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Roundup

From Politics to Scandals, Sports Seem to Speak to Our Times

Credit...Olimpia Zagnoli

Sports as escape has always been a myth, and I have never been reminded of that so clearly as I was recently before the singing of the national anthem at a marathon in the rural South, when the starter said that anyone who knelt was going to get a “butt whuppin’.” (I wondered especially how the African-American runners who had trained for months for the race felt about that jolly send-off.) Over the past month, I have steeped myself in some dozen new sports books, and all seemed, to varying degrees, to speak to the tenor of the times. Or maybe the tenor is sounding a note so long and shrill it seems like white noise in the background for everything.

The Golden State Warriors’ contretemps with the president over a withdrawn invitation to the White House seized a news cycle, and their subsequent statement that they “celebrate equality, diversity and inclusion” is reflected, for instance, in their hiring of the team president Rick Welts, “the highest-ranking out-gay team executive in American professional sports,” as Erik Malinowski puts it in BETABALL: How Silicon Valley and Science Built One of the Greatest Basketball Teams in History (Atria, $26). The phenomenon of Stephen Curry and the sudden rise of the Warriors to the N.B.A.’s heights deserve a deep dive, but “Betaball” is more often a disappointing data dump. Beginning with the purchase of the Warriors in 2010 by the venture capital wizard Joe Lacob, Malinowski, the Warriors beat writer for Bleacher Report, plods along through accounts of seven seasons, too infrequently rising from the morass of statistics and overly detailed game accounts to tell stories of outside-the-box thinking like those that animated Michael Lewis’s “Moneyball,” the ur-front-office-chronicle. (Game 1 of the 2012-13 second-round playoff series against the San Antonio Spurs takes nearly three pages.)

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The Golden State Warriors point to their 2017 N.B.A. championship banner.Credit...Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

When Malinowski homes in on those innovations that the Warriors adopted or developed, the stories are revealing. In one case, the coach Steve Kerr heeds the advice of the team’s performance trainer, Keke Lyles, to consult the Stanford University sleep researcher Cheri Mah, who proposed strategies (like limiting daytime naps to 30 minutes) to mitigate the effects of long-distance travel. Elsewhere, Malinowski convincingly makes the case that the organization’s openness to using new sources of data and to adopting suggestions up and down the organizational chart — reflecting Lacob’s Silicon Valley background — gives the Warriors a leg up on the opposition. Those accounts, however, are buried in the rote narration of the various seasons. Sentences like this are not uncommon: “David Lee, pouring in 19 points and nearly 11 boards while playing in 51 of Golden State’s first 52 games, was named as a reserve for the Western Conference All-Star squad, the first time a Warrior had been named to the All-Star team in 16 years, since Latrell Sprewell in 1997.” These may be sweet memories for hard-core Warriors fans, but they obscure the promised tale in the subtitle. (I also feel obligated to warn potential audiobook listeners that “David Lee” is about the only name the reader doesn’t mispronounce.)

If Malinowski’s book posits that winning through analytics and a diversity of opinion is the wave of the future, Mike McIntire, an investigative journalist with The New York Times, offers a chronicle of a team that succeeds the old-fashioned way: bending, breaking and ignoring the rules. CHAMPIONS WAY: Football, Florida, and the Lost Soul of College Sports (Norton, $26.95) documents how big-time college programs like Florida State massage egos, flout the law, bow down to the almighty dollar and make a mockery of the term “student-athlete” in order to keep winning. (Why the subtitle doesn’t add “State” to “Florida” is a puzzle, though.) McIntire doesn’t mention it in the book, but The Onion had been on this case as long ago as 2006 when it headlined a satirical piece “Florida State University to Phase Out Academic Operations by 2010.”

If the university had taken that route, we wouldn’t be reading about Christie Suggs, a teaching assistant at the College of Business’s Dedman School of Hospitality, “located in a rather odd place on … campus: the south end zone of the Seminoles’ football stadium.” Troubled by the shoddy, incomplete and plagiarized work of football players in online classes (“Coffee, Tea & International Culture” was one) and faced with unresponsive higher-ups, she reluctantly becomes a whistle-blower, but finds her concerns unaddressed and her work responsibilities reduced, notably as the Seminoles are marching toward a national championship season in 2013, led by the star quarterback Jameis Winston. More harrowing and better known is the story of Erica Kinsman, a Florida State freshman in 2012, who alleged that she was raped by Winston but whose complaint, McIntire says, was insufficiently investigated by the Tallahassee police and her case further undermined by athletic department machinations. (Winston was never charged, and the university eventually settled with Kinsman.)

Unrelenting in railing against these improprieties and many others on campus, like embezzlement in the booster club and the sordid influence of the rapper Luther Campbell, McIntire paints a grim picture of a culture of malfeasance, particularly in its treatment of women, at the heart of college athletics. Yet as briskly and passionately as he lays out the horrors in Tallahassee and elsewhere, there’s little that’s surprising, nor does he plot any way forward. Exposing wrongdoing is the investigative journalist’s raison d’être but McIntire’s account of the systemic depth of its entrenchment leaves one despairing of any potential corrective.

The popularity of the rediscovered historical sports narrative, à la “Seabiscuit” and “The Boys in the Boat,” has sent microfilm reels spinning, and Roseanne Montillo’s FIRE ON THE TRACK: Betty Robinson and the Triumph of the Early Olympic Women (Crown, $27) brings to light the accomplishments of women track athletes of nearly a century ago, who struggled to overcome old-boy resistance and misogynistic discrimination in pursuing their goals.

The book is a worthy addition to the genre but also demonstrates its limitations. In the first half, I found the portrait of Robinson, the Olympic 100-meter-dash champion in 1928 (when women were first allowed to compete), lacking in complexity, despite her survival of a dramatic plane crash and rehabilitation after. The “Notes and Sources” seem to indicate substantial reliance, perhaps overly so in the absence of many primary sources, on Montillo’s correspondence with Robinson’s son. Whatever the case, her style tends to the overheated, whether because of the paucity of sources or not: “She felt her muscles come alive as she dashed down the track, the auditorium pulsating wildly as time seemed to stop altogether yet simultaneously blast forward faster than she could ever have imagined.” Weather conditions, one of the readily available sources, seem to get outsize importance and emphasis in her re-creations.

It’s worth sticking with the book, however, through the second half, which picks up speed in the minibiographies of Babe Didrikson and lesser-known figures like Stella Walsh, a Clevelander who raced for Poland in the 1932 and 1936 Olympics, and whose strength and speed and refusal to shower with others provoked rumors about her true sex. There is also Helen Stephens, whose frank diary describes an awkward encounter with Hitler after her win in the 100-meter dash at the 1936 Berlin Olympics and her own battle with the general presumption that “no one that tall, with a stride that long, nearly six feet, with a form so graceless, could be anything other than a man.” (She was subjected to a clinical examination to confirm her eligibility.) By covering a wider range of personalities in the second half of her book, Montillo succinctly adds context to prevailing — and appalling — views and thus elevates the accomplishments of all the women competing in track.

Had she been playing 80 years ago, Maria Sharapova, at 6-foot-2 and fiercely competitive, might have suffered Stephens’s fate and had her femininity not just questioned but physically confirmed. In any case, it’s disturbing to read in UNSTOPPABLE: My Life So Far (Sarah Crichton/Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $28), the memoir that she’s written with Rich Cohen, that she’s so oblivious to women’s body-image issues she says of Serena Williams, “she has thick arms and thick legs and is so intimidating and strong. And tall, really tall.” Williams is 5-foot-9. ”Even now, she can make me feel like a little girl.” If not overtly racist, the statements play into racial stereotypes, implying that Williams, who holds a lifetime 19-2 record over Sharapova, has beaten the “little girl” merely by overpowering her, not through tactical acumen and other skills of the game.

I’m inclined to believe Sharapova that her doping, which caused her to be barred from the tour for 15 months, was inadvertent. And I admire her on-court tenacity and her marketing savvy. But if she really wants to help the “many young girls, who had been inspired by my example and my life” and whom she heard from during her suspension, she would do well to reflect on the way she thinks and speaks about other women. Her inspirational words for those girls: “The record book? Posterity? [Expletive] that. Did you hear what that girl said about me at the press conference? That’s what gets me going.”

I found a balm for Sharapovian self-absorption in Simon Critchley’s slim WHAT WE THINK ABOUT WHEN WE THINK ABOUT SOCCER (Penguin, $20), whose title is an obvious nod to Haruki Murakami’s “What I Talk About When I Talk About Running” (its own title a nod to a Raymond Carver story) and whose green cover seems copied from last year’s David Foster Wallace collection of tennis writing, “String Theory.” I admit to being a sucker for this kind of intellectual maundering about the meaning of sports, but I know plenty of sports fans can’t stand it.

Critchley trots out Sartre, Foucault and especially Hans-Georg Gadamer, whose idea of the “tragic pensiveness” of the spectator at ancient theater Critchley links to a soccer crowd’s participation, which is not “aloof from the action” but “constantly attentive.” Further, he asserts, adopting Hegel’s terms, that “the being of the players is not being-in-itself, but being-for-us, mediated through the spectators and requiring their recognition in order to affirm the players’ existence.” He does have the good sense to augment such bicycle-kick difficulty with simpler wisdom from soccer philosophers like the legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly, who once said: “The socialism I believe in is not really politics. It is a way of living. It is humanity. I believe the way to live and be truly successful is by collective effort, with everyone working for each other.” Much that Critchley muses on about soccer could be equally applicable to other team sports, and he doesn’t shy away from soccer’s long history of hooliganism, corruption and sexism.

Critchley’s most bracing commentary may be that on Philippe Parreno and Douglas Gordon’s 2006 film “Zidane: A 21st-Century Portrait,” about the French star: “On the one hand, it gives us a sense of the capture of reality by commodified images in the century into which we have slowly slouched our way. But on the other hand … there is the suggestion, the adumbration of an inaccessible interiority, a reality that resists commodification.” Call it a header-in-the-clouds book.

My favorite book of the bunch, and the one that best captures the American sports landscape in these times, is not about any competition on the field but about the landscape-clearing constructions where the games take place. THE ARENA: Inside the Tailgating, Ticket-Scalping, Mascot-Racing, Dubiously Funded, and Possibly Haunted Monuments of American Sport (Liveright, $27.95), by the freelance writer Rafi Kohan, is smart, readable, deeply reported and researched, engagingly personal, funny and often surprisingly poignant.

Kohan traverses the country from Green Bay’s Lambeau Field to New York’s Citi Field to San Diego’s Petco Park, embedding with the stadium Everymen and Everywomen who are the nobodies of the sports world. They are the people who tend the grass, change scoreboard numbers, sell food and logo merchandise, scalp tickets and wear mascot costumes. Of Brad Collins, who inhabits the character of Sluggerrr, the Kansas City Royals’ lion mascot, Kohan writes, “After frolicking on the field in 90-degree heat for pregame festivities and player introductions,” Collins enters the windowless mascot quarters, “slams the door and rips off his Sluggerrr head, which is not insubstantial, about one and a half feet square. The stench is immediate and overpowering, like lifting the cover off a cake tray filled with soggy gym socks.”

Don’t mistake the breezy style for lack of substance. Amid a section on the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium in Arlington, Texas (that is, Jerry’s World, for the team’s owner, Jerry Jones), Kohan describes over-the-top amenities like a $15 million sculpture by Anish Kapoor (which looks like “a celestial magnifying glass, as if God were frying Cowboys fans like ants”), but the section also undertakes a comprehensive, cogent survey of the literature on stadium economics. Other chapters explore the pathos of minimum-wage groundskeepers, detail the roller-coaster life of the halftime acrobat the Amazing Sladek and reveal illicit deals vendors cut to earn a few extra dollars — and management’s efforts to catch them.

Kohan’s penultimate chapter is called “Sex. War. America,” and it covers the way that sports has appropriated and intermixed that triad to tease out emotion and profit, portrayed memorably in Ben Fountain’s novel “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk,” based on the Dallas Cowboys’ 2004 Thanksgiving Day halftime show. Fountain tells him, “just seeing the display of militarism, American exceptionalism, pop music, soft-core porn all mixed together in this kind of crazy to-do — I started feeling like it was its own kind of voodoo.” Kohan also reminds us of a 2015 report from Senators Jeff Flake and John McCain revealing undisclosed payments from the Department of Defense to teams in order to fund military tributes, what Kohan calls “camouflaged propaganda.” The issue, for the senators and others, was one of transparency.

Kohan is sincerely moved at Marine Corps Appreciation Day in San Diego (paid for by the team, not Defense) as he watches a mother reunite with her teenage son for the first time since he left home for boot camp. At the same time, he states, “In the post-9/11 era, pressure has been growing inside stadiums — often implicitly — to participate in group patriotism.”

And outside stadiums, explicitly, at small-town marathons, before the starting gun fires.

Jay Jennings, the senior editor at Oxford American magazine, is the author of “Carry the Rock: Race, Football and the Soul of an American City.”

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A version of this article appears in print on  , Page 70 of the Sunday Book Review with the headline: Sports. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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