Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas

Time to Read
3 hrs 17 mins

Reading Time

3 hrs 17 mins

How long to read Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas?

The estimated word count of Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas is 49,135 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 3 hrs 17 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 5 hrs 28 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 1 hrs 50 mins.

Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas - 49,135 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 5 hrs 28 mins
Average 250 words/min 3 hrs 17 mins
Fast 450 words/min 1 hrs 50 mins
Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas by Vicki Mayk
Authors
Vicki Mayk

More about Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas

49,135 words

Word Count

for Growing Up on the Gridiron: Football, Friendship, and the Tragic Life of Owen Thomas

5 hours and 17 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

Explores the experience of one young man and the concerns about CTE he helped to illuminate, and the cultural allure of football in America that keeps boys trying to make the team despite the dangersAward-winning journalist Vicki Mayk raises a critical question for football players and their communities: does loving a sport justify risking your life? This is the insightful and deeply human story of Owen Thomas--a star football player at Penn, who took his own life when he was 21, the result of the pain and anguish caused by chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).It was Owen's landmark case which demonstrated that a player didn't need years of head bashing in the NFL, or even multiple sustained brain concussions, to cause the mind-altering, life-threatening, degenerative disease known as CTE. And Owen's case could not have come to light without Dr. Ann McKee, the neuropathologist who bucked conventional wisdom, and the football establishment, as she examined Owen's brain and its larger significance, building an ever-stronger case that said, at the very least, football should not be played by children under the age of 14.With its focus on a single life and the community touched by it--Owen's family, his teammates and friends, his teachers and coaches, and, later, Dr. McKee--Growing Up on the Gridiron explores the place of football in our lives. It doesn't make a heavy-handed argument to abandon the sport. Rather, it explores why football matters so deeply to many young men, and why they continue to take risks despite the evidence of serious, long-term harm.