Tricksters in the Madhouse
Lakers vs. Globetrotters, 1948
University of Nebraska Press
ISBN 0-8032-1526-6
"Christgau's play-by-play account of the game is sports writing
at its finest."
--Robert W. Black
Associated Press
"Through newspaper accounts, photographs and interviews, Christgau
meticulously recreates every play. . . . [H]is research is impeccable,
and his insights into the players and coaches, and, particularly
into America in the post-war '40s, are fascinating."
--San Francisco Chronicle
"Christgau's re-creation of every basket from newspaper accounts
and statistical records is remarkable, considering no newsreel
or audio of the game exists."
--Tom Hoffarth
LA Daily News
"[A] fascinating look at a chapter of Chicago sports lore I
am embarrassed to say was not familiar to me: an incredible game
at the stadium between George Mikan's Minneapolis Lakers and the
Goose Taum-Marques Haynes Globetrotters, deadly serious for once,
for what might have been the unofficial world championship back
in the days before pro basketball allowed black players in its
ranks."
--Ron Rapoporr
Chicago Tribune
"John Christgau does a marvelous job of recreating a pivotal
game and a pivotal time in the life of the NBA. . . . Christgau
recreates a play-by-play of the dramatic game but, surrounding
that, he provides a history of the teams and how they came to
be that is just as compelling."
--Minneapolis Tribune
“John Cristigau, a former high scoring forward for the Gator
basketball team, takes readers back to a night in Chicago Stadium
when a single game eclipsed the nation’s racial divide.” --SFSU
Magazine
“A riveting quarter-by-quarter account of a monumental moment
in professional basketball, a showdown game that has become lost
in other similar moments when white-dominated sports first encountered
the reality of African American competition…. This is a fascinating,
readable, enthralling account of the game, carefully researched
and carefully documented. A must for those who see sports as,
sometimes, its culture’s finest moment.”
--Terry Owens
Aethlon
"Profiles of the players and specifics of events surrounding
the game are interspersed with a play-by-play rendering to provide
context for the game action. It is impressive that Christgau (The
Origins of the Jumpshot) was able to piece together such a detailed
account of the game . . . but the most interesting parts of the
book are those outside the game. Recommended for any library."
--Library Journal
In February 1948 the brand-new, all-white Minneapolis Lakers were
arguably the greatest basketball team in America, favored to win
the World Professional Basketball Tournament later that year. Meanwhile
the Harlem Globetrotters, at the center of black basketball, were
riding their own incredible 103-game winning streak. Best known
to white audiences for their clowning and comedy, the Globetrotters
were not even thought to be in the same league with the mighty Lakers.
So when these two powerhouses met for the first time—on February
19, 1948, before an audience of eighteen thousand in Chicago Stadium—basketball
fans everywhere were in for an eye-opening performance. Tricksters in the Madhouse is the story of this pivotal
meeting, a game that would encapsulate the growing racial tensions
of the era, particularly the struggle of black Americans to gain
legitimacy in the segregated world of sports. Play-by-play, John
Christgau recreates the heart-stopping game that would shock white
basketball fans raised to view black athletes in separate and unequal
terms. Through in-depth interviews and extensive research, Christgau
brings this critical match-up to life. By looking beyond the drama
in the arena to the broader events of the day, he also puts the
game in its sociological context, revealing how, even as it enacted
the racial inequities of the time, this crucial game represented
an important step toward equality. John Christgau is the author of many books, including The
Origins of the Jumpshot: Eight Men Who Shook the World of Basketball
(Nebraska 1998). |

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