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Browns Scrapbook: A Fond Look Back at Five Decades of Football, from a Legendary Cleveland Sportswriter | 
enlarge | Author: Chuck Heaton Publisher: Gray & Co., Publishers Category: Book
List Price: $14.95 Buy New: $8.70 You Save: $6.25 (42%)
New (16) Used (5) from $2.06
Avg. Customer Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 16052
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 208 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.3 x 0.4
ISBN: 1598510436 Dewey Decimal Number: 796.332640977132 EAN: 9781598510430 ASIN: 1598510436
Publication Date: August 17, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: GREAT BOOK,VERY CLEAN,
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Veteran sportswriter Chuck Heaton looks back at his 47 years covering the Cleveland Browns--the "Old Browns" teams that fans still miss. Heaton covered the Browns for the Cleveland Plain Dealer from 1946 to 1993. In these columns, written shortly before his retirement in 1993, Heaton reminisces about Hall of Fame players like Jim Brown, Leroy Kelly, and Bobby Mitchell; original head coach Paul Brown; characters like fabled trainer Murray Kono; even notorious Browns rivals like Oilers' coach Jerry Glanville and Steelers' linebacker Jack Lambert. Browns fans age 40 and older will fondly recall the old days. Younger Browns fans will find out why everyone still longs for them.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
No longer like it was . . . July 15, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The subtitle tells it all: A Fond Look Back at Five Decades of Football, from a Legendary Cleveland Sportswriter.
Shortly into the book, you'll find this line: 'It was different back then.' Indeed, it was. I'm probably not alone in thinking it was BETTER back then, as well.
Chuck Heaton joined the Cleveland Plain Dealer as a sportswriter in 1946. His first beat was baseball, and his timing was excellent. The Indians won it all in 1948 and challenged again in 1954. Just before the end of that season, he was switched over to football, and from then until another switch 24 years later, he was the main writer of and about the Browns. It was a few more years before he retired (almost) completely, giving him 51 years of writing about sports.
In the early days of football, before the NFL became the marketing-obsessed entity it is today, teams didn't have their own year-round training/office complexes like they do today-it was after all, only a part-time 'game'. Most teams trained at a local college or university, which had a field and dormitories for the players, coaches and media. Yes, indeed, you read that correctly! In those early days, reporters lived with the players. Can you imagine that happening these days? Of course, that was also in the days before the ever-present television/media obsession, too.
Fans of football (or any other sport, for that matter) as it used to be will particularly enjoy the piece on page 157, titled "The Year Sports Lost Its Innocence". It's enough to make a grown person cry!
Heaton observed the greats and the not-so-greats among players and coaches, many of whom became life-long friends. He attended (and wrote about) the big games and the forgettable ones, as well, including the first Monday Night Football, Superbowls and championship games before the era of Superbowls. And yes, there was once such a thing!
In the early 90s -before the great defection --he compiled a personal sort of history about the Browns, in a series that ran in the Plain Dealer, under the same title as this book. For the most part, the pieces fall easily into six categories: Places, On and Off the Field, Rivals, Big Moments, The Game and Hall of Famers. A postcript lists the All-Time Greatest Browns Team.
Some of the individual pieces here carry the date they were originally printed, which helps to place them in the proper context of one's memory. The date on which Paul Brown died or the day the team was moved to Baltimore merit this attention. There are also eight pages of photos.
It's entirely appropriate that one of those photos is of Mr. Heaton at the Pro Football Hall of Fame holding the Dick McCann Memorial Award he received in 1980. Who says nice guys can't finish first?
Any football fan in your life should love this book!
CLASSIC CHUCK HEATON WRITING February 24, 2008 This is an absolutely GREAT read by a wonderful sportswriter. I must make a disclosure here: Chuck is my friend and I have read a decent percentage of everything he has ever written since my early days as a Browns fan in NE Ohio. His stories are elegantly told -- with humor and honesty. This is a nice gift for the sports junkie in your family ... or just a nice treat for yourself. You won't be disappointed either way, because these are stories unfamiliar to the average NFL fan.
We won't see times (or writing) like this again February 15, 2008 Chuck Heaton is a legend in the world of sports writing. That's not an exaggeration. Chuck is one of the very few writers who was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.
He was even chosen to present Browns running back Leroy Kelly at his induction into the Hall of Fame.
This collection of short stories serves as evidence of the worthiness of Chuck Heaton's Hall of Fame induction.
It must have been difficult to choose stories from Chuck's 50 years of writing, but the included works are outstanding. They give a feel for the game, the players and the time that we just don't read about anymore.
The book is broken down into several sections. The Places section tells tales of the travels of the players, coaches and sportswriters. Young readers will not believe the conditions. Superstars flying coach on a commercial plane? Unheard of. As Chuck wrote, "...such incidents will never be experienced by the present media covering the Browns. It was different back then."
Yes it was. For example, Chuck tells how "Black players were not allowed in the hotel the Browns used in Dallas and so the squad split up. The black players went to practice and then went to live with black families in the area." That was 1954, not that long ago.
Another section is On and Off the Field which includes reportings of the death of Paul Brown, trading Bobby Mitchell and the waiting by Leroy Kelly and Gene Hickerson for the Hall of Fame. Heaton claims Otto Graham as the best QB and rightly predicted that Red Right 88 would be Brian Sipe's legacy.
Brown's fans should ignore the favorable comments about the traitorous Art Modell. Chuck's stories were written long before the dastardly deed of moving the team.
The Rivals section is lots of fun. We read about Chuck Noll, Bum Phillips, Jack Lambert and others from the hated Steelers, Bengals and Oilers. Older readers will remember the rivalry with the Detroit Lions and way back to the pre-NFL days for the 49ers rivalry.
There are also some great old photos in the book - Chuck with the players and coaches and lots of classic Browns photos.
The Big Moments section should be savored. It includes reporting on the Browns 1964 championship over the Colts, the 1950 victory over the Eagles that shocked the NFL, the firing of Paul brown and the (gulp) Drive.
The Game section covers the NFL Draft and Chuck tells why 1964 was the year "the sport lost its innocence." (Chuck blames Joe Namath.)
The next section is on Hall of Famers and covers Jim Brown, Lou Groza, Dante Lavelli, Bill Willis, Bobby Mitchell, Paul Warfield, Mike McCormack, Frank Gatski and Leroy Kelly.
The final section is a lot of fun as Chuck chose his all-time greatest Browns team. Some selections are no-brainers such as Jim Brown at running back. Others will be a source of debate for football fans. And younger fans will argue that Josh Cribbs, for example, should be the kick returner and not Leroy Kelly. That's part of the fun.
The photo on the cover of the book summarizes the contents. Chuck is being lifted into the air by 4 Browns linemen. This kind of camaraderie was prevalent then (at least for respected writers like Chuck) and unlikely to be seen again.
Just as the quality writing and stories of Chuck Heaton are unlikely to be seen again.
Note. Sadly, Chuck Heaton passed away February 14, 2008 at the age of 90.
Quick and easy... January 18, 2008 Was shipped on time and arrived before xmas as needed. I would buy again.
Those Were The Days December 24, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Chuck Heaton covered the Cleveland Browns from their beginnings in 1946 in the upstart All-America Football Conference through 1993 for The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer.
These were years when local print journalism dominated team coverage and columnists mostly painted portraits of the stars, while not looking to upstage the story by injecting themselves into the debate. And it was a time when team employees - like long-time trainer Murray Kono - were as famous as some of the players and coaches.
The columns - reprinted from the years Heaton covered the team - have a much more unhurried, though meticulous, feel. Fans used to the columnists of today who battle local TV news shows, 24-hour sports TV and radio networks, Internet team websites and bloggers for unique angles in stories may not initially appreciate Heaton's style.
But this book is history much more than simply a walk down memory lane and is as an important volume in understanding the past art of sports journalism, which moved down the field with majestic class.
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