God on the Starting Line: The Triumph of a Catholic School Running Team and Its Jewish Coach

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Author: Marc Bloom

ISBN-10: 1891369741

ISBN-13: 9781891369742

Category: Education - Roman Catholic

“It captures the deeper joy of watching young athletes embrace unfashionable ideals of commitment, sacrifice, courage, and faith.”—Sports Illustrated\ “Marc Bloom coaches as every coach in the sport should. I recommend this book without reservation. Read it, commit it to memory, and you will be better for it.”—American Track & Field\ “At its core a spiritual book. It will inspire the reader who values small works of goodness and the courage to face big challenges.”—Jewish Book World\...

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Reflections on the role of faith in a rag-tag team turned state champion. Publishers Weekly In 1997, Bloom took a cross-country coaching job at a small Catholic high school on the Jersey Shore. Although he'd covered running internationally for publications like Runner's World and the New York Times, he hadn't coached before and expended Herculean effort to transform ragtag athletes into committed, passionate champions. In this memoir, employing a conversational writing style (and a jarring use of the present tense even when describing past events), Bloom candidly portrays the ups and downs of building his team. Some of the book's most heartwarming moments come through its interfaith elements, as Bloom, a Reform Jew, learns to understand and encourage his students' Catholic faith while simultaneously appreciating his own religion: "I figure that since Christian kids are taught that suffering with Jesus on the cross is a sanctifying duty, when you combine my nurturing energy with boys who should welcome pain you've got the makings of one fine cross-country team." Readers can easily imagine the Hollywood film that should emerge from this story, a hybrid of Mr. Holland's Opus and Dead Poets Society with underdog sports flicks like Rudy and Miracle, particularly in the inspirational final moments when the team triumphs at the 2000 state championships despite having an injured athlete. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

\ Publishers WeeklyIn 1997, Bloom took a cross-country coaching job at a small Catholic high school on the Jersey Shore. Although he'd covered running internationally for publications like Runner's World and the New York Times, he hadn't coached before and expended Herculean effort to transform ragtag athletes into committed, passionate champions. In this memoir, employing a conversational writing style (and a jarring use of the present tense even when describing past events), Bloom candidly portrays the ups and downs of building his team. Some of the book's most heartwarming moments come through its interfaith elements, as Bloom, a Reform Jew, learns to understand and encourage his students' Catholic faith while simultaneously appreciating his own religion: "I figure that since Christian kids are taught that suffering with Jesus on the cross is a sanctifying duty, when you combine my nurturing energy with boys who should welcome pain you've got the makings of one fine cross-country team." Readers can easily imagine the Hollywood film that should emerge from this story, a hybrid of Mr. Holland's Opus and Dead Poets Society with underdog sports flicks like Rudy and Miracle, particularly in the inspirational final moments when the team triumphs at the 2000 state championships despite having an injured athlete. (Nov.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.\ \