Poster Shopping Mall

Poster Subjects 
Main Menu

Abstract
Animals
Architecture
Artists
Astronomy & Space
Botanical
Cars
Christianity
Comic Book
Cuisine
Education
Fantasy
Holidays
Home & Hearth
Humor
Maps
Movies
Music
Patriotic
People
Places
Scenic
Sports
Still Life
Television
Transportation
Vintage
World Culture
Youth

Funny Pics and Poster Parodies

 
 

 

other great Links

 

The Blueprint: How the New England Patriots Beat the System to Create the Last Great NFL Superpower Posters Photos Art
Search for Posters Art Prints, photos and get results from all the many categories from Amazon including books, videos, dvds, toys, video games, and more.  

Posters Art Prints Photos collectables

If for some reason you can't find what the poster or art print your looking for try using the search boxes below

Find Movie Posters at MovieGoodsMovieGoods


 



Search:

 

The Blueprint: How the New England Patriots Beat the System to Create the Last Great NFL Superpower

Amazon Products

In association with Amazonaws.com

 


List Price: $14.95
Amazonaws.com's Price: $11.21
You Save: $3.74 (25%)

 


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Buy Now!



Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
Fabric Type: 9780312384852
Fax Number: Reprint
Legal Disclaimer: 0312384858
Maximum Color Depth: St. Martin's Griffin
Metal Type: St. Martin's Griffin
Publisher: 1
Region Code: 336
Total External Bays Free: September 02, 2008
Total Firewire Ports: St. Martin's Griffin
Total Parallel Ports: September 02, 2008
St. Martin's Griffin

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9780312384852
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.






Editorial Review:

Product Description:
For years, the New England Patriots were a certifiable joke of a franchise. They were run on the cheap and were once the very example of how not to manage a team. They hired inept coaches---one of whom (Clive Rush) was nearly electrocuted when he grabbed a microphone at his introductory press conference. In 1968 their scouting director, Ed McKeever, suggested they draft a wide receiver . . . before someone in the organization realized the player had been dead for six months. They plucked ex-players out of the stands minutes before kickoff---Bob Gladieux was enjoying a beer at the game when he heard his name called over the P.A. (The Patriots had cut a player earlier that morning and found themselves short. Gladieux, who would go on to spend four years in the league as a running back, made the tackle on the opening kickoff.) And they played in a run-down stadium that was one of the worst venues in professional sports. There were brief moments of success, but on each occasion, front-office infighting would invariably cause the franchise to slide back down to the basement again.
But in the first four months of 2000, everything changed. The hiring of head coach Bill Belichick and Vice President of Player Personnel Scott Pioli and the drafting of quarterback Tom Brady turned the fortunes of the franchise around. And their nontraditional approach to acquiring personnel---remembering that it’s not about collecting talent, it’s about assembling a team---quickly led to three Super Bowl titles in four seasons. It’s a feat that, in the salary cap era, with free agency, planned parity and balanced scheduling, is in many ways even more impressive than anything achieved by the past dynasties of Green Bay, Pittsburgh, Dallas, and San Francisco.

Along the way, Christopher Price has had a front-row seat for football history, chronicling the rise to power of the NFL’s unlikeliest superpower. Price takes the reader inside the franchise to give him a dynamic portrait of a mighty organization at the height of its power. Readers are immersed in the locker room during the strange and tumultuous days of 2001 and 2003, when major personnel moves involving a pair of the most popular players in franchise history---Drew Bledsoe and Lawyer Milloy---threatened to rock their championship foundation to the core. Readers get an up-close look at the team that dominated the league on the way to a record-setting winning streak in 2004. And Price analyzes what went wrong when they fell short in 2005 and 2006, and how they plan to return to Super Bowl form in 2007.

The Blueprint will explore how the Patriots went from the dregs to a dynasty, becoming the gold standard for professional sports franchises everywhere. It will prompt sports fans (and those who study organizations) to acknowledge what many football insiders have believed for a long time: when it comes to building a successful system, the Patriots have the Blueprint.




Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Interesting NFL tales, badly told
After finishing "The Blueprint," I find it hard to believe Christopher Price is gainfully employed as a writer. This is, simply, a horribly written book. He seemed to be directionless from the very start, with not only no clear purpose to the tale, but no understanding of how to unfold the events. Stories meander back and forth through a muddled timeline. There apparently was no editing whatsoever, as many missing and misspelled words, mispunctuations, truncated sentences, and derailed trains of ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Disappointing
Unfortunately, this book contains very little new material for the informed Pats, or NFL, fan. Most of this information has been written before. Too many pages spent on past Pats history, which has been chronicled elsewhere. Almost half the book is wasted on rehashing old feuds and sorry history.

In the introduction, the author says his model for this book was Moneyball, but he falls way short of that goal. Badly edited, lots of annoying errors and too many repetitive quotes used throughout ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Excellent look at the Patriots' great run in the last seven years.
Though not quite as good or groundbreaking as Michael Lewis' seminal "Moneyball", "The Blueprint" is an outstanding read. Well written and highly readable, this one is well worth the time of any NFL fan.

The first third of the book details the sometimes woeful, sometimes thrilling first four decades of the New England Patriots franchise. Owned by the Sullivan family, the team was too poor and cheap to compete with the Hunt's of the world and consequently had no championships prior to the miracle ... Read More



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Jumbled Mess
I've never before seen a book published by a "real" publisher be so full of typos and distracting grammatical errors. Did anyone proofread it? The author, Christopher Price, writes the entire book in such a sloppy train-of-thought fashion that it has the feel of high school term paper that was written the night before. And this term paper would not have received a passing grade.

However, the subject matter is very interesting, and Price does a good job of researching quotes from press conferences ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Price continues to write great stuff
I've read alot of his daily stuff, and LOVE his writing style. He's as good as they come. The book has some nice insite, and is well written. If you're a sports fan in general, you'll love this book.





 

Find your favorite art:

barewalls.com