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The Rebounders

A Division I Basketball Journey

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Unlike the stories of most visible Division I college athletes, Amanda Ottaway's story has more in common with those of the 80 percent of college athletes who are never seen on TV. The Rebounders follows the college career of an average NCAA Division I women's basketball player in the twenty-first century, beginning with the recruiting process when Ottaway is an eager, naive teenager and ending when she's a more contemplative twentysomething alumna.
Ottaway's story, along with the journeys of her dynamic Wildcat teammates at Davidson College in North Carolina, covers in engaging detail the life of a mid-major athlete: recruitment, the preseason, body image and eating disorders, schoolwork, family relationships, practice, love life, team travel, game day, injuries, drug and alcohol use, coaching changes, and what comes after the very last game. In addition to the everyday issues of being a student athlete, The Rebounders also covers the objectification of female athletes, race, sexuality, and self-expression.
Most college athletes, famous or not, play hard, get hurt, fail, and triumph together in a profound love of their sport and one another, and then their careers end and they figure out how to move on. From concussions and minor injuries to classrooms, parties, and relationships, Ottaway understands the experience of a Division I women's basketball player firsthand. The Rebounders is, at its core, a feminist coming-of-age story, an exploration of what it means to be a young woman who loves a sport and is on a course of self-discovery through that medium.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 22, 2018
      In this charming though uneven memoir, Ottaway recalls her four years as a scholarship player, beginning in 2008, on Davidson College’s women’s basketball team. She shares stories of her emotional and physical toil during the season, dealing with a coaching staff that breeds discord (“I believed that coach Katz loved us in her way. I just didn’t think she knew how to show us... her competitiveness came off as plain old hurtful”), stressing over her meager playing time, and realizing that she and her teammates are simply university “merchandise.” Ottaway relishes details—a strength coach boasts calves as “wide as cereal boxes”—and her description of the financial burden families face when a player gets injured is eye-opening. Throughout, she includes stories of her former teammates alongside those of her own struggles, a technique that works to varying degrees: while it offers glimpses into the broader world of college sports, it distracts from the narrative. Ottaway is certainly an affable and trustworthy guide but readers will be left wanting more. Agent: Laurie Abkemeier, DeFiore and Co.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2018
      Ottaway attended Davidson College in North Carolina on a basketball scholarship and is now a journalist in New York. This is a fascinating memoir precisely because she was not a star player, which gives her account of playing in college basketball's highest level (Division I) a perspective different from that of most athletes' memoirs. Her reflections on the college game aren't always flattering to others (she has changed the names of all her teammates and coaches in deference to their privacy). Among the issues explored are recruitment, body images and eating disorders, practice routines, intrateam rivalries, and the competitive atmosphere that permeates every aspect of the players' lives. She also delves into the social life of the Division I athlete: parties, drinking, and drug use. There's plenty of inside basketball, too, along with thoughtful reflection on the basketball conundrum that has men coaching women at all levels, but women rarely if ever coaching men. Ottaway is a fine writer who exhibits both compassion and insight throughout this story of one woman's coming-of-age as an athlete. Strongly recommended.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

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Languages

  • English

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