| Author/Contributor(s): | Schmidt, Raymond |
| Publisher: | Syracuse University Press |
| Date: | 06/18/2007 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Condition: | NEW |
Shaping College Football is the story of the intercollegiate gridiron sport in the years immediately after World War I when the game underwent major changes that transformed it into one of America's major sporting attractions and a commercial entity that would be recognizable to any twenty-first century fan.
Raymond Schmidt examines the many factors that were a part of college football's reshaping in the 1920s as the universities became dependent upon the revenue being generated by football, and the sport increasingly became identified as a commercialized, big business activity; all of it being played out against a backdrop of struggle between the academic and athletic factions over control of intercollegiate sport's place in the lives of the students and the university community.