When the Game Was Ours

 
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Hardcover Book, 352 pages

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From the moment these two players took the court on opposing sides, they engaged in a fierce physical and psychological battle. Their uncommonly competitive relationship came to symbolize the most compelling rivalry in the NBA. These were the basketball epics of the 1980s--Celtics vs Lakers, East vs West, physical vs finesse, Old School vs Showtime, even white vs black. Each pushed the other to greatness--together Bird and Johnson collected 8 NBA Championships, and 6 MVP awards and helped save the floundering NBA at its most critical time. When it started they were bitter rivals, but along the way they became lifelong friends.

With intimate, fly-on-the-wall detail, When the Game Was Ours transports readers to this electric era of basketball and reveals for the first time the inner workings of two players dead set on besting one another. From the heady days of trading championships to the darker days of injury and illness, we come to understand Larry's obsessive devotion to winning and how his demons drove him on the court. We hear him talk with candor about playing through chronic pain and its truly exacting toll. In Magic we see a young, invincible star struggle with the sting of defeat, not just as a player but as a team leader. We are there the moment he learns he's contracted HIV and hear in his own words how that devastating news impacted his relationships in basketball and beyond. But always, in both cases, we see them prevail.

A compelling, up-close-and-personal portrait of basketball's most inimitable duo, When the Game Was Ours is a reevaluation of three decades in counterpoint. It is also a rollicking ride through professional basketball's best times.

Product Details

  • Media: Hardcover Book, 352 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (November 04, 2009)
  • Edition: 1
  • ISBN-10: 0547225474
  • ISBN-13: 9780547225470
  • Dimensions: 6.2 x 9.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.15 lbs
  • Note: Some of this information came from Amazon.com

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Customer Reviews

  • Rating Magic and Bird Together Again At Last  Oct 22, 2009 (15 of 18 found this helpful)

    I thought it was really cool to see a book about the rivalry that brought us a new and improved NBA that was Larry Bird and Ervin Magic Johnson. The two, as you will see, could not be further apart in so many was as they were. They almost played on the same college team, you find out, but then they play against each other for years in so many venues.

    The book is layed out so we have a target date or highlight date, whether it be the college finals, an allstar game or the NBA finals, you see each event as a time in history, from both of their perspectives and from those of others with a bit of history between events and from each of their lives. You learn a lot without brutal details about our two heroes. And really for some of us, that is just what they were. I hed the chance to talk to Ervin one day on the phone, really. He was a down to earth guy, and I thanked him for what he and Larry had done to the game. He said he heard that a lot. Interestingly, that was in 95, before he returned to play again. Who would have known that it truly was what got the game of Basketball back to what it could be.

    Jackie MacMullan does a great job weaving and bobbing through the lives of both. Passing back and forth between the two of them and scoring with each chapter. (sorry, I just could not help myself).

    This should go down as one of the most intriguing and best reads about pro basketball and even sports. This is a great book for those who experienced it, those who are interested in the game and even kids interested in the sport. It is written tastefully so young kids could read it.

    These were two men of character that started off as fierce rivals and went on to mutual respect and became great friends. To see all of this behind the scenes and how the two of them kept their game great is a treat.

    Highly recommend.

  • Rating I just didn't enjoy this book nearly as much as I expected to...  Oct 27, 2009 (14 of 17 found this helpful)

    I'm sorry to be the one voice in opposition to the other reviews but I was so excited to get this book and had the worst time getting through it.
    First...I never got the impression anybody but Jackie MacMullan was the author. If Larry Bird and Magic Johnson had not been listed as authors I'd have never wondered reading this why not. It doesn't read like they wrote it and Jackie put form to it...it reads as if Jackie wrote it and had interviewed them as well as many others...like a typical biography. I was more expecting that I'd be reading what I felt was direct writing from the two stars of the story.
    My biggest gripe is the non linear story telling style used. In the brilliant book on Sandy Koufax the author alternated chapters of his life with a chapter about each of the innings of his perfect game and that was a clever way to tell the story and the biographical chapters were pretty much in chronological order. Books about folks who really don't have a great life story but a recent event of significance often begin with a "teaser" about something recent and then after the reader is grabbed take you back in time. The story of Bird and Magic needs no such gimmicks as this is a meaty story full of drama and much of it in my opinion is LOST because the author bounces around from year to year back and forth with no respect for chronological order so much of the story is confusing and drama lost. I say that as someone who knows the story and feels that the natural story arc is truly something special...and not needing of the continual back court dribble that the author employs.
    The author also spends more pages on the first Converse commercial they filmed than either the 84 or 85 playoff series...man I was sad about that. I was looking for a lot of juicy inside the huddle type of talk and was let down.
    To sum up ....I am happy to have read this book, but it wasn't as enjoyable or easy as I hoped. I did come away with even a greater respect for Bird (and being a life time Laker fan that is saying something).
    I think the "Sizzle" on this one is much tastier than the actual "Steak" which is more like hamburger in my opinion. If you are a fan of Larry Bird I'd recommend his autobiography "Drive" if you haven't read that before this book.

  • Rating RICK SHAQ GOLDSTEIN SAYS: "YOU CAN HEAR FROM LARRY & MAGIC WHAT THEY FELT WHILE PLAYING IN NCAA & NBA CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES  Oct 16, 2009 (10 of 13 found this helpful)

    For twenty-years basketball fans have heard and read from many sources what the true feelings of Larry Bird and Magic Johnson were like as these two unbelievably competitive men changed the game of basketball. They were so totally different... and yet at the core... so totally alike. For the first time Larry and Magic collaborate to reveal what they "really" thought about each other through each and every step of their game-changing careers. It's like having a split screen with Magic on one side and Larry on the other as they share their childhoods... college... and NBA careers... and even their post playing lives. At the end of each historical milepost the split screen becomes one as both Hall of Famers summarize in real-time... adding comments that are more sage with the blessing of age and maturity.

    When Magic and his Michigan State team met Larry's Indiana State team for the National Championship Game in 1979 it drew a 24.1 Nielsen rating, "THE HIGHEST IN COLLEGE BASKETBALL HISTORY, A NOTEWORTHY MILESTONE THAT REMAINED UNTOUCHED THREE DECADES LATER." From that time forward Larry and Magic were forever linked-compared-and-intertwined for the rest of their lives. A mutual hatred breeded mutual respect and in the end a lifetime friendship. Along the way they were universally credited with saving the NBA. "IN 1979 THE LEAGUES FOUR-YEAR DEAL WITH CBS WAS WORTH $74 MILLION. BY 2002 THE LEAGUE HAD INKED A SIX-YEAR DEAL WITH ABC, ESPN, AND TNT VALUED AT 4.6 BILLION." The author's pull no punches as they both admit that starting in the aftermath of their NCAA showdown that one hated the other. After Magic won the NBA championship in his rookie year Bird now admits extreme jealousy. Though neither one admitted it in those days they each followed the others stats and accomplishments like madmen possessed. As some individual awards went Bird's way... Johnson felt slighted. But through it all they both admit this feverish competition between the two made them both rise to athletic levels they would never have reached without the burning desire to outdo the other. And then in 1985 they both agreed to take part in the now infamous Converse commercial entitled "CHOOSE YOUR WEAPON"... and Magic came to Larry's home in Indiana... and the miraculous took place. These two fiery... hating... competitors... started to talk and found out they were very much alike... and their childhoods were extremely similar. And then in the unlikeliest of scenario's they became extremely good friends. They realized then... and now... that their lives were forever interlaced. Magic couldn't go anywhere without people asking how Larry was doing... and Larry couldn't go anywhere without being asked how Magic was doing.

    Any true basketball fan will not only share the exhilaration of the glorious pinnacles of the author's careers... but you will also feel the grief as their careers come to an end. And of course Magic becoming HIV positive. The definitive epitome of the friendship that had been born through these competitive games... was when Magic demanded that Larry be contacted and made aware of his disease before it was made public. Along with the accepted fact that Bird and Magic saved the NBA... potential readers will also truly enjoy the coverage regarding Michael Jordan taking the baton and leading the NBA to reach even higher goals. The detailed story telling regarding the 1992 Olympic Basketball Dream Team is a must read for all basketball fans. A scene between the greatest players in the world at the Olympic Village during a game of pool with Jordan, Magic, Larry, Barkley, Ewing... and others... as they banter between themselves as to who "was" the greatest... "is" the greatest... and "would-have" been the greatest... if time had been shuffled differently... is one of the greatest behind the scenes look at these famous stars I've ever come across. It is akin to the stalking of lions in the jungle as they contemplate changi

  • Rating The Greatest Rivalry of All- The Best Of Friends  Nov 4, 2009 (3 of 3 found this helpful)

    Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, to a lifelong Celtics fan those two names bring back the days of the most exciting basketball rivalry of all time. Bird the man of few words and Magic the man who was effusive and charming. Both became two of the most famous names in basketball. They lifted the game of basketball from one of mundane everyday game to one of the most exciting games in sports.

    Larry Bird and Magic Johnson made their professional basketball debuts on October 12, 1979. Bird was playing for the Boston Celtics; Johnson with the Los Angeles Lakers. They recount those days and those before in NCAA where they met each other and started following each other's play. They were fierce opponents and in the land of basketball 'hated' each other. They were, of course, jealous of each win, but always admiring of the other's remarkable talents. Magic recounts the racism in sports at the time, and the reverse racism. Because Larry Bird was white, the entire Celtics team was thought of as white, and, as a result garnered all the white fans. Magic was black and all the black folks in LA and Boston were Celtic fans. The Commissioner of Basketball took this racism and tried to turn it around, He also took the popularity of Magic and Larry and built basketball into the sport it is today. It was not until their first commercial together that they actually talked. Converse talked them both into making a commercial in Larry Bird's hometown. The morning went well and then Magic accompanied Larry to his home for lunch. Larry's mother gave him a big hug and the ice was broken forever. They learned they could be friends and still be fierce rivals. They didn't meet or talk much, they continued to admire each other.

    This book speaks in each of their voices and is tied together very well by Jackie MacMullan. Each of them tells of their early life and their struggles. They both loved basketball and that love took them to the heights. One of the most memorable stories is about the night Magic learned he had HIV- one of the first people he called was Larry Bird. Larry said that was the first time in his memory he did not want to go out and play basketball that night. Magic also talked Bird into playing basketball for the Olympics. That time was special and remembered by every red blooded basketball fan in the United States. The first time each of their teams won the series is recorded, and each of them was jealous of the other and realized that they needed to suffer and watch the other team celebrate so this would not occur again. How could these fierce rivals from similar backgrounds fight each other so hard and then become friends? They are friends, but rarely talk, they have never vacationed together nor do they send Christmas cards. It doesn't matter, they are forever linked.

    Highly Recommended. prisrob 10-03-09

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  • Rating Poignant, Funny, and Real--A Slam Dunk!!!  Oct 27, 2009 (4 of 5 found this helpful)

    Do you appreciate a great human interest story, especially one that emphasizes competition and respect? Are you old enough to have lived through the Laker/Celtic rivalry of the '60's that was reborn in the '80's thanks to Magic Johnson and Larry Bird? If so, run, don't walk to get a copy of "When The Game Was Ours"--it will be one of the most satisfying and gratifying reads of your life.

    Jackie MacMullan expertly weaves and intertwines the compelling story of these two true superstars from their first contact at a high school all star game in April of 1978 through all the glamorous and torturous stops thereafter in a superb attempt to portray the men behind what came to be the fiercest and most compelling player rivalry in NBA history. Two men from simple roots who ultimately captured the imagination of the entire world of basketball to such an extent they were forever after linked to one another by fans and by history.

    Using key dates of all-star games, divisonal playoffs, or world championship games, their story is told from each other's point of view with well researched comments thrown in from teammates and coaches at the time. Truly, the reader has an inside seat for the memories of two Hall-of-Famers who recreate the crazy, scintillating, individual and team rivalries that brought professional basketball back from the brink.

    Along the way, the reader comes to understand how these two proud and talented individuals saved the NBA from its lackluster and low-life reputation. Magic and Bird came along at a time when the NBA was floundering and dying. It was under-financed, under-marketed, under-seen, under-appreciated, and definitely unfocused. The compelling rivalry of these two individuals and their teams over a 12 year period did more to restore pride, respect, and financial stability to the NBA than anyone could have ever imagined or predicted.

    The real joy of this book for me was the personal real comments and feelings that Larry and Magic felt at the time---feelings that are sometimes excruciatingly poignant. There was always respect but often that was clouded by anger, jealousy, frustration, and the steely determination to best the other. Both were so alike in many ways--great passers and team leaders, superb shooters, focused determination and perseverance---yet so identifiably different---East Coast versus West Coast, Showtime versus Old School, extroverted ebullience versus introverted excellence, and, yes, white versus black.

    Lastly, there are fascinating insights and revelations in the book regarding little known or misrepresented issues from their playing years. Did Magic and Isiah Thomas conspire to "freeze out" Michael Jordan in his first all-star game? Who really blackballed Isiah Thomas from the Olympic Dream Team in Barcelona? Who was the first person Magic wanted his agent to call prior to the public announcement that he had contracted HIV? These and other mysteries are answered in this fast paced and informative book. I lived through these times, loved this rivalry, and I found the behind-the-scenes thoughts and memories presented in "When The Game Was Ours" to be spellbinding. I highly recommend this book to all.

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