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Got Your Number

The Greatest Sports Legends and the Numbers They Own

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

ESPN personality (Get Up and #Greeny) and New York Times bestselling author Mike Greenberg partners with mega-producer Hembo to settle once and for all which legends flat-out own which numbers. In short essays certain to provoke debate between and amongst all generations, Greeny uses his lifetime of sports knowledge to spin yarns of the legends among the legends and tell you why some have claimed their spot in the top 100 of all time.

Sports and numbers go hand in hand.
Sports and loud, assertive debate? Even better.

Cheering on, agonizing over, and being in plain awe of your favorite players has left you with a deep and intricate memory of their greatness, not to mention well-honed arguments as to why your favorites are really the best. In arenas, in front of your TV, and in bars, you've debated friends and strangers alike. You've joyfully mocked your friends' (sometimes laughable) favorites. You've spouted accomplishments, statistics: Yours won six titles, batted .350 in the clutch, or generated 82% of their team's scoring.

But not all numbers are created equal. Some are accomplishments. Others are identity. Looming large over any image you have of an athlete: the number on their jersey. Numbers often provide the most visceral parts of any sports legend's identity. They are what people remember—worldwide. Jordan, Jeter, Brady—to fans, they are as much their number as they are anything else.

Sure, 1 through 100 might seem like a large range, but fierce competition across the ages has blessed only a lucky few to claim one of these as their own. For some, the victors may not be so obvious. That's why Greeny's here to help.

Ascend into discussion, fans of all stripes. Come away enlightened. Or maybe a little enraged. Either way, you are sure to be occasionally surprised—and endlessly entertained. Whatever your sport, welcome to the place where all the arguments are finally decided, once and for all.

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  • Reviews

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2023
      A sportscaster decides which players own the numbers from one to 100. Along with his longtime producer, Hembekides, ESPN stalwart Greenberg loves a good debate. He's going to get them from readers after selecting not so much the 100 most accomplished players in sports history, but those whose exploits secured "ownership" of each number--e.g., Babe Ruth with No. 3 or Tom Brady with No. 12. In most cases, it's about the men and women who wore the numbers, but other digits are awarded to such luminaries as Muhammad Ali, Billie Jean King, Michael Phelps, and Serena Williams, representing their total victories, winning streaks, or years they dominated. It's a fun, entertaining, and totally subjective book, but Greenberg's hyperbole and smug certitude get tiresome, as they do on his radio show. Sports fans will concur with many of his selections but disagree vehemently with others. "Wayne Gretzky is the greatest athlete in the history of North American team sports," he writes, and golf is "the greatest game ever invented." Even for a book about superlatives, there is an eye-rolling excess of "greatest ever," "best who ever lived," and similar effusions. Greenberg allows his enthusiasms to run away with him, with a breathless writing style that grates after a few pages. Sometimes he contradicts himself: "Tom Brady is the greatest football player that has ever lived," he writes; 50 pages later, he anoints Jim Brown as "the best football player that ever lived." Greenberg tries to hedge, contrasting "best" versus "greatest," but this sort of splitting of hairs doesn't cut it. One of the author's favorite phrases is, "there is no doubt." Readers, however, will find plenty to doubt in these pages, and the author fails to provide enough contextual information to back up his choices. Credit Greenberg for assembling a deluge of fascinating statistics. Bench him for hyperextended prose.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      April 15, 2023
      Greenberg, former cohost of ESPN's Mike & Mike, for which he and partner Mike Golic were inducted into the Broadcasting Hall of Fame, and coauthor Paul Hembekides, content producer for Greenberg's current podcast, ESPN's Get Up, have curated a celebration of athletic greatness built around numbers, from 1 to 100, many of them on jerseys. Entries are built on stats: Tom Brady (12) won 35 postseason games, more than all but two NFL franchises. Wayne Gretzky (99) would still have the most total career points even if his goals weren't counted. Bill Russell (6) played in 21 winner-take-all games and won them all. Tennessee's legendary women's basketball coach, Pat Summitt, coached 38 seasons and never had a losing record. When approached by University of Tennessee officials to coach the men's basketball team, Summitt, according to the authors, dismissed the overture, asking, "Why is that a step up?" A wonderfully inspiring book, though probably just a bit ephemeral.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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