Loose Balls: The Short, Wild Life of the American Basketball Association
And then as quickly as the Colonels appeared, they were gone. They had been around just long enough to win a world championship and showcase not only some of the best basketball players in the history of the game, but also some of its most colorful characters.
Perhaps this book should have been written years ago, but there always seemed to be plenty of time. And then one day, a generation or two removed, someone asked what happened to that pro-basketball team back in the 60s and 70s?
BAM, it hits you. This book had to be written.
Here are never-before-told stories that only Lloyd "Pink" Gardner would know. He lived it and Gary P. West wrote it.
A story of colorful owners with family connections to the Lindbergh kidnapping and Hope Diamond; sports agents who would do anything to sign players; a double murder and suicide; a businessman who thought he could do in basketball what he had done with Kentucky Fried Chicken; an insignificant T.V. deal that turned into hundreds of millions of dollars; a team that drafted a 5 6 , 55-year-old college professor; and through it all still won a world championship.
Lloyd Gardner was a major part of the success of the Kentucky Colonels. Anyone who knows anything about the Kentucky Colonels and their history will tell you that. Lloyd had the perfect temperament to be a trainer, and the knowledge to get the players back after certain injuries, and the key thing of loyalty... to the players and the coaches. Hubie Brown--Interview with Drew Deener on WKRD Radio
Country | USA |
Brand | Acclaim Press |
Manufacturer | Acclaim Press |
Binding | Hardcover |
ItemPartNumber | B01K2KC8LQ |
UnitCount | 1 |
EANs | 9781935001829 |
ReleaseDate | 0000-00-00 |