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The Best Sports Memoirs, According to Sports Journalists

Portrait of Louis Cheslaw

Whether you’re a sports fan or just a history buff, looking back at sporting events has produced some of the world’s finest journalism. But it could be argued that no outside observers’ perspective can compare to being inside the heads of those who scored that game-winning point, series-winning run, or tournament-winning goal (or coached any teams that did). Which is why, with so many of our favorite sports still on pause as their leagues figure out how to resume competition, we realized getting lost in a good sports memoir could be the next best thing to spending hours watching a game itself. But with so many sports memoirs ghostwritten or scribbled in a hurry as a valedictory rite of passage, which ones are actually up to snuff?

To find out, we asked 17 experts — including sportswriters, broadcasters, and professors — for their recommendations. While their responses included memoirs written by many athletes who are household names, we also learned about stories told by others that the spotlight may have missed, and a few written by coaches or superfans with perspectives that are just as gripping as those of athletes who actually took the field. Read on for their picks, which we’ve organized by sport. In the tradition of our other reading lists, we’ve named any books with two or more recommendations as best overall. But we’ve also included titles emphatically recommended by just one person, for those who may want to dive further into any category.

Best tennis memoirs

Best overall tennis memoir.

good sports biography books

Three people raved about this memoir, which journalist Jonathan Eig, the author of Ali: A Life , says “may be the all-time best-written memoir by a major athlete.” All who recommended it praised the book’s “shockingly” candid nature, pointing out Agassi’s honesty is especially rare for an athlete who was one of the most popular of his generation. “Few autobiographies have dared to show athletes so naked,” writer Sam Diss, the head of content at London-based soccer magazine Mundial , says, adding that Agassi is “not writing this book to stick the boot into old foes or people who screwed him out of money.” Instead, Diss says he’s “passed over, gone clear, and reveals his trauma and grudges with equal parts pain and catharsis, in a way that doesn’t feel point-scoring, but freeing.”

More recommended tennis memoirs

good sports biography books

According to Dr. Amira Rose Davis, a Penn State professor of history and African-American studies who also co-hosts the feminist sports podcast Burn It All Down , “the long history of black women in sport” is often obscured in sportswriting. But memoirs by black female athletes, which allow them to “narrate their own careers,” can “push us all to consider whose voices we are missing when we tell sports stories.” One of those women is tennis champion Althea Gibson, who wrote two memoirs that Davis recommends. “Gibson broke the color line at Wimbledon and was the first African-American Grand Slam champion,” she tells us. The first, I Always Wanted to Be Somebody, chronicles Gibson’s journey from childhood to the majors, while the follow-up, So Much to Live For, chronicles Gibson’s transition from the game to a golf career and beyond. Davis considers both essential reading, but notes that the details of Gibson’s post-career struggles in the latter work are especially poignant, and “serve as a reminder that being the queen of the tennis court is all well is good” but, as Gibson writes, “you can’t eat a crown.”

Editor’s note: These two books are now out of print and therefore priced higher than others on this list.

good sports biography books

Another historic player, Arthur Ashe, remains the only black male tennis player to win Wimbledon (among other major titles). Marshall Jon Fisher, author of A Terrible Splendor says Ashe’s memoir has been one of his favorites since he was 12 years old. “Ashe told his life story in the context of a diary of one year on the tennis tour — Wimbledon 1973 to Wimbledon 1974,” Fisher tells us. “If only he’d known he would finally win the hallowed tournament in ’75, he might have waited a year. But then we wouldn’t have the same searching, melancholy masterpiece.”

good sports biography books

This 1978 memoir of playing the world tennis circuit in the late 1950s and early 1960s is a “hilarious and poignant gem,” Fisher tells us. “In those days, the tour was more collegial, as well as more attainable for a cast of colorful characters more interested in seeking life experience than in becoming multimillion-dollar ground-stroke machines.” And lucky for readers, Forbes jotted down observations while he toured that “should entertain tennis fans forever,” according to Fisher.

Best baseball memoirs

Best overall baseball memoirs.

good sports biography books

Three people told us about pitcher Jim Bouton’s book about his career with the New York Yankees and other teams in the ’60s. According to writer Daniel Okrent (who is credited with inventing the scoring system for fantasy baseball), it is “the memoir that broke the mold, earning Bouton the enmity of his fellow players and the applause of generations of fans” for its honest details of legendary players’ drunkenness, womanizing, and prodigious drug use (including some tales that, Okrent admits, “are less hilarious today”). Mark Kram, Jr., the author most recently of Smokin’ Joe: The Life of Joe Frazier , calls it a “bawdy tell-all” and an “instant sports literary classic.” Bouton was known for his wild knuckleballs, and Eig says that he “tossed the perfect knuckleball with this.”

good sports biography books

This memoir by the one-time owner of the Cleveland Indians, St. Louis Browns, and Chicago White Sox was recommended to us by both Kram and former Grantland editor Rafe Bartholomew . “Baseball owners were a hidebound and altogether humorless bunch until Bill Veeck crashed the party,” according to Kram, who tells us that, “with a wooden leg, Veeck lugged home from the South Pacific in World War II, sent a dwarf to the plate, gave us the exploding scoreboard, and cooked up countless other promotional stunts that imbued a gray game with jump and color.” Kram says that Veeck’s memoir is “full of colorful tales and big ideas,” adding that he was fortunate enough to spend time with Veeck on a few occasions and that he “emerges in his book just as he was in person. One can almost hear his gravelly chuckle.”

More recommended baseball memoirs

good sports biography books

Pitcher Jim Brosnan’s memoir focuses on his time playing for the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds in 1959. Okrent says that the memoir about Brosnan’s “unexceptional season with two unexceptional teams remains the most honest — and, I suspect, most accurate — account of the daily life of a ballplayer that we’ve ever seen.” It wasn’t meant to be a book filled with shocking revelations, according to Okrent, but is now thought of as one thanks to Brosnan’s inclusion of the Cardinals’ trainer “distributing an early form of steroids and amphetamines to the players.”

good sports biography books

This bittersweet memoir tells the story of Pat Jordan’s promising, yet unfulfilled career as a pitcher. According to Kram, it’s a “hall-of-fame, lyrical memoir of youth ascendant and the hard luck that spares only the fortunate few.” Jordan began his career as a highly regarded schoolboy pitcher in 1950s Connecticut before, as Kram tells it, “signing with the Milwaukee Braves and spending three years toiling in bush league outposts such as McCook, Davenport, Waycross, Eau Claire and Palatka.” Then, 13 years after the Braves handed him his unconditional release, he revisited that period to write this — and later become “one of our preeminent sports journalists.”

good sports biography books

Dirk Hayhurst succeeded where Pat Jordan did not, according to Kram, who notes he actually pitched in the big leagues (albeit briefly). Kram calls this, his second memoir, a “small gem,” noting it unfolds around and during his 2008 season with the San Diego Padres and offers a “candid account of the obstacles that he faced during his climb to the highest league, including conflicts with his eccentric grandmother, alliances and tensions with teammates, and the jitters he overcame when he finally got the call and discovered he was indeed out of his league.”

Best basketball memoirs

Best overall basketball memoirs.

good sports biography books

Seven people recommended basketball memoirs, with two directing us to this one by NBA great and former U.S. senator from New Jersey, Bill Bradley. Both Bartholomew and Mike Tollin , an executive producer of ESPN’s The Last Dance , recommend the 240-page book that chronicles just 20 days in the life of Bradley’s time as a professional basketball player. Tollin, who told us he first learned about Bradley’s prowess by reading John McPhee’s famous 1965 profile of Bradley’s college basketball career at Princeton, says that reading the memoir “gave me an even greater appreciation for his humanity, and rare insight.”

good sports biography books

“This classic deserves a much wider audience,” Eig tells us (Bartholomew is also a fan, as is Barack Obama, who called it the “best basketball book I’ve ever read.”) At the time he wrote it, Rick Telander was a faded football prospect who spent his time freelance writing and playing pickup basketball games in New York City. The memoir tracks his time observing and playing games at Flatbush’s Foster Park in the mid-1970s, and Telander rotates between observer, player, and team coach, reflecting throughout on the darker reality his fellow players from low-income neighborhoods would return to once the sun went down. “I remember Telander’s beautiful sentences, which feature his keen eye for detail, and his effortless blend of sociology and sport,” Eig says.

More recommended basketball memoirs

good sports biography books

New York Times basketball and culture writer Sopan Deb recommends this 1980 memoir by legendary Boston Celtics center Bill Russell (who is regarded as the NBA’s first black superstar). “ Second Wind , in which he famously refers to Boston as a ‘flea market’ of racism, is an honest accounting by one of the most important athletes in the history of mankind,” Deb says.

Editor’s note: Due to this book’s recent popularity and the fact that it hasn’t been reissued (yet), we’re seeing it priced higher than others on this list.

good sports biography books

Northwestern University’s director of sports journalism , J.A. Adande (who also appears on ESPN as a contributor), told us this is not only his favorite sports memoir, but that Abdul-Jabbar’s “fascinating perspectives” on race, religion, love, and America itself from the 1950s through the 1980s make it one of his favorite books ever. According to Adande, even though Abdul-Jabbar is one of the greatest players of all time, “basketball feels almost like an afterthought” in this book, or “something he pursued because he was tall and suited for it, but not something he felt as passionately about as, say, jazz.” Adande notes that Abdul-Jabbar has gone on to write dozens of books and essays on timely topics, and that “you can see the genesis of those in Giant Steps .”

good sports biography books

Sports journalist and broadcaster Taylor Rooks told us about this memoir written by Tim Grover, a basketball trainer. But she assures he’s not just any trainer: “Tim Grover is the legendary trainer to athletes like Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, and Dwyane Wade.” The book, according to Rooks, focuses on the mental practices Grover taught these athletes (and others) to ensure they didn’t just have good seasons, but good careers. “It’s full of anecdotes and stories that make you feel closer to the players we all grew up watching,” she says, adding that it includes a favorite quote: “The only difference between feedback and criticism is the way you hear it.”

good sports biography books

“My sports life has been consumed by two seminal NBA dynasties: the Michael Jordan Bulls and the Kobe-Shaq-Gasol Lakers,” sports and culture writer Dave Schilling says, adding that “those teams have one thing in common: head coach Phil Jackson.” According to him, anything Jackson wrote would have been a must-read given his shepherding of some of the greatest basketball players of all time, but Eleven Rings , which Schilling describes as memoir–cum–self-help book, goes the extra mile. “It gives an insight into how Jackson motivated his teams, which included a collection of massive egos, some of whom were not prone to taking orders,” he says. “It’s sort of a classic ‘Dad Lit’ book where the author delivers meme-able motivational insights.”

Best football memoirs

Best overall football memoir.

good sports biography books

Four folks recommended books about American football, with three specifically highlighting George Plimpton’s memoir of his weeks-long athletic career (Plimpton, of course, is best known for helping to start the Paris Review). Diss describes the book as “the perfect encapsulation of a classic conversation starter: How long could you last in a match at professional level?” Spoiler alert: The answer, Diss points out (without giving the story away), is not long. “But Plimpton’s eloquence and brio propels this dive into American football in a way that’s both very funny and dredges up a newfound respect for even the lowliest pro athlete,” he explains. Okrent is also a fan, telling us “Plimpton’s weeks in uniform in the Detroit Lions’ training camp may have been a stunt, but the book is a gem. However bad Plimpton was as an NFL quarterback, he was that good as a writer — a truly winning combination.”

Another recommended football memoir

good sports biography books

According to Rooks, this memoir, written by “one of the more polarizing figures in sports, forces us to ask many questions, especially ‘When does a person who did bad things qualify for the public’s forgiveness?’” Finally Free , Rooks says, tackles Vick’s search for that answer as he goes through his many controversies. “It stuck with me,” she says, “because it speaks to the idea that the bad things that happen to us shape us just as much as the good.”

Best soccer memoirs

Best overall soccer memoir.

good sports biography books

While High Fidelity author Nick Hornby spent even less time playing professional sports than George Plimpton (a.k.a. no time at all), Fever Pitch was recommended to us as the ultimate fan’s memoir by three people, two of whom say they weren’t really fans of soccer before picking it up. The book “reads like a letter from a friend,” according to Diss, who describes the plot as “a fan in conversation with himself, in a doomed romance with his club, and asking what it all means to have those men chasing after a ball and those people standing there in the freezing cold and rain watching them do so.” Schilling says Fever Pitch was his entrée into the world of obsessive soccer fandom, telling us the prose “played right into my young-adult-male belief in intellectual and emotional purity. If you are going to love something — Arsenal, the Smiths, comic books, sketch comedy — you better love it to the point that it damages your ability to function in society or hold a job.” Sports journalist Sarah Baicker adds that you “probably don’t even have to care about sports to love the book, but if you do, as I do, you’ll recognize yourself in Hornby’s fandom.”

Another recommended soccer memoir

good sports biography books

Wambach’s autobiography came recommended to us by sports reporter and commentator Kate Fagan . According to Fagan, the former star forward of the U.S. women’s national team “isn’t here to build her brand or make you love her, she’s here to be honest about her life, about her drinking, and about the inside workings about the peaks and valleys of being a professional athlete.” For that reason, she says that “if you want to really understand the grind of an athlete — read this.”

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33 Sports Books to Read Now That Sports Are (Mostly) Back

We missed them, too.

best sports books 2020

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Everyone loves an underdog. That’s why we’re drawn to sports movies—there’s something special about the magic depicted in Remember The Titans , Miracle , or even something silly like The Waterboy . But good sports books, and we mean good ones, go even deeper. Whether we’re learning a lot about something we already care about, diving deep into a brand new subject, or taking in an entirely fictional world in a novel set in a universe alternate to our own, there’s always going to just be more when you’re the one painting the pictures inside your own mind.

And now with so much time—there’s still a pandemic happening, last we checked—sports fans need to find alternate ways to get their fix; just flipping to ESPN doesn’t hit the same when there’s no NBA Playoffs Game 5 to catch the end of. But that’s OK, because for every epic sports moment or figure that you can think of, there’s probably a book where you can learn more.

Want to learn more about Mike Tyson? You got it. How about Michael Jordan? Sure. Maybe you want to find a great Yogi Berra quote to text your mom to make her laugh. A solid option! All of that and more can come from picking the right book. And below, we’ve got 33 of the very best that can help to make this sports-less quarantine period that much less painful.

Pocket Books The Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of One Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls

The Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of One Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls

If followed the NBA in the '90s, you've heard of this one. If you watched  The Last Dance ,  you've heard of this one. But let's get into it just in case: sportswriter Sam Smith got inside with the Chicago Bulls for their first championship, in the 1990-1991 season. For the first time, people saw that Michael Jordan—MJ, His Airness, Air Jordan, whatever you prefer to call him—wasn't just a 2-dimensional basketball god, but a real person with a real personality and real issues. And it gets into teammates and coaches of the era, too. A must-read for anyone looking to fill in relatively-recent NBA history. 

Brand: Riverhead Fever Pitch

Fever Pitch

You've probably heard of this one in its form as a Jimmy Fallon-led (remember when he used to act?) 2004 romantic comedy about a guy balancing his love life with his obsessive love for the Boston Red Sox. The movie, actually, is based on a memoir of obsessive devotion to English Football Club Arsenal, written by author Nick Hornby ( High Fidelity, A Long Way Down).  Funny, interesting, and still engrossing, if you're a sports fan who just can't figure out why you continue rooting for the loser , you'll find home here. 

St. Martin's Press 24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid

24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid

While we're all missing baseball (and believe me, we  all  wish we were at a ballpark with a hot dog and a beer right about now), why not read a brand new book from the mind of one of the game's all-time greats? Willie Mays came together with co-author John Shea to tell the story of his incredible, lengthy career (he played from 1951-1973), which saw him play through the civil rights era as one of the game's earliest superstars. 

Back Bay Books What Made Maddy Run: The Secret Struggles and Tragic Death of an All-American Teen

What Made Maddy Run: The Secret Struggles and Tragic Death of an All-American Teen

Things might not always be as shiny as they seem. That's the main takeaway in this crushing book by Kate Fagan, expanded from her ESPN Magazine story about the tragic suicide of Madison Holleran. The story looks at a college athlete who by all accounts would've seemed to "have it all," but always had an unexplainable darkness bubbling under the surface. An absolutely crushing story, but one that deserves to be read. 

Back Bay Books Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN

Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN

This nonfiction story on the past and present of ESPN is long (763 pages) but it's an oral history—so you can read through it like movie dialogue. Starting with stories of the network's very beginning in 1979, and coming up to date with many names that you'll still see on TV every day, this book is gripping, and quite cinematic. So cinematic, in fact, that a major adaptation has been in discussion for a couple years now. Read the book now and get ahead of the curve. 

Workman Publishing Company The Yogi Book

The Yogi Book

This isn't so much a book you'll sit down and read for a couple hours as much as it's something you'll pick up when sitting with family and friends and get a good laugh at. As a collection of Yogi Berra's greatest quotes and his funniest anecdotes (and with less than 200 pages) , it's hard to beat  The Yogi Book. 

Scribner Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike

Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike

Did you ever wonder what goes into those cool sneakers you picked up for $120? If you have, great. If you haven't, maybe now is the time to start wondering.  Shoe Dog  is an interesting, never-before-told story from Phil Knight about founding a company you might have heard of called Nike. Where did 'Just Do It' come from? The answer is here. 

Triumph Books Doc: The Life of Roy Halladay

Doc: The Life of Roy Halladay

Todd Zolecki's brand-new book (it just came out on May 19) takes a deeper look at the late MLB star Roy Halladay. Halladay, who was inducted in the Hall of Fame last summer, and is yet another case of someone who had demons hiding beneath the surface;  Doc  tells the fascinating story behind Halladay's balancing act. He was a star on the field, and a beloved father and husband, while also dealing with the dark demons that come along with addiction. 

Plume Undisputed Truth

Undisputed Truth

It can feel like there's a divide a lot of the time with celebrity memoirs. Sure, it's someone you want to read from and learn about, but the book isn't in their voice—it's some undisclosed ghostwriter's voice. Well,  Undisputed  Truth  almost certainly has its own ghostwriter, but it's a damn good one, because it reads  exactly  like a book that Mike Tyson would write. This book hops from one entertaining anecdote to the next, and never feels like you're getting your information from anywhere other than the man itself. 

Simon & Schuster Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods

When  The Last Dance  ended, a popular conversation emerged: Who else could possibly be as compelling as Michael Jordan? Who could possibly power their own 10-part documentary series? A common response was Tiger Woods, and as this biography by Jeff Benedict—published just before his incredible 2019 Masters win—proves, there's quite a lot to mine.  Tiger Woods  talks to more than 250 people in the golfer's orbit, and paints as clear a picture as you could possibly imagine. 

Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster The Dynasty

The Dynasty

OK, we'll be up front with you— The Dynasty  isn't out yet. It comes out in September. But you're going to want to pre-order this book from writer Jeff Benedict—who wrote the above  Tiger Woods . Here, he has a book of the same ilk on the way about the New England Patriots, with more than 200 interviews conducted about the team's three lightening rods: Robert Kraft, Bill Belichick, and Tom Brady .  With Brady now a Tampa Bay Buccaneer, we're guessing there might have been some last-minute edits—and we can't wait to read them. 

PublicAffairs The Victory Machine: The Making and Unmaking of the Warriors Dynasty

The Victory Machine: The Making and Unmaking of the Warriors Dynasty

If you liked  The Jordan Rules,  this book from NBA writer Ethan Sherwood Strauss might be the closest thing to a modern-day version of it. Focusing on the late-2010s Golden State Warriors dynasty years, this book takes inside looks at Warriors ownership and the emergence of the dynasty, and at Kevin Durant's entry and exit into the story. The mercurial Durant refused to be interviewed for the book—which, in a lot of ways, that makes it even juicier. 

The Cactus League: A Novel

The Cactus League: A Novel

Do you love baseball? Do you love good writing? Then  The Cactus League —the debut novel from  Paris Review  editor Emily Nemens—is for you. You know the baseball player stereotypes: the tobacco-chewing, steroid-using, meathead beefcakes.  The characters in  The Cactus League  are not this. Instead, it  looks at the inverse; the guys in spring training. Guys who don't know their future; who don't know if they're even going to make the team. It's fiction, but it's a baseball fan's dream—especially when games aren't currently being played. 

H. G. Bissinger Friday Night Lights

Friday Night Lights

The book that launched the critically acclaimed film and television show, Bissinger’s chronicle of high school football in West Texas is a snapshot of the gridiron’s grip on small town America.

John McPhee A Sense of Where You Are: Bill Bradley at Princeton

A Sense of Where You Are: Bill Bradley at Princeton

The legendary New Yorker writer’s brilliant profile of Bill Bradley—the former U.S. senator and New York Knicks star.

Jim Bouton Ball Four: Twentieth Anniversary Edition

Ball Four: Twentieth Anniversary Edition

The ex-pitcher’s chronicle of his 1969 season with the New York Yankees is one of the greatest books about baseball not because it glorifies the sport, as so many baseball books do, but because it serves as an insider account of the seedier side of the game: the infighting, the womanizing, and Mickey Mantle’s heavy drinking. With its unblinking look at the side of locker room culture most of us will never see up close, it was critically lauded at the time and has become a non-fiction classic—even though it cost him friends on the diamond.

Andre Agassi Open: An Autobiography

Open: An Autobiography

Memoirs by former athletes are almost always dull, self-glorifying, and cliche. But tennis great Andre Agassi threw out the formula for his 2009 memoir, in which the Punisher peels back the curtain to show readers the price he paid for his success on the court—an unhappy childhood in which he was groomed for tennis greatness at an early age that gave way to a stressful adulthood which found him unfulfilled by his accomplishments.

Michael Lewis Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game

Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game

You’d be hard-pressed to find a book that’s had more of an impact on the sport it’s about. Lewis’s insightful 2003 profile of Billy Beane and the Oakland Athletics, which was later turned into the Brad Pitt movie of the same name, inspired front offices across the MLB and beyond to rethink their approach to assembling their teams—for better and for worse.

A. J. Liebling The Sweet Science

The Sweet Science

No list of sports books could be complete without Liebling’s collection of essays on boxing. The late author and New Yorker writer wrote about boxing the way he wrote about food, another of his favorite subjects—with insight and wit in equal parts. He was so renowned for his meditations on the sport that the Boxing Writers Association of America named a damn award after him.

Wayne Coffey The Boys of Winter: The Untold Story of a Coach, a Dream, and the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team

The Boys of Winter: The Untold Story of a Coach, a Dream, and the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team

The former New York Daily News sportswriter’s 2005 book is perhaps the definitive account of the 1980 U.S. Men’s Hockey Team—the group of amateur Americans who took on the superb Russian squad in Lake Placid and performed a “Miracle on Ice.”

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9 Powerful Sports Autobiographies Every Fan Should Read

Best sports autobiographies

“The moment you give up is the moment you let someone else win.”

To millions across the globe, sportspeople are the closest things to superheroes. Their exploits on the pitch, field or stadium conjure emotions seldom few things can match, and the memories they fashion can last for a lifetime. And on the back of this, the inspiration these athletes can wield has seen their influence grow immeasurably, especially in the world of books where their stories, motivations and beliefs can be explored in incredible detail. With that in mind, check out What We Reading for the 8 most powerful sports autobiographies! 

Why We Kneel, How We Rise – Michael Holding

Michael Holding was one of the most prolific bowlers in cricket history, leading the infamous West Indian attack that dominated the sport across the 1970s and ‘80s. He has also become one of the most respected voices in the game in the years since with his work as a pundit and commentator. 

In Why We Kneel, How We Rise, Holding explores how racism dehumanises professionals, and how the Black Lives Matter movement has triggered a counter-offensive from strong figures from across the world of sport. Speaking to various figures who have experienced the effects of racism firsthand, this sports biography is one of the most insightful, powerful, and eye-opening pieces of education. 

Why We Kneel best sports autobiographies

Check out the Best Ashes Books

Lioness: My Journey To Glory – Beth Mead

England’s win at Euro 2022 was one of the defining moments in women’s football being put on an equal pedestal, with the Lionesses being spearheaded by the exploits of Beth Mead on the pitch. The 2021-22 Arsenal Player of the Year finished as top scorer and Player of the Tournament , and Lioness: My Journey to Glory is her recounting of how she and the team finally brought football home. 

As well as all the glorious days in the 2022 sun, it is also a powerful story of Mead’s rise up the football pyramid, exploring the challenges that moulded her along the way. Powerful and honest, it is one of the best sports biographies for people of all ages to feel inspired. 

Too Many Reasons To Live – Rob Burrow 

One of the most talented Rugby League players of his generation, Rob Burrow also served as one of his sport’s most inspirational figures. Told from an early age that he was too small to make it as a professional player, Burrow’s career was one of defying expectations. 

In 2019, not long after his playing career came to an end, Burrow was diagnosed with motor neurone disease, a degenerative disease that doctors only gave a life expectancy of a handful of years. However, spurred on by his wife and three children, Burrow would showcase the sort of strength his in fight that made the entire sporting world stop and stare at him in awe. Too Many Reasons to Live is Burrow’s inspiring tale of love and courage in the face of so much adversity. 

Resilience – Elise Christie 

Shortlisted for Sunday Times’ best sports autobiographies in 2022, Resilience is the autobiography from triple World Champion speed skater Elise Christie. 

Refreshingly open and honest, the book details the torrents of mental anguish, abuse, and floods of misinformation that have followed Christie throughout her career. And yet it is also an inspiring tale of incredible strength and determination, documenting how Christie has been able to overcome hurdle after hurdle on her way to cementing herself as one of British athletics’ greatest modern competitors. 

Love Of The Game – Ricky Hill 

Ricky Hill was born under the shadow of Wembley Stadium, the home of English football for over a century. At the time, he was told only two for every hundred people could hope to make it as professional footballers; however, this was also a society where racism was prevalent and the hurdles Hill would have to scale in pursuit of his dream were far greater than most had to deal with. 

Despite this, Hill would go on to fashion a remarkable career in the beautiful game. He would become only the fourth Black player to play for the England men’s team and became a trailblazing reformer for BAME coaches across the country following his retirement. Love Of The Game is one of the pioneering sports autobiographies on how prejudice in football coaching took one of its first steps to being tackled on the back of the experiences courtesy of Hill. 

The Mamba Mentality: How I Play – Kobe Bryant 

Kobe Bryant was, and still remains, one of the biggest icons in the world of basketball. The only player in NBA history to have two jersey numbers retired, Bryant was a titan on and off the court during his twenty years in the sport and even managed an Academy Award for his 2017 film, Dear Basketball. 

His sudden death in 2020 shook the world of sports , with even those outside of basketball paying homage to Black Mamba in its wake. The Mamba Mentality is the autobiography from Bryant, detailing his passion for all things basketball and the core beliefs and values that shaped him as a player. Released just after his retirement, it is one of the most intimate sports autobiographies for those looking to get into the mind of one of the all-time greats. 

Hooked – Paul Merson 

Paul Merson is one of the most recognisable faces in the world of football punditry today. An accomplished attacker, Merson made over 300 appearances for Arsenal, won two league titles and played for his country 21 times. He has become a familiar voice to all football fans on the back of his appearances on Soccer Saturday on Sky Sports and is one of the game’s most beloved names. 

However, Merson has also become one of the most important figures in opening dialogues within the beautiful game on a number of candid subjects. His difficulties with mental health, gambling and addiction are given the spotlight in his autobiography, Hooked. An eye-opening and honest self-reflection, it is a strong reminder outside looks can be deceiving, Merson deserves huge credit for breaking the normal footy formula when it comes to sports autobiographies here. 

The Death Of Ayrton Senna – Richard Williams

Ayrton Senna was one of the most fearless and mercurial talents the world of motorsports has ever served up. The three-time Formula 1 World Champion became and endures as one of the sport’s most iconic figures for his relentless pursuit of perfection and fearlessness when it came to finding the limit.

His death in 1994, however, also remains one of the darkest moments not only in Formula 1, but also across sports history. In his beautiful and classic sports biography on the complexities and brilliance of the Brazilian, Richard Williams pays homage to the life and death of Ayrton Senna. Embodying the courage and spirit that any sports fan can admire, it is an essential Formula 1 book for anyone looking to learn more about the pinnacle of motorsport.

The First Half – Gabby Logan 

From Strictly Come Dancing, Match of the Day, all the way to the Olympics , Gabby Logan is one of the most recognisable presenters in British television. A staple fixture in the sporting world for over twenty-five years now, Logan stands as one of the most beloved pioneers on the small box and has continued to trailblaze a place for women with her columns, contributions and very-own podcast . 

The First Half is Gabby Logan’s first-ever book. In a sports autobiography that will have readers laughing and crying in equal measure, the presenter details the key decisions that have shaped her career, the obstacles she has had to navigate along the way, and how painful losses have continued to fuel her ambitions. 

James Metcalfe

Part-time reader, part-time rambler, and full-time Horror enthusiast, James has been writing for What We Reading since 2022. His earliest reading memories involved Historical Fiction, Fantasy and Horror tales, which he has continued to take with him to this day. James’ favourite books include The Last (Hanna Jameson), The Troop (Nick Cutter) and Chasing The Boogeyman (Richard Chizmar).

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The 30 Best Sports Books of All Time

This list of the best sports books of all time covers a wide variety of sports and perspectives, from boxing to mixed martial arts to basketball and gymnastics and everything in between. The best books about sports capture the experience of athletics, whether you’re simply a die-hard fan, you’re the one up to bat, or you’re a sports journalist. In this roundup of the best nonfiction sports books, you’ve got an angle into athletics from multiple perspectives on a bevy of sports.

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And now for a list of the best sports books of all time…

Barbarian days: a surfing life by william finnegan.

good sports biography books

The winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Autobiography, William Finnegan’s Barbarian Days is a gripping memoir about the author’s long-held admiration for surfing. Raised in Hawaii and California, Finnegan developed a fascination with surfing that would last him decades. Now, in Barbarian Days , he shares how chasing waves impacted his life. It’s a surfing book you won’t want to miss and one of the best selling sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase Barbarian Days on Amazon

The boys of summer by roger kahn.

good sports biography books

This memoir tells the story of the author’s childhood living within the shadow of Ebbets Field, home of the Brooklyn Dodgers during the 1930s and 1940s. That team included such baseball greats as Jackie Robinson and Carl Erskine, among others. Later, Roger Kahn covered the 1950s Dodgers for The Herald Tribune . Told with sentimentality and detail that makes this history come alive, The Boys of Summer is one of the best sports books.

How to read it: Purchase The Boys of Summer on Amazon

The boys of winter: the untold story of a coach, a dream, and the 1980 u.s. olympic hockey team by wayne coffey.

good sports biography books

This riveting read chronicles the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team that surprised the world in an upset win against the formidable Soviet Union. Known as the “Miracle on Ice,” this epic competition was a resounding defeat against the enemy in the heigh of the Civil War. Thanks to copious insider stories and peppered with details you won’t find anywhere else, The Boys of Winter is an engrossing tale of what became both legend and myth and for sure one of the best books about sports.

How to read it: Purchase The Boys of Winter on Amazon

Doc: the life of roy halladay by todd zolecki.

good sports biography books

As a Philadelphia Phillies fan, I know all about pitching phenom Roy Halladay. I even had the good fortune to go to a game where “Doc,” as Halladay was affectionately known, pitched. I’ll never forget how tall and big he was. In this biography of Halladay, MLB.com Phillies journalist Todd Zolecki tells the story of Doc’s ups and downs in his professional career as well as his inner demons that tormented him, including a fight against addiction. Halladay famously died young in a tragic plane accident. Doc keeps his unparalleled career and undeniable legacy alive in what is one of the best sports biographies books.

How to read it: Purchase Doc on Amazon

Fever pitch by nick hornby.

good sports biography books

This story behind Fever Pitch will be relatable to anyone who has ever dove headfirst into fandom. But not just fandom during the good times, but during the hard times, the losing seasons, the disappointing losses. In this case, author Nick Hornby is talking about his life’s passion, football (soccer to Americans), though any fan can relate. This is definitely one of best books about sports from a fan’s perspective. This book was adapted to a feature film in 2005.

How to read it: Purchase Fever Pitch on Amazon

Friday night lights by h. g. “buzz” bissinger.

good sports biography books

Friday Night Lights is maybe the best football book ever written and definitely one of the best selling sports books. Published in 1990, H. G. “Buzz” Bissinger’s story follows a high school football team in Odessa, Texas. What makes this book so great is the universal core story about the big dreams of small towns that strike through polarized social and racial boundaries and unite fans around a team that puts it all on the line with their game. It’s a book so influential that it inspired the acclaimed TV show, also called Friday Night Lights .

How to read it: Purchase Friday Night Lights on Amazon

The game by ken dryden.

good sports biography books

Named one of Sports Illustrated ‘s 10 best sports books of all time, The Game is one to add to your TBR (to-be-read list). This riveting memoir reveals the life and career of Ken Dryden, the former Montreal Canadiens goalie and one-time president of the Toronto Maple Leafs. Dryden details life on and off the ice, giving readers an inside look at what it means to be a professional athlete, what that means for one’s personal life, family, and off-the-rink life, and the way those lines become blurred. This definitely tops any list of the best nonfiction sports books.

How to read it: Purchase The Game on Amazon

The girls of summer: the u.s. women’s soccer team and how it changed the world by jere longman.

good sports biography books

I’m going to age myself here, but I remember when the U.S. Women’s Team won the 1999 World Cup. It was an exciting time to be a girl! You looked up to heroes like Mia Hamm, the dominating player for Team U.S.A. In The Girls of Summer , esteemed New York Times journalist Jere Longman pulls back the curtain on that win and looks at the forces that shaped the victory. Longman traces how gender, race, and class interplayed in the team, as well as the sexualization of the players and how the male and female teams differed in the world’s eye.

How to read it: Purchase The Girls of Summer on Amazon

A good walk spoiled: days and nights on the pga tour by john feinstein.

good sports biography books

Widely considered one of the best sports books ever, John Feinstein’s A Good Walk Spoiled details life on the PGA Tour. As he traveled alongside golf greats like Nick Price and Paul Azinger, Feinstein came to understand the relentless pressure, the grueling pace, and the palpable glory that was for the taking for players on “The Tour.”

How to read it: Purchase A Good Walk Spoiled on Amazon

Heaven is a playground by rick telander.

good sports biography books

The best sports book don’t have to feature professional teams; in Heaven Is a Playground, the author profiles amateur basketball games in the summer of 1974 in Brooklyn. It’s definitely a classic. Read it and see why President Barack Obama called it “The best basketball book I’ve ever read” in 2005. This underrated read is surely one of the best nonfiction sports books.

How to read it: Purchase Heaven Is a Playground on Amazon

The imaginary girlfriend by john irving.

good sports biography books

You might know author John Irving from his fiction books, like The World According to Garp and The Cider House Rules . But Irving had another love, other than penning beloved bestselling books: wrestling. As a teen at the elite boarding school Phillips Exeter Academy, Irving was a dominant wrestler, a sport he participated in for twenty years, eventually becoming a referee and later a coach until he way forty-seven. This memoir that is both a coming-of-age story as well as a personal retrospective on how athletics left a lifelong impact on the author, certainly one of the best sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase The Imaginary Girlfriend on Amazon

Little girls in pretty boxes: the making and breaking of elite gymnasts and figure skaters by joan ryan.

good sports biography books

I remember checking this book out of my high school library during my freshman year and tearing through it. For many, gymnastics and ice skating are fun spectator sports we watch during the Olympics, a “Wow!”-filled experience. But in Little Girls in Pretty Boxes , Joan Ryan looks at what goes on behind the scenes, away from the medal stands, to reveal what happens between commercials when the cameras are off. It’s a damning account of how gymnastics and figure skating is unbelievably dangerous and often puts young girls in the hand of emotional, physical, and sexual abusers. In the most recent edition of this book, there’s a new forward that addresses the most famous case of sexual assault in the USA Gymnastics physician Larry Nassar. It’s no shocker that Little Girls in Pretty Boxes went on to become a feminist classic and one of the best nonfiction sports books.

How to read it: Purchase Little Girls in Pretty Boxes on Amazon

Loose balls: the short, wild life of the american basketball association by terry pluto.

good sports biography books

This funny, engaging read—certainly one of the best sports books of all time—shines a spotlight on the American Basketball Association (the ABA), which was the first effort to great a national basketball league in America. The ABA had six seasons which proved to be incredibly influential, with its groundbreaking features like the 3-point shot, on the eventaul NBA. Terry Pluto’s Loose Balls is an incredibly entertaining look at this short-lived league that left a long shadow on the sport. (For more on the ABA, check out the Wikipedia article .)

How to read it: Purchase Loose Balls on Amazon

Moneyball: the art of winning an unfair game by michael lewis.

good sports biography books

Adapted as a feature film starring Brad Pitt and Jonah Hill, Michael Lewis’s book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game profiles the Oakland A’s baseball team. Even though they had a small budget, the organization used key in-game statistics (also called sabermetrics ) to assemble a winning team. Moneyball ranks high on any list of the best books about sports.

How to read it: Purchase Moneyball on Amazon

Never die easy: the autobiography of walter payton by walter payton.

good sports biography books

In case you haven’t heard of football star Walter Payton, his life and remarkable career is definitely worth exploring. As the—to this day—leading running back in the NFL’s history and the star who led the Chicago Bears to their one and only Super Bowl championship, Payton became a famous icon in American sports. In Never Die Easy , Payton welcomes readers into his amazing career and life. It’s an autobiography that feels vivid and urgent and surely one of the best sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase Never Die Easy on Amazon

The noble hustle: poker, beef jerky, and death by colson whitehead.

good sports biography books

Author Colson Whitehead is perhaps best known for his Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Underground Railroad , but before that success, he was assigned a story from Grantland magazine to cover the World Series of Poker in Las Vegas. The result is The Noble Hustle , an investigative reporting work of narrative nonfiction in which the writer becomes part of the story. This book is funny, insightful, quirky, and a wild ride and one of the most unconventional and appealing best nonfiction sports books.

How to read it: Purchase The Noble Hustle on Amazon

Open by andre agassi.

good sports biography books

Surely one of the best sports books ever, Open is tennis star Andre Agassi’s deeply revealing autobiography. This memoir pulls you in and doesn’t let go, telling the astounding story of his rise to become perhaps the greatest male tennis player of all time. But behind the scenes of that amazing success, Agassi felt unfulfilled. In Open , he sheds light on his life away from the net, the good times, the bad times, and everything in between. Open is certainly one of the best selling sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase Open on Amazon

Paper lion: confessions of a last-string quarterback by george plimpton.

good sports biography books

If you haven’t heard of the term “participatory sports journalism,” you’ll know it when you read George Plimpton’s Paper Lion . To write his book, Plimpton joined the Detroit Lions football team as an amateur quarterback. Plimpton practiced with the Lions during training camp. Although he didn’t make the roster, Plimpton had an extraordinary experience, which he details in his irreverent, quirky, and funny book, Paper Lion , definitely one of the most original books about sports.

How to read it: Purchase Paper Lion on Amazon

Playing for keeps: michael jordan & the world he made by david halberstam.

good sports biography books

Michael Jordan was perhaps the greatest basketball player of all time. And Playing for Keeps just might be the greatest book about Michael Jordan. In Playing for Keeps , Halberstam surveys the epic life, extraordinary career, and unmatched legacy of Michael Jordan, the star player for the Chicago Bears. Playing for Keeps is definitely one of the best sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase Playing for Keeps on Amazon

Rome 1960: the olympics that changed the world by david maraniss.

good sports biography books

This intriguing book surveys the 1960 Olympics set in Rome, Italy. Subtitled “The Olympics That Changed the World,” Rome 1960 explores the intersection of many forces that made this more than just your usual Olympics, including the influence of the Cold War, the Civil Rights Movement, and the dawning presence of female athletes. This book expertly untangles all of these strands to show how pivotal the Olympics of 1960 was radically different and incredibly influential.

How to read it: Purchase Rome 1960 on Amazon

Seabiscuit by laura hillenbrand.

good sports biography books

The racing horse Seabiscuit was a sensation during his time; in 1938, he received more press coverage than Hitler, Mussolini, and FDR. Yet his stunning success was no fluke but rather the perfect convergence of three men who helped make the horse a decorated athlete and perhaps the greatest race horse of all time, including millionaire owner Charles Howard, mustang braker trainer Tom Smith, and quirky jockey Red Pollard. Together, the trio helped Seabiscuit become the horse no one could have predicted. Read all about it in Laura Hillenbrand’s compulsively readable book Seabiscuit , a top best selling sports books.

How to read it: Purchase Seabiscuit on Amazon

A sense of where you are: bill bradley at princeton by john mcphee.

good sports biography books

In A Sense of Where You Are , famed New Yorker writer John McPhee shines a light on the famed basketball player Bill Bradley in the years when he played for the Princeton Tigers. Bradley would later go on to play for New York Knicks and become a U.S. Senator, but, in this book, McPhee focus on the years before Bradley’s professional and political career took off. It’s a book about raw talent, incredible drive, and unbridled ambition and ranks high among this list of the best sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase A Sense of Where You Are on Amazon

Shoe dog: a memoir by the creator of nike by phil knight.

good sports biography books

In Shoe Dog , the creator of Nike tells of his awe-inspiring rise from a startup to becoming the leading athletic shoe company. This is a list of the best sports books, but sports would not be the force it was it without the Nike shoes that athletes use today more than ever.

How to read it: Purchase Shoe Dog on Amazon

The sweet science by a.j. liebling.

good sports biography books

This collection of boxing essays by the great New Yorker writer A.J. Liebling covers pivotal moments in the history of the sport, including the comeback of Sugar Ray Robinson, the emergence of prodigy Rocky Marciano, and the decline of Joe Louis. With Liebling’s eye for finding the human moments among a brutally violent sport distinguish this collection as a must-read for any boxing, or sports in general, fan.

How to read it: Purchase The Sweet Science on Amazon

The system: the glory and scandal of big-time college football by jeff benedict and armen keteyian.

good sports biography books

I included this book in my roundup of the best football books , and I’m including it here because it brings a much-needed perspective on the industry of college football. And yes, I’m saying “industry” because college football is no longer just a more innocent version of pro ball. In The System , the the authors peel back the layers to focus on the athletes, their highly paid coachers, and the networks making billions off the sport. It’s a book that all football fans should read. The System is definitely up there with the best books about sports.

How to read it: Purchase The System on Amazon

Those guys have all the fun: inside the world of espn by andrew miller and tom shales.

good sports biography books

Sports and ESPN go hand in hand. You can’t have one without the other. In Those Guys Have All the Fun , authors Andrew Miller and Tom Shales take a deep dive into the most-famous sports network. Drawing on more than 500 interviews with ESPN staffers past and present, plus renowned athletes, Miller and Shales expose ESPN for what it is: an undeniable force, albeit one with scandal, rivalries, and conflict. Those Guys Have All the Fun proves that the best sports books don’t have to be about what happens on the field but rather behind the camera.

How to read it: Purchase Those Guys Have All the Fun on Amazon

Three-ring circus: kobe, shaq, phil, and the crazy years of the lakers dynasty by jeff pearlman.

good sports biography books

This book takes a hard look at how the Los Angeles Lakers became a legend and a dynasty. From Kobe to Shaq, the 1996-2004 years of success were marked by celebrity athletes, ruthless management, and unparalleled talent. Read all about it in Three-Ring Circus .

How to read it: Purchase Three-Ring Circus on Amazon

Thrown by kerry howley.

good sports biography books

In Thrown , Kerry Howley profiles two men in the mixed martial arts pantheon. Howley followed these fighters, one an established, aging, and tested athlete the other an up-and-coming prodigy. Mixed martial arts has never been so interesting than this emotionally visceral, compelling book and its unflinching look at the brutal mixed martial arts sport. This irreverent, gut-wrenching story is one of the best sports books of all time.

How to read it: Purchase Thrown on Amazon

Tiger woods by jeff benedict.

good sports biography books

Tiger Woods is undeniably the most famous golfer of all time. Yet scandal has followed his success. In this biography from Jeff Benedict, Woods is revealed for the prodigious, complicated, ambitious golfer—and man—that he is. This is for certain one of the best sports books for readers who want to understand the grit that follows the glamor of life as a professional athlete. This is certainly one of the best sports biographies books.

How to read it: Purchase Tiger Woods on Amazon

Undisputed truth by mike tyson.

good sports biography books

And now for the last installment in this roundup of the best sports books… Perhaps the most controversial yet successful boxer of our modern era is Mike Tyson, the dynamic and bombastic athlete who upended traditions of decor and performance to become the winner he was. In Undisputed Truth , Tyson tells all. It’s an unputdownable autobiography that any fan of sports will want to read.

How to read it: Purchase Undisputed Truth on Amazon

And there you have it the best sports books of all time. which one will you read first, share this:.

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Sarah S. Davis is the founder of Broke by Books, a blog about her journey as a schizoaffective disorder bipolar type writer and reader. Sarah's writing about books has appeared on Book Riot, Electric Literature, Kirkus Reviews, BookRags, PsychCentral, and more. She has a BA in English from the University of Pennsylvania, a Master of Library and Information Science from Clarion University, and an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts.

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12 Game-Changing Sports Biographies and Memoirs

Five diverse biographies and memoirs on sports legends, showcasing their journeys both on and off the court.

These winning reads smash the competition.

A great sports story gets everyone on their feet — whether you just finished your 10th marathon or you prefer to race through your TBR stack. The following sports biographies and memoirs are packed with athletic drama that every reader will enjoy, from underdog wins and buzzer-beater finishes to the off-court scandals and triumphant personal comebacks of the greatest athletes of our time.

A basketball player in a purple and gold jersey, with the number 32, is captured in mid-action as he goes for a shot. the background is a striking yellow with dynamic purple text that reads "magic," referencing the player's nickname. below, the title "the life of earvin 'magic' johnson" is prominently displayed, along with the author's name, roland lazenby.

Magic: The Life of Earvin "Magic" Johnson

By roland lazenby.

From Roland Lazenby, the renowned biographer of Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and Jerry West, comes Magic, the definitive sports biography of basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson. Johnson reached dazzling new heights over the course of his career on the court, transforming American basketball into top-tier entertainment with his exciting playing style and leading the Los Angeles Lakers to greatness during the team’s Showtime era. Yet Johnson also faced his share of scandals and controversies, including his extravagant lifestyle and shock retirement from basketball in the wake of his HIV diagnosis. Lazenby draws on hundreds of interviews with teammates, coaches, rivals, and more to capture every facet of this complex figure, offering a gripping and comprehensive account of the renowned player and his extraordinary career.

An autobiographical book cover featuring a close-up portrait.

By Andre Agassi

A striking story about the double-edged sword of success, Open by Andre Agassi tracks the tennis star’s astounding triumphs, failures, and battles both on and off the court. Agassi went pro at the age of 16; by his early 20s, he was a tennis legend. Yet with worldwide success came pain, doubt, and relentless media scrutiny. Agassi opens up about it all in this candid and bestselling sports memoir, delivering a fascinating read for fans and newcomers alike. And if that isn’t enough to draw you in, note that Open is cowritten by J. R. Moehringer, one of the all-time ghostwriting greats, whose success with this narrative paved the way for his teaming up with Prince Harry on his recent smash memoir . 

A representation of legacy: an iconic basketball player's jersey, immortalized in literature.

Michael Jordan: The Life

Michael Jordan transcends the sports world. You know him even if you know nothing about basketball — and if you grew up in the ’90s, he was practically everywhere you looked. In Michael Jordan: The Life, Roland Lazenby tracks Jordan’s career from college kid to NBA superstar and beyond. Along the way, Lazenby complicates our collective understanding of the sports icon, countering Jordan’s on-court image with the darker sides of his character, his rocky relationships, and his merciless ambition.

A woman with short, blonde hair smiling gently, featured on the cover of her memoir titled "forward.

By Abby Wambach

In Forward, soccer luminary and two-time Olympic gold medalist Abby Wambach shares her journey from being put on the boys’ soccer team at the age of seven to becoming one of the all-time greatest soccer players in the history of the sport. Wambach’s compelling account is suffused with grit and determination, and it speaks to the unique challenges women face in their quest for athletic greatness. It’s a must-read for sports fans and indeed anyone in need of inspiration. For a double dose of empowerment, check out Wolfpack , Wambach’s #1 New York Times bestseller from 2019 that encourages women to join together and unleash their inner potential.

A book cover highlighting the biography of legendary athlete jim thorpe, titled "path lit by stars: the life of jim thorpe" by david maraniss, noted as a new york times bestseller.

Path Lit by Lightning

By david maraniss.

Written by David Maraniss, a two-time Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and the biographer of such figures as Barack Obama and Roberto Clemente, Path Lit by Lightning tells the fascinating story of Jim Thorpe, a renaissance athlete whose rise and fall took on mythic proportions. Thorpe was one of the best all-around athletes the world had ever seen; he won medals in the decathlon and pentathlon in the 1912 Olympics, was an All-American football player, and played baseball for the New York Giants. Yet as a member of the Sac and Fox Nation, he also faced intense racism and discrimination that hobbled his career and ultimately led to a life of hardship. Maraniss movingly chronicles Thorpe’s life in this landmark sports biography, breaking down the myth to reveal the man at its core.

The image shows the cover of a book titled "the mamba mentality: how i play" by kobe bryant, featuring a close-up of the author's contemplative profile against a dark background, with an introduction by phil jackson and photographs by andrew d. bernstein.

The Mamba Mentality

By kobe bryant.

Kobe Bryant’s presence on the court was legendary — and it belied a complicated and often troubled life off the court. In The Mamba Mentality, Bryant shares his outlook on life and basketball and delves into his famous “Mamba Mentality” philosophy, an approach to playing that’s built on passion, tenacity, and the singular pursuit of athletic excellence. It’s a fascinating look at the gone-too-soon powerhouse player and his thorny relationship with success, fame, and sports.

Intense focus and determination: a tennis legend captured in the heat of the game.

By Billie Jean King, Johnette Howard, and Maryanne Vollers

The world of sports would not be the same without Billie Jean King, a legend both in tennis and for her work breaking down barriers for women athletes. All In chronicles King’s career from her formative years through the 1973 Battle of the Sexes exhibition match against Bobby Riggs and the creation of the women’s pro tennis circuit to King’s acknowledgment of her sexual identity and coming out at the age of 51. At once a story of one person’s impact on tennis and a cultural revolution in the sports world, this winning memoir offers insight and guidance on issues from political activism and personal relationships to finding your true self.

Close-up of a person's face, half in shadow, emphasizing the eyes with a tear on one cheek, against a deep red background, featuring text indicating a bestseller status.

Tiger Woods

By jeff benedict and armen keteyian.

In Tiger Woods, sportswriters Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian deliver a fully realized portrait of the eponymous golf titan. The bestselling sports biography draws on interviews with more than 250 people to chronicle Woods’s meteoric rise, scandalous fall, and triumphant return to world-class athletics. The unsparing narrative also shines a light on the damage parents can do in their single-minded quest to turn their children into star athletes, drawing connections between Woods’s unparalleled achievements on the golf course and his parents’ obsession with success. 

A book cover titled "the last folk hero: the life and myth of bo jackson" by jeff pearlman, portraying a profile view of bo jackson overlaid with the text.

The Last Folk Hero

By jeff pearlman.

Bo Jackson was a one-man sports phenomenon in the 1980s and ’90s, excelling in football and baseball, and starring in one of the most successful ad campaigns in Nike history. In addition to his athletic triumphs, wild tales about Jackson leaping over parked cars and helping land a plane in distress elevated the sports star to mythical levels, like a modern-day Paul Bunyan. In The Last Folk Hero, sportswriter Jeff Pearlman tells the story of the man behind the myth. Drawing on more than 700 interviews, this fascinating sports biography is a must-read for Jackson superfans and for those eager to find out more about this larger-than-life American sports icon.

Challenging the status quo: 'good for a girl' by lauren fleshman, a powerful narrative about a woman's journey in the male-dominated world of running.

Good for a Girl

By lauren fleshman.

In the bestselling Good for a Girl, elite runner Lauren Fleshman draws on her own story and the work of psychologists and physiologists to advocate for a radical transformation of sports for young women. Competing in institutions that aren’t built for them, women athletes are held back from the beginning and plagued by sexism, eating disorders, and physical and mental injuries. Many would-be elites drop out before they can truly achieve greatness. Fleshman argues that we’re long overdue for a change. Readers will find plenty to love in Fleshman’s rousing narrative, which blends sports memoir with a manifesto and demonstrates a passion for personal success as well as creating a world in which all women athletes are allowed to thrive.

A focused boxer, fist clenched and ready, exudes determination and strength.

Ali: A Life

By jonathan eig.

Jonathan Eig’s bestselling and award-winning biography of Muhammed Ali turns the facts of Ali’s life and career into a harrowing story of courage, activism, and athletic excellence. The storied heavyweight boxer was not just an accomplished athlete but a natural performer, civil rights activist, and political protester. Drawing on interviews, FBI files, and archival recordings, Eig weaves a gripping tale of Ali’s boxing career, his political victories and personal triumphs, and his lasting impact on American culture.

A portrait of a determined basketball player, featuring a close-up of his focused expression, with accolades highlighting his success as a new york times bestseller.

By Jeff Benedict

We round out our list with a living legend who’s playing at the top of his game. In LeBron, Jeff Benedict chronicles LeBron James’s layered and inspirational story, from his early years of struggle as the son of a young mother to becoming the No.1 overall draft pick in the NBA straight out of high school and his transformation into the greatest basketball player of the 21 st century. Based on three years of research and more than 250 interviews, Benedict’s sweeping narrative goes well beyond James’s success on the court, exploring his relationship to fame and his dual identity as a celebrity and an activist fighting for social justice .

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10 Best Sports Books of All Time | TheReviewGeek Recommends

Ever wonder what the greatest sports books of all time are? As an avid reader and sports fan, you’ve probably devoured your fair share of sports memoirs, biographies, and narratives over the years. But with so many options out there, it can be tough to determine which are truly the best of the best.

Not to worry, we’ve got you covered. We looked at decades of sports books to identify the 10 best sports books ever written. From vivid memoirs to cultural critiques, this list has it all. Whether you’re a fan of basketball, baseball, tennis or beyond, these books capture the passion, drama and inspiration of sports in a way that will stick with you long after the final page. These are the 10 best sports books of all time.

Friday Night Lights by H.G. Bissinger

Friday Night Lights is a modern American classic. This book by H.G. Bissinger follows the story of the 1988 Permian High School Panthers football team from Odessa, Texas.

Odessa is a town obsessed with high school football. The whole community rallies around the Panthers each week. As you read, you’ll feel the electricity in the air on game nights and understand why Friday night football is so central to the town’s identity.

good sports biography books

Ball Four by Jim Bouton

Ball Four is Jim Bouton’s groundbreaking baseball memoir that provides an insider’s look at the 1969 season with the Seattle Pilots and Houston Astros.

Published in 1970, the book was controversial for its time because Bouton openly discussed the less-than-professional antics of players. However, his candid stories about life in the big leagues made Ball Four an instant classic.

The Boys of Summer by Roger Kahn

The Boys of Summer by Roger Kahn is considered a baseball classic and one of the greatest sports books ever written. Published in 1972, it chronicles the Brooklyn Dodgers team from 1952 to 1957, focusing on some of the biggest stars like Duke Snider, Pee Wee Reese, and Jackie Robinson.

As a kid growing up in Brooklyn, you were probably a Dodgers fan. They were your local team, the boys of summer you cheered for from the bleachers. Kahn was a beat writer who covered the Dodgers during their heyday, so he writes about the team with a sense of nostalgia, bringing you back to the postwar era when baseball was America’s pastime.

Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Michael Lewis

Moneyball is the classic underdog story of how the Oakland A’s, a small-market baseball team with a tiny budget, turned to statistics and analytics to level the playing field against big-spending rivals like the New York Yankees. Written by Michael Lewis, Moneyball follows the A’s general manager Billy Beane as he builds a winning team in the early 2000s based not on intuition and traditional scouting methods but on hard data and statistics.

Beane realized that the A’s couldn’t compete by paying top dollar for star players. Instead, he focused on players who were undervalued in the market according to metrics like on-base percentage. He assembled a team of players who got on base a lot, even if they didn’t seem like typical all-stars. This “moneyball” approach allowed Beane to get wins on the cheap by finding hidden value where other teams weren’t looking.

The Natural by Bernard Malamud

The Natural by Bernard Malamud is a classic 1952 novel that explores themes of morality and ethics in baseball. It tells the story of Roy Hobbs, an aspiring baseball player from rural Pennsylvania with raw, natural talent.

As a teenager, Roy’s baseball skills and ambition lead him to try out for the Chicago Cubs. On his way there, he meets a woman named Iris on the train who seduces him. Her jealous ex-lover then shoots Roy, delaying his baseball dreams for over a decade.

Shoeless Joe by W. P. Kinsella

Shoeless Joe by W. P. Kinsella is a magical story of baseball, dreams and second chances. The story follows Ray Kinsella, an Iowa farmer who hears a voice telling him to build a baseball field on his farm and seeks out the ghost of Shoeless Joe Jackson.

Ray is obsessed with baseball and idolizes Shoeless Joe, the famous Chicago White Sox player who was banned from baseball for allegedly helping fix the 1919 World Series. One day, Ray hears the voice while in his field saying, “If you build it, he will come.” Believing it means Shoeless Joe, Ray plows under his corn and builds a magnificent baseball field.

The Bronx Is Burning by Jonathan Mahler

The Bronx Is Burning by Jonathan Mahler chronicles one of the most tumultuous years in New York City’s history. Focusing on 1977, Mahler dives into the Son of Sam murder spree, a devastating blackout, and the New York Yankees’ World Series victory. At the center of it all is the Bronx, which had deteriorated into a symbol of urban blight.

As the Son of Sam terrorizes the city, New Yorkers grow increasingly paranoid. The killer taunts police and tabloids with cryptic letters, warning that his next victim could be anyone. The NYPD launches a massive manhunt but struggles to catch a break in the case. The city is on edge, wondering where he might strike next.

A Season on the Brink by John Feinstein

A Season on the Brink chronicles the turbulent 1985-86 basketball season of the Indiana Hoosiers and their fiery coach Bobby Knight. At the time, Knight was already controversial but still revered for leading the Hoosiers to three NCAA championships. This behind-the-scenes look at the team provides a glimpse into Knight’s intense and often combative coaching style.

As an embedded journalist with the team, Feinstein enjoyed unprecedented access to practices, locker rooms, team meetings, and games. He captures the highs and lows over the course of the season in vivid detail. The Hoosiers finished with a lackluster record of 21-8, failing to win either the Big Ten title or make the Final Four for the first time in years. The losing season highlighted Knight’s abrasive coaching methods and stubborn refusal to change.

The Golf Omnibus by P.G. Wodehouse

The Golf Omnibus is a delightful collection of golf-themed short stories, essays and musings penned by acclaimed British humorist P.G. Wodehouse. First published in 1912, this omnibus provides a glimpse into golf’s formative years in the early 20th century.

Wodehouse’s writing is a masterclass in wit and whimsy. His stories capture the trials and tribulations of the duffer, portraying familiar scenes of slices, hooks and tricky putts with tongue firmly in cheek. Any golfer will recognize the all-too-familiar struggles of Wodehouse’s characters.

Only the Ball Was White by Robert Peterson

Only the Ball Was White by Robert Peterson is a must-read sports book. Published in 1970, this pioneering work examines the role of African-American athletes in baseball’s segregated era.

As Jackie Robinson famously broke MLB’s color barrier in 1947, this book takes you back to a time when baseball, and society, were deeply segregated along racial lines. Peterson profiles many of the era’s greatest Negro League stars, like Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson, and Cool Papa Bell, who were denied a chance to showcase their talents on baseball’s biggest stage due to the color of their skin.

There we have it, our list 0f 10 best sports books. What do you think about our picks? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below:

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Best sporting books ever

The 35 Best Sports Books Ever Written

Fill the gaps between watching sport with the greatest writing about Muhammad Ali, Brian Clough, Diego Maradona and more

We’re not the first to observe that the thing about sport is that it comes with a built-in narrative arc. There will be heroes and there will be villains. There will be triumphs and there will be disappointments. There will be winners and there will be losers (unless it’s a sport like football which, to Ted Lasso’s continuing befuddlement, allows for a “tie”). But what happens off the pitch, or outside the field, or court-side, can often be as dramatic – if not more so – than what happens on, as it takes a certain type of person to excel at sport: gifted, driven, and sometimes, yes, a little psychotic.

Documentary-makers have found a rich seam to exploit in retelling sports narratives recently, and looking at some of the more exceptional characters who’ve risen to the fore ( The Last Dance being the most high-profile example, although there has been a raft of other good ones ), but nothing can delve into the intricacies of a great athlete’s mind like a book, especially in the hands of a great writer. Here we’ve recommended some of our favourites of this century and the last, that will keep you gripped to the final whistle.

A Woman's Game: The Rise, Fall and Rise Again of Women's Football by Suzy Wrack (2022)

best sports books

Timed to land just as the Lionesses started their tilt at winning the Euros and immortality, the Guardian's Suzy Wrack traces women's football from the mid-Great War, post-Suffragette days when huge crowds would flock to see women's teams – Dick, Kerr's Ladies drew 53,000 to Goodison Park on Boxing Day 1920 – to a backlash that saw women banned from playing on FA pitches between 1921 and 1971 on the grounds that football was "unsuitable for females". Then, the slow climb back to prominence, and a big decision to make: does women's football try to 'catch up' with the global reach of the men's game, or make the most of what makes it different and joyful? This is a thorough run through a backstory which rarely used to make the back pages.

The Game of Our Lives: The Meaning and Making of English Football by David Goldblatt (2014)

best sports books

In the men's game, however, things have rarely been more weird. At the time of writing, Manchester United may still be bought out by former Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Jassim, and the season has stretched into late June thanks to a mid-winter World Cup. How did we get here? Goldblatt shows how English football as we know it was liquidated and reformed as an entertainment product to beat them all in the wake of the Thatcher years, knitting it together with the ways England itself has changed in the 21st century. A lot has changed in the last decade – Chelsea cop a lot of flak, despite the ownership now looking positively quaint next to Manchester City and Newcastle United – but to understand how we got here, start with this.

Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan (2015)

barbarian days a surfing life book by william finnegan

Finnegan’s Pulitzer-Prize-winning memoir about his lifelong obsession with surfing – starting in California as kid, then Hawaii as a teen, taking him right though to New York in the present (a lesser-known surf spot, certainly) – is a searing and startling paean to the sport. Yes it can seem pointless, and yes it can be punishing, but Finnegan is able to encapsulate the feeling of freedom and euphoria like few others, while also describing his own meandering personal history, which somehow transformed him from a twentysomething stoner surf-bum into a renowned political journalist for the New Yorker, particularly for his reporting from Apartheid-era South Africa.

Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter’s Son by John Jeremiah Sullivan (2004)

Like so many of the titles on this list, John Jeremiah Sullivan’s first book – printed in the UK for the first time in 2013 after the success of his brilliant 2012 essay collection, Pulphead – is a sports book but also something more. It began as a consideration of the life of his late father, Mike Sullivan, who had been a sportswriter for a Kentucky newspaper, and whose fascination with sport in general, and with horse racing in particular, his son had never quite managed to understand. In telling the story of the legendary racehorse Secretariat, one of whose Kentucky derby wins his father attended, he unpicks a sport that is both fascinating and mystifying in equal measure.

Land of Second Chances: The Impossible Rise of Rwanda’s Cycling Team by Tim Lewis (2013)

land of second chances book by tim lewis

If sport can be accused of providing neat story arcs (see intro!), or clear-cut heroes and villains, Lewis’s British Sports Book Award-winning exploration of the attempt – by a group of American former professional cyclists – to set up a cycling team in Rwanda a decade after the genocide there in which 1 million people were slaughtered, is as nuanced and fascinating as they come. Lewis, a contributing editor to Esquire , spent time in Rwanda with the would-be riders, including the talented Adrien Niyonshuti, who lost six brothers in the 1994 genocide, and also the professionals who helicopter in to set up the country’s first team, but who, in the case of coach Jock Boyer, turns out to have a dark past of his own.

Football Against The Enemy by Simon Kuper (1994)

Football against the enemy.

Football Against The Enemy

Financial Times columnist Simon Kuper wrote this accomplished and quirky footballing travelogue when he was still only in his early 20s. And it's remarkably good; arguably the first and even best in the now-not-so-new wave of 'literary' football tomes that have followed in ever-greater numbers. Kuper travels to 22 countries to find out how football has shaped individual national politics and culture – and vice versa – meeting players, politicians and picking up anecdotes and observations along the way. We all know football as a global obsession, but these fascinating tales – from the tragic to the bizarre – show just how far its reach extends.

Touching The Void by Joe Simpson (1988)

Simpson's harrowing account of his and Simon Yates's calamitous assault, in 1985, on Siula Grande, Peru, has rightly transcended the sport of climbing and become a legendary fable for what humans are capable of doing to survive. It centres, of course, on one of the most amazing escapes ever achieved: with Simpson hopelessly hanging off one end of a rope, Yates is faced with cutting it to prevent them both being killed. Somehow, Simpson survives the fall. But alone in a crevasse with a shattered leg, his situation is hopeless. What follows is a staggering tale of will and courage that also addresses the perennial question of what drives people to climb mountains in the first place. As Churchill said: "When you're going through hell, keep going".

A Good Walk Spoiled: Days And Nights On The PGA Tour by John Feinstein (1995)

Even if you're not a golf fan – though it certainly helps if you are – this groundbreaking account of the highs and lows of the 1993/4 season on the American pro circuit is ultimately a human drama. With unprecedented access to the stars – Greg Norman, Nick Price, John Daly and Nick Faldo to name just a few – and rookies alike, it reveals the disparate personalities and personal travails behind the TV images and how these combine with the particular demands of a sport where the margins between success and failure are so thin. A gripping and always entertaining account of what can justifiably be called the cruellest sport of all, whatever your level.

Addicted by Tony Adams (1998)

Harpercollins pub ltd addicted.

Addicted

Adams was still a regular for Arsenal and England when his jaw-droppingly frank autobiography was published at the start of the 1998–99 season. His drinking problem destroyed him personally yet seemed to leave his football unaffected (wearing bin bags under training kit to sweat out the booze served him well). If any stories were left out, they must have been truly hideous. Here are remembrances of picking through jeans on the bedroom floor to find the least-piss-soaked pair to wear. Expect fights, prostitutes, broken lives, redemption.

Paper Lion by George Plimpton (1966)

To millennial sportswriters who never leave the office (or sofa) to live blog sport on TV, Plimpton’s participatory journalism (“that ugly descriptive”, in his words) must seem preposterous and grand. That Plimpton himself came across ever so slightly preposterous and grand was not lost on the man himself, who pricked that public persona with a terrifically witty, inquisitive writing style that worked best applied to sport. Of his five books about taking part in pro-level match-ups in boxing, baseball, ice hockey, golf and US football, Paper Lion , on the latter, is the finest.

Pocket Money by Gordon Burn (1986)

Burn, known for his mixing of fiction with non-fiction in the New Journalism style, spent a year documenting snooker during its mid-Eighties’ boom, and produced one of the lesser-known classics of British sportswriting. Reading it now, Burn is not the Hunter S of the green baize: his write-up is as straight as Steve Davis’s cue action, yet all the better for it. Every endorsement deal, every shit hotel room from Stoke to Guangzhou, every hour on the practice table, every string pulled by the promoter Barry Hearn: Burn recorded the lot with great skill.

Provided You Don't Kiss Me: 20 Years With Brian Clough by Duncan Hamilton (2007)

Brian Clough Nottingham Forest manager

“A spurious intimacy evolves between you,” writes Hamilton, of the relationship between a football club reporter and the club’s manager. In his case, from the age of 18 for two decades in Nottingham, with Clough, “an extraordinary journey with a contradictory, Chinese box of a man — idiosyncratic, eccentric, wholly unpredictable.” Clough’s one-liners are magnificent, for example, on a time before blanket player representation: “the only agent back then was 007 — and he shagged women, not entire football clubs.” Hamilton’s poignant, revealing book is a wonder.

I Think Therefore I Play by Andrea Pirlo (2013)

Sh123 andrea pirlo: i think therefore i play.

Andrea Pirlo: I Think Therefore I Play

I Am Zlatan is held up as the foreign footballer’s must-read memoir, but entertaining though the Swede’s book is, time spent rubbing up against his ego isn’t so enlightening. Pirlo’s, however, has the sort of insight you’d expect from the thinking man’s Greatest Player of his Generation. "You won’t believe me, but it was right in that very moment," about to take the first penalty in the 2006 World Cup Final shoot-out, "I understood what a great thing it is to be Italian. It’s a truly priceless privilege." Also learned: he adores video-game football and always plays as Barça.

Laughing in the Hills by Bill Barich (1980)

As mid-life crises go, Barich’s, aged 35, is special. Five rejected novels, mother and mother-in-law dead of cancer five weeks apart, no money, no job, wife with suspected brain tumour. Craving structure, he found it only studying the Daily Racing Form , picking horses methodically and placing small bets. He then told his wife (tumour: false alarm), he’d be moving to a motel next to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Fields racetrack, “convinced there was something special about racing and I wanted to get to the heart of the matter.” There was. He did. His write-up of that time is spectacularly good.

Ball Four by Jim Bouton (1970)

On the face of it, a diary of the 1969 season by a second-string pitcher for the Seattle Pilots baseball team, the only year that team existed, does not leap to the top of the to-read pile. But the total frankness in terms of locker-room talk, player drug use and womanising, bad blood, gamesmanship and other off-topic matters means this is the most inside-a-team book you’ll ever read. It offended baseball so much, Bouton’s 1971 follow-up was called I’m Glad You Didn’t Take It Personally . David Simon, creator of The Wire , put Ball Four in his six all-time favourite books.

The Damned United by David Peace (2006)

Faber & faber the damned utd.

The Damned Utd

Brian Clough (see elsewhere on this list) spent 44 days as manager of Leeds United in 1974. Peace’s self-styled “fiction, based on a fact” unpacks this mistake via an unrelenting Clough inner monologue that brings the great man vividly to life. (The Clough family, and Leeds’ Johnny Giles disagreed, the latter winning an apology though the courts.) As a study of football partisanship, one of the game’s most important emotions, it is astonishing. Said Gordon Burn (see elsewhere on the list), “if the English novel needs a kick up the pants... consider it wholeheartedly kicked.”

Cassius Clay Muhammad Ali 

Muhammad Ali by various

Taschen gmbh greatest of all time: a tribute to muhammad ali.

Greatest of All Time: A Tribute to Muhammad Ali

The Greatest has a whole shelf to himself in the sporting library (including, naturally, The Greatest Coloring Book of All Time ). Four books in particular stand out, together covering every angle you could wish for. Jonathan Eig’s Ali: a Life (2017) is the best cradle-to-grave account, as good on the flaws as the fabulous. King of the World: Muhammad Ali and the Rise of an American Hero (1999) by David Remnick focuses on the Clay-becomes-Ali era of the early Sixties. The Fight (1975) is Norman Mailer’s amazing retelling of the Rumble in the Jungle, and the giant, glossy Greatest of all Time (2003; 2010 reprint) by Taschen, is the coffee table book to top them all.

Slaying the Badger: LeMond, Hinault and the Greatest Ever Tour de France by Richard Moore (2011)

The badger, or more correctly, Le Blaireau , is Bernard Hinault, the last Frenchman to win the Tour de France and one of cycling’s all-time greats. Out to get him is his American teammate Greg LeMond, who finished second to Hinault in the 1985 Tour and wants the result reversed in 1986’s race. Reliving the latter contest, Moore forces the reader to pick sides — grizzled veteran versus young upstart, old ways versus new ways, USA versus France — which only heightens the drama. Journo props to Esquire contributor Moore, too, for tracking down both men more than 25 years later for illuminating postscripts.

Open by Andre Agassi (2009)

According to The New York Times : "one of the most passionately anti-sports books ever written by a superstar athlete." Says Agassi: "I knew in the book I had to expose everything." So: the unceasing slog, from toddler to champ, that prevented him from loving tennis, or anything, until he met his second wife Steffi Graf. His failed first marriage to Brooke Shields, crystal meth: it’s all here. Props to Agassi and his quest for truth, and also his ghost, JR Moehringer, who got 250 hours of interview time with his subject instead of the typical 30.

All Played Out by Pete Davies (1990)

English football’s second-finest hour — Italia ’90 — led to its finest book. Having spent the year before the World Cup earning the trust of the England players and manager Bobby Robson, Davies was let into the camp during the tournament. He also observed, close-up, the press, fans and hooligans. An epic journey for the team and their chronicler, superbly told with sharp reportage, dry humour and real feeling. In 2010, the book was retitled One Night in Turin , to tie in with the documentary of the same name.

Chinaman by Shehan Karunatilaka (2011)

First, to get ahead of any Twitterstorm, we recognise the decision of cricket bible Wisden (the greatest annual sports book ever, of course) to stop using the term “chinaman” to describe a slow left-arm wrist-spin bowler. Such a player is one of cricket’s rare gems, and this novel is about a washed-up journalist trying to find a slow left-arm wrist-spinner who has faded from the spotlight. The author knows a lot about cricket, but he also knows a lot about myth, mystery, obsession, drinking and noble pursuits undertaken by the ignoble.

Mystery Spinner: the Story of Jack Iverson by Gideon Haigh (2002)

Mystery spinner cricket bowler

Hold your right hand out in front of you, palm facing you, fingers spread, then bend your middle finger at the knuckle. Now try bowling a cricket ball held between thumb and middle finger. Jack Iverson mastered it, and bamboozled batsmen so much that when he played for Australia, the captain, also Iverson’s club captain, would move players from other clubs around in the field so they couldn’t watch Iverson up close. This biography, by the writer many think is cricket’s current best (they’re correct), reveals, at times movingly, why Iverson didn't become an all-timer.

Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby (1992)

Hornby could not have imagined that his book would be relevant to the football fan’s experience 26 years after it was first published. (That it is still in print, after several bestselling years, would also be a surprise to him.) It’s harder for fans to follow Hornby’s best piece of advice — be seen reading the papers’ back pages on the first days of a new job, to attract fellow supporters — but he absolutely nails the inexorable pull of football fandom. And he had to do it all with boring, boring Arsenal.

Aurum Press Ltd Levels of the Game (Sports Classics)

Levels of the Game (Sports Classics)

Levels of the Game by John McPhee (1969)

This writers’ favourite began life, as most of its author’s books do, as an article in The New Yorker . It is an account of the 1968 US Open semi-final between Arthur Ashe and Clark Graebner, a profile of both men and their place in US society at the time. Ashe is black, Democrat, bookish, skinny; Graebner the opposite. Every sportswriter ever has played the sport-is-life-and-life-is-sport card. In this slim volume, which punches far beyond its weight, McPhee plays it best of all.

The Miracle of Castel Di Sangro by Joe McGinniss (1999)

Castel Di Sangro is a small-time football club that miraculously rose through the Italian pyramid to Serie B’s second tier for the 1996–97 season. Equally extraordinary was the presence of McGinniss, a US writer famous for a revealing Richard Nixon book and true-crime doorsteps, as the upstarts’ Boswell. He had fallen hard for soccer after the 1994 World Cup and moved to Italy to document the fairy tale. Instead: corruption, cocaine smuggling, car crashes and conspiracy to go with the calcio .

Fast Company by Jon Bradshaw (1975)

Bobby Riggs Billie Jean King Battle of the Sexes

Brilliant, evocative profiles of winning gamblers including Bobby Riggs (of the 1973 'Battle of the Sexes' tennis match), pool legend Minnesota Fats and Tim Holland, backgammon’s best ever. The author, who wrote for Esquire , New York magazine and Vogue , understood these rascals because he admired and shared their qualities. In his introduction to a later edition, writer Nik Cohn remembers Bradshaw’s "conscious roguery, a Rothmans perpetually dangling from one corner of his mouth, and that lopsided shark’s grin plastering the other. He sported Turnbull & Asser silk shirts and Gucci loafers, flashed gold lighters and a Piaget watch." Touché.

Beware of the Dog by Brian Moore (2010)

England’s 64-cap hooker begins this second account of his life by effectively apologising for the less-than-candid nature of the first, then describing the sexual abuse he endured as a child, why he came to deal with it as an adult and what happened when he told his mum. It’s genuinely stunning. But this book is not on this list because of just one chapter. Everything that follows, including pissed-up rugby tales, personal and professional highs and lows, feels like it’s in the book for the same reasons as that prologue: honest, insightful and crucial to Moore’s life.

The Hand of God: the Life of Diego Maradona by Jimmy Burns (1996)

Burns was the right choice to decode Diego in the post- Fever Pitch wave of sportswriting. As the former FT man in Buenos Aires, he knew Argentina and its favourite son perhaps better than any other English-language writer. The beats of the player’s life are storyteller’s gold: shantytown upbringing, national team aged 17, FC Barcelona aged 22 (when he also had his first line of coke), World Cup winner aged 25, roaring into a camera at the World Cup, full of illegal stimulants, aged 33. Also: mafia, money, mayhem. Burns weaves it all together magnificently.

The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game by Michael Lewis (2006)

The blind side: evolution of a game.

The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game

Lewis’s Moneyball , about disruptive baseball analysis, often appears on lists of this sort, but The Blind Side is more entertaining, with a you-couldn’t-make-it-up human-interest core that some felt was over-egged in the film version starring Sandra Bullock. Back in the book, two stories are told: how a black US high-school football prospect (crack addict mother, dad killed in prison) changes after adoption by a rich white family, and how the game itself has changed with respect to the “blind side”, a quirk of player growth and tactics.

A Life Too Short: the Tragedy of Robert Enke by Ronald Reng (2011)

Reng and Enke were planning to write a book together; Reng wrote it alone after Enke killed himself in November 2009. Three months peviously, Enke had kept goal for Germany for the last time. Three years earlier, his two-year-old daughter died after lifelong heart problems. More than once, the pressure of top-level football had come down hard. Rene uses Enke’s diaries, interviews with the keeper’s wife and family and the material the two men generated together in a masterful, moving account of depression and its devastating consequences. Once read, never forgotten.

The Death of Ayrton Senna by Richard Williams (1995)

Ayrton Senna racing driver 

Williams, former editor of Melody Maker and chief sportswriter of The Guardian , is both the man you want over your shoulder when playing HQ Trivia and the sort of writer who can make you listen to, or care about, someone you had no interest in before reading his take on them. Of course, Senna is beloved; even more so since the 2010 documentary biopic. Williams even-handedly dispels the myths surrounding the Brazilian’s remarkable life, his tragic death and the afterlife of his legend, yet maintains his heroic aura through concise, insightful analysis.

The Illustrated History of Football by David Squires (2016)

Squires has just completed another season of football cartoons for The Guardian , with no sign of let-up in quality, hilarity or niche Simpsons references. His first book, a history of the game with all-new work, is the funniest football tome since Viz ’s Billy the Fish Football Yearbook , published 26 years earlier. The second volume, The Illustrated History of Football: Hall of Fame , is more of the same excellence.

Full Time: the Secret Life of Tony Cascarino by Paul Kimmage (2000)

Everything you’d think the 21st-century footballer is advised to leave out of an autobiog is here: infidelity, itemised career earnings, dialogue with the internal voice of crippling self-doubt (“you pathetic fucker, Cascarino!”), mystery injections from club physios and, most candidly, the fact you were not really qualified to play for your country. “Tony Goal”, as the Republic of Ireland (perhaps) centre-forward was known in France, teamed with Irish writer Paul Kimmage, whose cycling book Rough Ride and rugby book Engage , had a shot at being on this list.

A Lot of Hard Yakka, Triumph and Torment by Simon Hughes (1997)

A lot of hard yakka.

A Lot of Hard Yakka

“There’s nothing exceptional about me; never was,” claims Hughes, in what is the only duff note in a book that proves his statement incorrect. His lid-lift on the jobbing cricketer’s lot is a celebration of shortfalls, on and off the pitch. After all, what is sport if not mostly mediocrity punctuated by rare moments of glory and despair? Hughes has neither of those. He has kit sponsors rewarding improved performance with “a couple of short-sleeved casual shirts” and that time he interrupted coitus to turn over the Donna Summer tape. Very funny stuff.

My Father and Other Working-Class Football Heroes by Gary Imlach (2005)

Stewart Imlach played for Scotland at the 1958 World Cup and won the FA Cup with Nottingham Forest a year later. Now you know about as much about Stewart as did his son Gary when the old man died. Holding a cigarette card of his dad at a collectors’ fair a few months after the funeral, Gary laments, “How had I managed to let him die without properly gathering together the details of his career, his life story?” Surely doubly galling for Gary, the TV sports journalist, who had likely researched thousands of other sporting lives. This book triumphantly redresses his oversight.

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24 Best Sports Biographies Books of All Time

Our goal : Find the best Sports Biographies books according to the internet (not just one random person's opinion).

  • Type "best sports biographies books" into our search engine and study the top 5+ pages.
  • Add only the books mentioned 2+ times.
  • Rank the results neatly for you here! 😊 (It was a lot of work. But hey! That's why we're here, right?)

(Updated 2024)

As an Amazon Associate, we earn money from purchases made through links in this page.

Last Updated: Monday 1 Jan, 2024

  • Best Sports Biographies Books

Open

An Autobiography

Andre Agassi

Born to Run

Born to Run

A hidden tribe, superathletes, and the greatest race the world has never seen.

Christopher McDougall

The Blind Side

The Blind Side

Evolution of a game.

Michael Lewis

Shoe Dog

A Memoir by the Creator of Nike

Phil Knight

Ball Four

The Final Pitch

Barbarian Days

Barbarian Days

A surfing life.

William Finnegan

Eleven Rings

Eleven Rings

The soul of success.

Phil Jackson

Tiger Woods

Tiger Woods

Jeff Benedict

Michael Jordan

Michael Jordan

Roland Lazenby

The Boys in the Boat

The Boys in the Boat

Nine americans and their epic quest for gold at the 1936 berlin olympics.

Daniel James Brown

Unbroken

A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption

Laura Hillenbrand

The Mamba Mentality

The Mamba Mentality

Kobe Bryant

Touching the Void

Touching the Void

Joe Simpson

Seabiscuit

An American Legend

Rafa

Rafael Nadal

Alone on the Wall

Alone on the Wall

Alex Honnold

Orr

Mariano Rivera

The Captain

The Captain

The journey of derek jeter.

Ian O'Connor

Gerrard

My Autobiography

Steven Gerrard

Drive

The Story of My Life

Coming Back Stronger

Coming Back Stronger

Unleashing the hidden power of adversity.

Clemente

The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero

David Maraniss

  • The 33 Best Sports Books Ever Written | Esquire www.esquire.com
  • The best sports books and autobiographies - Pan Macmillan www.panmacmillan.com
  • The 25 Best Sports Books of All Time To Read in 2021 – SPY spy.com
  • 50 Great Sports Biographies - Sports Management Degree Guide www.sports-management-degrees.com
  • 100 Best Sports Biography Books of All Time (Updated for 2021) www.shortform.com

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11 best sports autobiographies

From dealing with pressure on the pitch to overcoming demons in their personal lives, indybest finds sports stars whose memoirs pack a punch, article bookmarked.

Find your bookmarks in your Independent Premium section, under my profile

good sports biography books

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Whatever sports you're into, these books, all published in the last six months, make for absorbing reads.

{1} Gareth Thomas: Proud: Ebury, £20

good sports biography books

Since becoming Britain’s first openly-gay professional rugby player in 2009, Thomas has been something of a pin-up for the LBGT community. But it was not an easy path to contentment, as he lays bare in this accomplished, moving effort.

{2} Nicole Cooke: The Breakaway: Ebury, £20

good sports biography books

Before the likes of Laura Trott was making headlines for women’s road racing, Cooke was battling to give the sport the recognition she felt it deserved. Her grit and determination, spanning from childhood to the London Olympics, radiates from the page in this account of achieving in a male-dominated arena.

{3} I an Poulter: No Limits: Quercus, £20

good sports biography books

The media has seized upon snappy dresser Poulter’s “rags to riches” story. But the one-time market trader who became a Ryder Cup master’s story has impact when it comes from the horse’s mouth. His revealing tale is an absorbing one for golf aficionados.

{4} Our Life on Ice: The Autobiography: Simon & Schuster, £20

good sports biography books

From their gold medal-winning routine in 1984 to eight years judging Dancing on Ice, Jane Torvill and Christopher Dean have come as a professional pair. This shines a light on their individual personal struggles and how their – entirely unromantic – partnership has worked for four decades in the figure skating business. Fans will love it.

{5} Roy Keane: The Second Half: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, £20

good sports biography books

To use a sporting cliché, this blisteringly honest book - written in collaboration with Booker Prize winner Roddy Doyle — is a tale of two halves. An account of the driven Premier League star’s career, then an insight into life as a manager. Keane’s self-deprecating wit, combined with a take-no-prisoners approach, make for an entertaining read.

{6} Jimmy White: Second Wind: Trinity Mirror sport media, £20

good sports biography books

Snooker might not be your usual bag, but White’s searingly honest account of how drugs cost him ten world titles and nearly his life, is a gripping one. “The Whirlwind” airs his dirty laundry and leaves you to make up your own mind on his legacy.

{7} Luis Suarez: Crossing the Line : Headline, £20

good sports biography books

When you’ve gone from the street football of Montevideo to the excellence of Ajax, married your childhood sweetheart, been banned for racism and biting, almost dragged Liverpool to the title, been thrown out of the World Cup, and joined Barcelona, you’ve got a story to tell. Suarez delivers his brilliantly and honestly.

{8} Carl Froch: Froch The Autobiography: Ebury, £20.87

good sports biography books

Froch has never been scared to take on the hardest opponents in the boxing ring. Here, alongside his in-depth analysis of fights – including his much-hyped win against George Groves to– you see a softer side, loyal to friends, family and trainer Rob McCracken.

{9} KP: The Autobiography : Sphere, £20

good sports biography books

Former England cricket captain Kevin Pietersen takes a no-holds-barred approach to telling the stories - and apportioning blame - for his memorable moments, including being dropped before the failed 2013/14 Ashes series. Like him or not, KP’s book is compulsive reading.

{10} Brian O’Driscoll: The Test: Penguin, £20

good sports biography books

With Ireland a favourite to take the Six Nations, now’s an apt time to delve into the life of the national side’s former rugby captain. The likeable O’Driscoll covers his turmoil over the suicide of his best friend, along with his own surprising on-pitch struggles. Buy

11. Geoffrey Boycott: The Corridor Of Certainty: Simon & Schuster, £20

good sports biography books

The batsman-turned-commentator is always forthright on his beloved sport but here you get a unusually candid insight into his life away from cricket, notably a harrowing account of his recent cancer treatment. You sense the impact the illness had on his family in this engaging book that reads almost as if Boycott was sat next you telling the story. Buy

Verdict For books that transcend sport and are moving and thought-provoking memoirs, try Gareth Thomas' Proud or Nicole Cooke's The Breakaway .

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Best Sports Books: Top 10 Athlete Biographies [2024 Update]

Posted by Rubin Alaie | The Best Book Lists | 2

Best Sports Books: Top 10 Athlete Biographies [2024 Update]

What are the best sportsbooks in recent years? Here you will find a top 10 with the most beautiful sports biographies to be inspired by top athletes, including football players and other top athletes.

Contents of this page:

The top 10 best books about sports

Criteria for compiling these recommended books.

Our editors have carefully read as many as possible books about this subject. Then, they used the following criteria for choosing the best picks: ⠀

  • The literary quality of the books.
  • The amount of books sold worldwide.
  • The professional reviews in newspapers.
  • The expertise and experience from the author.
  • The quality of the examples, knowledge and practicality
  • The actuality and whether the information is useful or too old.
  • Our editor’s opinions: they have read and judged the books extensively.

Full disclosure: as Amazon Associates we earn from qualifying purchases.

1.The League: How Five Rivals Created the NFL and Launched a Sports Empire

The way the author weaved the narrative of the establishment and endurance of the NFL through the point of view of these five men was engaging from start to finish. A must-read for any NFL fans looking to gain a unique understanding of the birth of their beloved sport.

2.Cloudbuster Nine: The Untold Story of Ted Williams and the Baseball Team That Helped Win World War II 

An absolute necessity read for baseball darlings, history buffs, and any individual who wants to be taken back to a period of genuine legends. This is simply a must-read for anyone out there with eyes! A unique and jaw-dropping tale that is not to be missed.

3.The Mamba Mentality: How I Play

Our pick for any Kobe Bryant fans out there. This book has become even more relevant in recent years after the passing of the basketball lessons. From start to finish, this is an inspiring read that looks at both Bryant’s extraordinary talent and the man behind it.

4.The Greatest Baseball Stories Ever Told: Thirty Unforgettable Tales from the Diamond

This is the perfect Christmas present for any baseball fans out there. 30 individual and unique stories that often go untold. Interesting from start to finish and each story feels as if it has its own voice. A must-read for any die hard supporters of the sport.

5.One Shot at Forever: A Small Town, an Unlikely Coach, and a Magical Baseball Season

An extremely enjoyable book about communities and humble community games. For those who love a true rags-to-riches underdog tale, this is about as good as it gets. Any baseball fans out there who do not know this story simply must read about it now!

6.The Ultimate Football Trivia Book: 600 Questions for the Super-Fan

If you’re a true football fan, then this book is a must try. Our pick for anyone looking for a stocking filler for a football fan this Christmas. This book is a great test of football knowledge with 600 questions of varying difficulty. Not only will you have fun, but you will learn too!

7.The Greatest Gambling Story Ever Told: A True Tale of Three Gamblers, The Kentucky Derby, and the Mexican Cartel

The story is incredible! The author is a genius! A jaw-dropping story told in such an amazing way. You do not have to be a gambling fan at all to enjoy this story. It’s a tale that grips you from the very first word to the last.

8.The Story of Baseball: In 100 Photographs

The perfect gift for any baseball fans. There are plenty of information and trivia books out there but this book looks to compile the most important and game-changing moments in baseball in 100 photographs, from humble beginnings to finals viewed by millions.

9.Shoot Your Shot: A Sport-Inspired Guide To Living Your Best Life

For any young sport-lover growing up, no matter where they are, how wealthy they are, or what their dreams are, this is the book for them. Inspirational from the first word until the last, the author Vernon creates such a powerful guide to finding happiness in life.

10.Rising Above: How 11 Athletes Overcame Challenges in Their Youth to Become Stars 

Recommended for every sports lover. Real life always beats fiction! This book outlines 11 famous athletes who faced huge challenges in their early years but came out the other side stronger than ever. Eye-opening, informative and inspirational!

What do you find in these top 10 biographies of elite athletes?

Stacks of football books seem to be written every year. What is a good choice from this? In this list you won’t necessarily find the very best sports books ever, but they are certainly inspiring and poignant.

Also for children it is good to read some of these books about football and other sports, for example so that they know exactly how someone became successful or so that they become familiar with the pitfalls of being famous.

Biography books football players and other athletes : o ther recommendations outside the top 10

  • I am Zlatan and Ik Zlatan are indispensable to learn what goes into the way Zlatan Ibrahimovic lives, thinks and plays. He has grown into a football player who continues to surprise and never disappoint.
  • I think therefore I play – Andrea Pirlo
  • I f you are specifically looking for good soccer books, check out these recommendations.

Enjoy reading!

Related: also read this...

About the author.

Rubin Alaie

Rubin Alaie

Hello! Thanks for reading these articles. My intention is to make happiness as simple and clear as posssible. By the way, excuse my English. I am not a native English speaker since I live in Amsterdam. Much appreciated if you use the comments to make suggestions on my grammar. See ya in another blogpost!

Tags: sport biography

Stein

Dear, taste is always personal but still strange and unfortunate that the biography of the German goalkeeper Ronald Enke: “A life too short” by Ronald Reng is not mentioned here. A truly fantastic biography that stands out from many other popular biographies. One to really read!

Rubin Alaie

Thank you for adding Stein 🙂

Further Reading (Related)

Full disclosure.

As Amazon Associates we earn from qualifying purchases. Furthermore, certain content that appears on our our website, comes from Amazon. This content provided is ‘as is’ and is subject to change.

good sports biography books

Best Sellers in Sports Biographies

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good sports biography books

COMMENTS

  1. Best Sellers in Sports Biographies

    Best Sellers in Sports Biographies. #1. You Never Know: A Memoir. Tom Selleck. 1,851. Kindle Edition. 1 offer from $13.99. #2. The Wingmen: The Unlikely, Unusual, Unbreakable Friendship Between John Glenn and Ted Williams.

  2. 20 Best Sports Memoirs 2020

    The 20 Best Sports Memoirs, According to Sports Journalists, including "Open" by Andre Agassi, "I Always Wanted To Be Somebody" by Althea Gibson, "Portrait in Motion" by Arthur Ashe ...

  3. The 33 Best Sports Books to Add to Your Reading List

    All of that and more can come from picking the right book. And below, we've got 33 of the very best that can help to make this sports-less quarantine period that much less painful. $26 at Amazon ...

  4. 9 Powerful Sports Autobiographies Every Fan Should Read

    James' favourite books include The Last (Hanna Jameson), The Troop (Nick Cutter) and Chasing The Boogeyman (Richard Chizmar). Autobiographies Hooked Hookes Lioness Love Of The Game Mamba Mentality Resilience Sports The First Half Too Many Reasons To Live Why We Kneel. For millions of fans across the globe, sportspeople are modern-day superheroes.

  5. The 30 Best Sports Books of All Time

    Friday Night Lights by H. G. "Buzz" Bissinger. Friday Night Lights by H. G. "Buzz" Bissinger. Friday Night Lights is maybe the best football book ever written and definitely one of the best selling sports books. Published in 1990, H. G. "Buzz" Bissinger's story follows a high school football team in Odessa, Texas.

  6. Game-Changing Sports Biographies and Memoirs

    Magic: The Life of Earvin "Magic" Johnson. By Roland Lazenby. From Roland Lazenby, the renowned biographer of Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, and Jerry West, comes Magic, the definitive sports biography of basketball legend Earvin "Magic" Johnson. Johnson reached dazzling new heights over the course of his career on the court, transforming ...

  7. 10 Best Sports Books of All Time

    Let us know your thoughts in the comments below: Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Best Sports Books: Here are 10 best sports books including A Season on the Brink by John Feinstein and Shoeless Joe by W. P. Kinsella.

  8. 20 Best Sports Biography eBooks of All Time

    Winner of the 2018 PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing. Winner of The Times Sports Biography of the Year. "Stunning . . . Eig's brilliant, exhaustive book is the biography the champ deserves." —NPR.org. The definitive biography of an American icon, from a New York Times best-selling author with unique access to Ali's inner circle.

  9. 20 Best-Selling Sports Biography Books of All Time

    A list of the best-selling sports biography books of all time, such as Open, Wooden, Madden, SATCHEL and Finding Ultra. Categories Experts Newsletter. BookAuthority; BookAuthority is the world's leading site for book recommendations, helping you discover the most recommended books on any subject. Explore; Home; Best Books; New Books ...

  10. The 35 Best Sports Books Ever Written

    Jonathan Eig's Ali: a Life (2017) is the best cradle-to-grave account, as good on the flaws as the fabulous. King of the World: Muhammad Ali and the Rise of an American Hero (1999) by David ...

  11. 5 Must Read Sports Biographies (2024)

    The Top 5. Buy on Amazon. "Open: An Autobiography" by Andre Agassi - "Open" is a memoir by retired American tennis player Andre Agassi, published in 2009. The book provides a candid and revealing look at Agassi's life, both on and off the court. In the book, Agassi discusses his difficult childhood, his rise to fame as a tennis player, and his ...

  12. 24 Best Sports Biographies Books (Definitive Ranking)

    Sports Biographies Books of All Time. Our goal: Find the best Sports Biographies books according to the internet (not just one random person's opinion).. Here's what we did:; Type "best sports biographies books" into our search engine and study the top 5+ pages.; Add only the books mentioned 2+ times.; Rank the results neatly for you here! 😊 (It was a lot of work.

  13. 11 best sports autobiographies

    Buy. 11. Geoffrey Boycott: The Corridor Of Certainty: Simon & Schuster, £20. The batsman-turned-commentator is always forthright on his beloved sport but here you get a unusually candid insight ...

  14. The best sports books, according to the Washington Post Sports staff

    My current favorite is " The Great American Sports Page: A Century of Classic Columns from Ring Lardner to Sally Jenkins " (2019), edited by John Schulian. " The Norton Book of Sports ...

  15. Best Sports Books: Top 10 Athlete Biographies [2024 Update]

    The top 10 best books about sports. 1.The League: How Five Rivals Created the NFL and Launched a Sports Empire. 2.Cloudbuster Nine: The Untold Story of Ted Williams and the Baseball Team That Helped Win World War II. 3.The Mamba Mentality: How I Play.

  16. Best Sellers in Sports Biographies

    Best Sellers in Sports Biographies. #1. The Leadership Secrets of Nick Saban: How Alabama's Coach Became the Greatest Ever. John Talty. 348. Audible Audiobook. 1 offer from $15.30. #2. Lucky Me: A Memoir of Changing the Odds.

  17. The 64 Best Sports Books of All Time

    Food & Drink. WhiskeyBeerRecipesCocktails & SpiritsHealthy FoodWine. Great sportswriting is about the bigger picture, the social context, the consequences and the sepia-toned nostalgia. Here are ...

  18. The Best Sports Books to Read Today

    Get in the game with our wide selection of sports books. Here you'll find sports biographies like Jeff Fletcher's Sho-Time and David Maraniss's Path Lit By Lightning; memoirs by famous athletes including Open, by Andre Agassi, and The Mamba Mentality, by Kobe Bryant; as well as sports fiction like Harlan Coben's Myron Bolitar series. Find a deeper understanding of sports and their ...