Puneet Varma (Editor)

Everybody's All American

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Author
  
Frank Deford

Publisher
  
Viking Press

ISBN
  
978-0-670-30035-8

Genre
  
Sports fiction

Pages
  
314 pp.

OCLC
  
7273853

Everybody's All-American is a 1981 novel by longtime Sports Illustrated contributor Frank Deford and later made into a motion picture directed by Taylor Hackford.

Plot summary

The novel tells the story of a fictional famous college football player at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the early 1950s. The setting of the novel was changed to Louisiana University for the movie adaptation. The main character, Gavin Grey, wins the Heisman Trophy and then goes on to a professional career, but is sidetracked by alcoholism, failed business ventures, and marital difficulties among other misjudgments.

The novel is narrated by Grey's nephew, Donnie McClure, an historian who has written a biography of Confederate war hero J.E.B. Stuart. During his college career, Grey's heroics are often compared to Stuart's actions. Both are celebrated not only for their actions, but for their gentle behavior and consideration for others around them.

Grey's greatest moments came away from the football field. At a fraternity party, a carelessly-placed cigarette ignites the dress of a young coed, who staggers back in fear and nearly starts a much larger fire by lighting a set of drapes. Despite a strong fear of fire, Grey saves the woman by leaping forward and dousing the flames. A few weeks later, Grey, McClure and a UNC teammate, Lawrence, venture into a black neighborhood where Grey meets Narvel Blue, another one-time football star whose greatness was never realized due to bad grades, segregation and bad luck. Blue and Grey compare attributes but decide that a foot-race must be held to determine which is the faster runner. Despite falling behind initially, Grey eventually overcomes Blue by a shade at the end of the race.

After a serious knee injury cuts short his professional career, he is miserable in retirement and returns to accept a lesser role with the Baltimore Colts. However, his season, and ultimately his football career, end after a knee injury in his third game. Grey is left calling every team in the NFL, begging for one more chance.

Grey is left to constantly reminisce about his glory days on the football field, boring and embarrassing those around him. His once-gawky and awkward nephew Donnie becomes a respected scholar and biographer, and his beauty queen wife, Babs, becomes a successful career woman. All of Grey's former teammates move towards their life off the gridiron with infinitely more grace, while Narvel Blue overcomes racism in the South to become a successful restaurateur.

As each day passes, Grey falls farther away from his moments of glory. And with each passing day, his relevance, sense of place and his grasp of the world around him fade until he is diminished to little more than a ghost.

References

Everybody's All-American Wikipedia