There’s a reason you like sports more than politics.
It’s because sports make sense and Washington doesn’t. In sports, you have to play by the rules, but in Washington they constantly change the rules to reward special interests they like and punish those they don’t. In sports, referees know how to stay out of the action; the players are the stars. But in Washington, congressmen, senators, and bureaucrats think they’re the stars, and that regulation, not freedom and competition, makes America work. In sports, players know you win or lose as a team, but how many politicians think of “Team America” rather than their petty self-interests?
No one knows sports and politics better than George Allen. The son of a Hall of Fame football coach, and a college quarterback and rugby player himself, Allen has also been a United States Senator and Governor of Virginia. He’s seen the worlds of sports and politics close up, and he knows which one he prefers– it’s the same one you do, because sports work and Washington doesn’t. In What Washington Can Learn from the World of Sports, Allen blends sports anecdotes–memorable, funny, and nostalgic–with the political issues we face, drawing out the principles of sports that have real world applications to our national life and politics. In What Washington Can Learn from the World of Sports, you’ll learn, through great stories about the intersection of sports and politics:
* Why politicians (like Richard Nixon, who phoned in plays to the Redskins and Dolphins) are the worst armchair quarterbacks–and know far less than they think they do
* Why merit matters in sports, and needs to matter more in Washington
* Why coaches are always looking to build improvement, while Washington is content to manage decline
* Why in sports, as in life, nothing is more important than a good defense
* PLUS a foreword from L.A. Rams great David “Deacon” Jones, an afterword from Oklahoma Sooner quarterback and former congressman J. C. Watts, and much, much more
Provocative, entertaining, and down to earth, What Washington Can Learn from the World of Sports is the perfect book for everyone who believes the common sense of the playing field should be applied on Capitol Hill.
What Washington Can Learn From the World of Sports
There are a lot of similarities between sports and life. I ve found that out after being fired from coaching. Who better to explain what Washington can learn from sports than George Allen? He s the son of a Hall of Fame coach, a former player himself, and has had vast experience as a national political figure. Interesting, right between the eyes, great reading!
JON GRUDEN, commentator on Monday Night Footballand former NFL Coach
The good Governor George Allen shows how sports is all about competition and winning and losing and playing by the rules, while Fedzilla is an unaccountable beast, ripping up the rulebook, eating our most entrepreneurial citizens, and taking this country to hell post haste. Great book, important lessons, and sound advice from a guy who gets it.
TED NUGENT, rock star and best-selling author of Ted, White, and Blue
George Allen has written a great book that demonstrates a truly unique way to advance conservative ideas. A home run.
PETER SCHWEIZER, best-selling author of Do as I Say (Not as I Do)
George Allen has great insight into what Washington can learn from the world of sports. The founding fathers worked together as a team in spite of their differences; they understood the importance of a balance of power, just as Coach Allen used to preach everyone just do your own job and everything else will fall into place and be consistent in your responsibilities and take nothing for granted and we will win. Politicians in Washington need to be reminded of their duties, their responsibility to work as a team, and not let the media and polls sway their decisions.
BRIG OWENS, former Washington Redskins defensive back”
About the Author
The list of Regnery authors reads like a “who’s who” of conservative thought, action, and history.