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Book cover of Games Presidents Play Sports And the Presidency
Sports Essays, Sports - History, General & Miscellaneous Public Policies, Sports & Politics, Presidents of the United States - General & Miscellaneous

Games Presidents Play Sports And the Presidency

by John Sayle Watterson
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Overview

The Games Presidents Play provides a new way to view the American presidency. Looking at the athletic strengths, feats, and shortcomings of our presidents, John Sayle Watterson explores not only their health, physical attributes, personalities, and sports IQs, but also the increasing trend of Americans in the past century to equate sporting achievements with courage, manliness, and political competence.

The author of College Football begins with George Washington, whose athleticism contributed to his success on the battlefield and may well have contributed to the birth of the republic. He moves seamlessly into the nineteenth century when, for presidents like Jackson, Lincoln, and Cleveland, frontier sports were part of their formative years. With the twentieth-century presidents β€” most notably the hyperactive and headline-grabbing Theodore Roosevelt β€” Watterson shows how the growth of mass media and the improved means of transportation transformed presidential sports into both a form of recreation and a means of establishing a positive self-image.

Modern presidents have used sports with varying degrees of success. Herbert Hoover fled Washington on weekends to the trout pools of Camp Rapidan in the Blue Ridge to escape relentless pressures and public criticism during the Great Depression. Franklin Roosevelt demonstrated remarkable physical endurance in his campaign to restore his ravaged body from polio. An obsessive love affair with golf became an issue for Dwight Eisenhower in his campaign for reelection in 1956. Richard Nixon, a former third-string college football lineman, placed calls to Coach George Allen of the Washington Redskins, once suggesting a trick play in a big game.

From the opening pitch of the baseball season to presenting awards to Olympic champions, our sports culture asks the president to play an increasingly active role. Sports, Watterson argues, open a window into the presidency, shedding new light on presidential behavior and offering new perspectives on the office and the sporting men β€” and women β€” who have and will occupy it.

About the Author, John Sayle Watterson

John Sayle Watterson is an adjunct assistant professor of history at James Madison University. He is the author of College Football: History, Spectacle, Controversy, also published by Johns Hopkins.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Sports historian Watterson (College Football: History, Spectacle, Controversy) suggests that presidents' athletic endeavors reveal a lot about their actions in office: presidents who play team sports, for example, are more likely to approach the presidency as a team player. Though Watterson glances briefly at 18th- and 19th-century presidents, this book really begins with the ever-so-athletic Teddy Roosevelt. In the 20th century, presidents used sports to craft a manly image; indeed, athletic ability has become almost a prerequisite for getting elected. One of the most surprising chapters examines Calvin Coolidge, perhaps the least athletic of the modern presidents, yet he was savvy about sport, cozying up to athletic stars and turning his awkward attempts at fishing into a symbol of his rural roots. Bill Clinton was not a natural athlete, but he loved golf. Yet he sometimes broke the rules on the links-a cavalier attitude that, in Watterson's view, foreshadowed his troubles with Monica Lewinsky. Occasionally, Watterson overstates his case, as when he claims, "Increasingly, sports have defined the presidency," or when he argues that Woodrow Wilson's efforts to reform college football presaged his 1913 call for progressive banking and tariff reform. Nonetheless, this is an enjoyable study of politics and culture. 30 b&w photos, 1 illus. (Oct. 31) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Watterson (history, James Madison Univ.; College Football: History, Spectacle, Controversy) examines the place of sports and athletics in the lives of our Presidents. Early Presidents, he shows, often continued the sports and games of their youth while in office, but few used sports as building blocks of their political or personal lives. Then came Theodore Roosevelt-peripatetic hiker, hunter, rock climber, swimmer, and former Rough Rider-who set the standard for the modern sporting presidency and our current expectation of a chief executive as vigorous and outgoing. Watterson illustrates how some Presidents used sports for political gain (e.g., Warren G. Harding thrived on photo-ops with famous athletes of the 1920s, hardly a major championship was won during the Nixon era without a conspicuous congratulatory call from the President, and George H.W. Bush, one of the best athletes among Presidents, used sports in an attempt to dispel his public image as an effete wimp), while others have seen their love of sports backfire (as when Eisenhower was widely criticized for spending too much time on the golf course). This well-researched, nicely written work will appeal to history buffs and sports fans alike. Recommended for all public and academic libraries.-Jim Burns, Jacksonville P.L., FL Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
June 6, 2026
Publisher
Johns Hopkins University Press
Pages
416
Format
Hardcover, 2006
ISBN
9780801884252

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