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Monsters

The 1985 Chicago Bears and the Wild Heart of Football

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The gripping account of a once-in-a-lifetime football team and their lone championship season

For Rich Cohen and millions of other fans, the 1985 Chicago Bears were more than a football team: they were the greatest football team ever—a gang of colorful nuts, dancing and pounding their way to victory. They won a Super Bowl and saved a city.

It was not just that the Monsters of the Midway won but how they did it. On offense, there was high-stepping running back Walter Payton and Punky QB Jim McMahon, who had a knack for pissing off Coach Mike Ditka as he made his way to the end zone. On defense, there was the 46: a revolutionary, quarterback-concussing scheme cooked up by Buddy Ryan and ruthlessly implemented by Hall of Famers such as Dan "Danimal" Hampton and "Samurai" Mike Singletary. On the sidelines, in the locker rooms, and in bars, there was the never-ending soap opera: the coach and the quarterback bickering on television, Ditka and Ryan nearly coming to blows in the Orange Bowl, the players recording the "Super Bowl Shuffle" video the morning after the season's only loss.

Cohen tracked down the coaches and players from this iconic team and asked them everything he has always wanted to know: What's it like to win? What's it like to lose? Do you really hate the guys on the other side? Were you ever scared? What do you think as you lie broken on the field? How do you go on after you have lived your dream but life has not ended?

The result is Monsters: The 1985 Chicago Bears and the Wild Heart of Football, a portrait not merely of a team but of a city and a game: its history, its future, its fallen men, its immortal heroes. But mostly it's about being a fan—about loving too much. This is a book about America at its most nonsensical, delirious, and joyful.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 11, 2013
      Almost 30 years after the Chicago Bears won their first and only Super Bowl, that team with its wild assortment of tough players and coaches still capture the imaginationâand fuel the current fantasiesâof Chicago's die-hard football fans. Cohen, (The Fish That Ate the Whale), who grew up as a suburban Chicago Bears fan and witnessed first-hand the Bears' victory when he was 17, deftly captures how the team "played with a gleeful excess that seemed a perfect expression of the cityâits character, its toughness, its heartbreaks, its history." While Cohen covers much of the same ground as other books on the '85 Bears, he is especially good at detailing the rivalry between coach Mike Ditka and his defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan, whose defensive line viewed him as Ditka's equal, "the god each player was working toward as well as the mad scientist turning the levers." His fan's perspective added to his excellent reporting and engrossing interviews produce great insights into the team's colorful stars: legendary running back Walter Payton and his personal struggles; Dan "Danimal" Hampton and the brutal Monsters of the Midway defense; the 300-plus pound "Refrigerator" Perry; and quarterback Jim McMahon with his bad-boy persona, who, according to Ditka, arrived at Bears camp with "'a beer in his hand and a six-pack under his arm."

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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