George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

"A marvelous job of unveiling the rich and intriguing tapestry of George Varnell's life."

- Daniel James Brown, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Boys in the Boat

"This deeply researched book relays the facts about Varnell while imparting the essence of the man, particularly his love of sports and sportsmen."

- Timothy P. Brown, author of How Football Became Football: 150 Years of the Game's Evolution

"George Varnell lived the kind of century-filling life that almost sounds like it's made up: star athlete, Olympian, coach, sports writer, editor, and Seattle journalism legend. Jeff Burlingame does an excellent job of putting that life into the historical context of the times. With detailed research and skilled writing, Burlingame has crafted a compelling book I couldn't put down."

- Charles R. Cross, New York Times bestselling author of Heavier Than Heaven

George Varnell's story once was stored in bits and pieces of bits and bytes-online mentions in newspaper articles, on sports websites, and in digitized archives of the many universities whose athletic teams he either cursorily or profoundly impacted. Now pulled together in George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman, those mentions tell the more-than-noteworthy tale of a silently influential man. This meticulous biography illustrates Varnell's life as:

  • An athlete who competed in America's first Olympics in 1904;

  • A college football running back at the University of Chicago under coach Amos Alonzo "A.A." Stagg;

  • Gonzaga University's first basketball coach, who helped create the team (and also an early football coach at the school);

  • A longtime sports editor in both Spokane at The Daily Chronicle and at The Seattle Times, where he was a contemporary with Royal Brougham of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer;

  • A prominent college football referee who still holds the record for most Rose Bowl games officiated. In the days when referees were better known than star players, Varnell was indeed a star profiled in film, magazines, and newspapers;

  • The Seattle Times' beat reporter for the University of Washington's crew team, including the one that won gold in the 1936 Olympics. Varnell helped fundraise for that team so it could attend the Olympics, is regularly sourced in Daniel James Brown's The Boys in the Boat, and also has a trophy in his name awarded at the Huskies' opening-day race each year.

The unheralded story of this athlete, groundbreaking Gonzaga University basketball coach, record-setting Rose Bowl referee, renowned sports writer, and dedicated family man will appeal to sports fans as well as those who find themselves intrigued by the humble human spirit.

1143180166
George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

"A marvelous job of unveiling the rich and intriguing tapestry of George Varnell's life."

- Daniel James Brown, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Boys in the Boat

"This deeply researched book relays the facts about Varnell while imparting the essence of the man, particularly his love of sports and sportsmen."

- Timothy P. Brown, author of How Football Became Football: 150 Years of the Game's Evolution

"George Varnell lived the kind of century-filling life that almost sounds like it's made up: star athlete, Olympian, coach, sports writer, editor, and Seattle journalism legend. Jeff Burlingame does an excellent job of putting that life into the historical context of the times. With detailed research and skilled writing, Burlingame has crafted a compelling book I couldn't put down."

- Charles R. Cross, New York Times bestselling author of Heavier Than Heaven

George Varnell's story once was stored in bits and pieces of bits and bytes-online mentions in newspaper articles, on sports websites, and in digitized archives of the many universities whose athletic teams he either cursorily or profoundly impacted. Now pulled together in George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman, those mentions tell the more-than-noteworthy tale of a silently influential man. This meticulous biography illustrates Varnell's life as:

  • An athlete who competed in America's first Olympics in 1904;

  • A college football running back at the University of Chicago under coach Amos Alonzo "A.A." Stagg;

  • Gonzaga University's first basketball coach, who helped create the team (and also an early football coach at the school);

  • A longtime sports editor in both Spokane at The Daily Chronicle and at The Seattle Times, where he was a contemporary with Royal Brougham of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer;

  • A prominent college football referee who still holds the record for most Rose Bowl games officiated. In the days when referees were better known than star players, Varnell was indeed a star profiled in film, magazines, and newspapers;

  • The Seattle Times' beat reporter for the University of Washington's crew team, including the one that won gold in the 1936 Olympics. Varnell helped fundraise for that team so it could attend the Olympics, is regularly sourced in Daniel James Brown's The Boys in the Boat, and also has a trophy in his name awarded at the Huskies' opening-day race each year.

The unheralded story of this athlete, groundbreaking Gonzaga University basketball coach, record-setting Rose Bowl referee, renowned sports writer, and dedicated family man will appeal to sports fans as well as those who find themselves intrigued by the humble human spirit.

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George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

by Jeff Burlingame
George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman

by Jeff Burlingame

Paperback

$25.00 
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Overview

"A marvelous job of unveiling the rich and intriguing tapestry of George Varnell's life."

- Daniel James Brown, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Boys in the Boat

"This deeply researched book relays the facts about Varnell while imparting the essence of the man, particularly his love of sports and sportsmen."

- Timothy P. Brown, author of How Football Became Football: 150 Years of the Game's Evolution

"George Varnell lived the kind of century-filling life that almost sounds like it's made up: star athlete, Olympian, coach, sports writer, editor, and Seattle journalism legend. Jeff Burlingame does an excellent job of putting that life into the historical context of the times. With detailed research and skilled writing, Burlingame has crafted a compelling book I couldn't put down."

- Charles R. Cross, New York Times bestselling author of Heavier Than Heaven

George Varnell's story once was stored in bits and pieces of bits and bytes-online mentions in newspaper articles, on sports websites, and in digitized archives of the many universities whose athletic teams he either cursorily or profoundly impacted. Now pulled together in George Varnell: The Life and Times of a Pioneering Sportsman, those mentions tell the more-than-noteworthy tale of a silently influential man. This meticulous biography illustrates Varnell's life as:

  • An athlete who competed in America's first Olympics in 1904;

  • A college football running back at the University of Chicago under coach Amos Alonzo "A.A." Stagg;

  • Gonzaga University's first basketball coach, who helped create the team (and also an early football coach at the school);

  • A longtime sports editor in both Spokane at The Daily Chronicle and at The Seattle Times, where he was a contemporary with Royal Brougham of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer;

  • A prominent college football referee who still holds the record for most Rose Bowl games officiated. In the days when referees were better known than star players, Varnell was indeed a star profiled in film, magazines, and newspapers;

  • The Seattle Times' beat reporter for the University of Washington's crew team, including the one that won gold in the 1936 Olympics. Varnell helped fundraise for that team so it could attend the Olympics, is regularly sourced in Daniel James Brown's The Boys in the Boat, and also has a trophy in his name awarded at the Huskies' opening-day race each year.

The unheralded story of this athlete, groundbreaking Gonzaga University basketball coach, record-setting Rose Bowl referee, renowned sports writer, and dedicated family man will appeal to sports fans as well as those who find themselves intrigued by the humble human spirit.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780578950242
Publisher: Gray Bear Books
Publication date: 03/10/2023
Pages: 212
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Jeff Burlingame is the NAACP Image Award-winning author of several nonfiction books, including a bestselling YA biography of his childhood friend Kurt Cobain, and critical looks at the historic and tragic plights of the Lost Boys of Sudan and the crew and passengers of the Titanic. His books have received favorable reviews in hundreds of major publications worldwide, and been honored by the New York Public Library and the NAACP, which in 2012 awarded him its highest literary honor at a nationally televised event in Hollywood, California, for his YA book on Olympic champion Jesse Owens. He also is a winner of the Society of Professional Journalists' national Sigma Delta Chi award. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Burlingame www.jeffburlingame.com
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