see Mr. Lewis do at some point in the future.
Michael Lewis using his talents to whinge a bit about the cost of nurturing a child’s aspirations .
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Interesting analysis
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In a really creepy way of making 12 year old girls promise themselves to a particular college university and having parents spend thousands on plane tickets and coaching.
Never reaches as far as conclusions to some of the implications or anyone recommending changes
Parental obsession with the Youth Industrial Sport
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Interesting but ultimately pointless
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