Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 296
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-5381-0754-6 • Hardback • August 2018 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
978-1-5381-0755-3 • eBook • August 2018 • $45.50 • (£35.00)
Dick Friedman is the football correspondent and contributing editor for Harvard Magazine. He worked for four decades as an editor and writer at People, TV Guide, and Sports Illustrated. At SI he covered the NBA, baseball, college basketball, and golf. Friedman also helped edit several of SI’s coffee-table books, including on pro and college football, and was a contributor to College Football’s Best (2016). Since 2014 Friedman has been a contributor to SI’s sister publication Golf Magazine.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Prologue: Two Brickleys, A Century Apart
1: P.D. Strangles the Bulldog
2: Death in the Afternoon
3: Haughton Cuts Camp Off at the Pass
4: “Here Is the Theoretical Superplayer in Flesh and Blood”
5: The da Vinci of the Dropkick
6: The System
7: Brickley 15, Yale 5
8: The Football Industrial Complex
9: “Yale Supplied the Bowl . . . But Harvard Had the Punch”
10: Poor Eli’s Hopes We Are Dashing
11: From Soldiers Field to Flanders Field, and Beyond
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Mr. Friedman does an excellent job of tracing the history of Coach Haughton…. [T]his book was a great historical read of that time frame of the game and the intense rivalry between Harvard and Yale. I recommend it for any football library.
— Gridiron Greats
Friedman captures the beginning of Big Time Football in America in a colorful and interesting read about a Harvard football legend.
— Tim Murphy, head coach, Harvard football
With wit and grace, Dick Friedman conjures a vanished era of American football, when young men bereft of helmets drop-kicked four-point field goals, Harvard bestrode the gridiron like colossi, and the redoubtable Percy Haughton midwifed the modern game into existence. If the Harvard coach has largely been forgotten, The Coach Who Strangled the Bulldog restores him to his proper place alongside Pop Warner, Amos Alonzo Stagg, and Walter Camp as a giant of a golden age. This is a masterly account, persuasive and entertaining.
— Steve Rushin, Sports Illustrated columnist and author of Sting-Ray Afternoons
This timely book will have a broad appeal—even more so than it would have just a few years ago due to the recent controversies surrounding the modern game. From medical issues and concern over violence to corruption and astronomical head coaching salaries, this book touches on many of the problems that plague the game today, only excluding political protests. It provides a detailed biography of Percy Haughton—the football genius and Harvard coach—as well as a history of the sport he so dearly loved through some of its defining early moments. Haughton made many game-changing contributions to the sport's modern incarnation in the early 20th century during his career as an Ivy League coach—first at Cornell but most prominently at Harvard. Friedman, a sports journalist, is not a scholar in the traditional sense, but there seems to be no other sports historian that could have written such a detailed and thorough account, documenting both the history of football and the person who arguably changed the game. Ultimately, this book is a fun and engaging read.
— Choice Reviews