The Milan Miracle: The Town That Hoosiers Left Behind

Awards:   Winner of Bronze Medal, Sports, 2017 Independent Publisher Book Awards.
Author:   Bill Riley
Publisher:   Indiana University Press
ISBN:  

9780253020895


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   29 August 2016
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $60.72 Quantity:  
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The Milan Miracle: The Town That Hoosiers Left Behind


Awards

  • Winner of Bronze Medal, Sports, 2017 Independent Publisher Book Awards.

Overview

Will lightning ever strike twice? Can David beat Goliath a second time? These questions haunt everyone in the small town of Milan, Indiana, whose basketball team inspired Hoosiers, the greatest underdog sports movie ever made. From a town of just 1,816 residents, the team remains forever an underdog, but one with a storied past that has them eternally frozen in their 1954 moment of glory. Every ten years or so, Milan has a winning season, but for the most part, they only manage a win or two each year. And still, perhaps because it's the only option for Milan, the town believes that the Indians can rise again. Bill Riley follows the modern day Indians for a season and explores how the Milan myth still permeates the town, the residents, and their high level of expectations of the team. Riley deftly captures the camaraderie between the players and their coach and their school pride in being Indians. In the end, there are few wins or causes for celebration-there is only the little town where basketball is king and nearly the whole town shows up to watch each game. The legend of Milan and Hoosiers is both a blessing and a curse.

Full Product Details

Author:   Bill Riley
Publisher:   Indiana University Press
Imprint:   Indiana University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.249kg
ISBN:  

9780253020895


ISBN 10:   0253020891
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   29 August 2016
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The accomplishments of a group of young men in 1953-1954 forever put Milan on both the Hoosier and national basketball maps. Numerous authors have revisited Milan to contrast its' current condition with those of the 1950 s, but none have quite honestly captured the full view of what Bill Riley relays in The Milan Miracle. Despite a glorious past, things aren t quite so glamorous for the Milan Indians these days. Chris May, Executive Director, Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame


Milan may not now be the location of 'happy ending' sports stories, but the town had a magical moment many communities do not, one that can serve as burden or inspiration. The beauty of sports is that the underdog can rise up unexpectedly, even if the address keeps changing. * Indiana Magazine of History *


Milan may not now be the location of 'happy ending' sports stories, but the town had a magical moment many communities do not, one that can serve as burden or inspiration. The beauty of sports is that the underdog can rise up unexpectedly, even if the address keeps changing. -Indiana Magazine of History The accomplishments of a group of young men in 1953-1954 forever put Milan on both the Hoosier and national basketball maps. Numerous authors have revisited Milan to contrast its' current condition with those of the 1950's, but none have quite honestly captured the full view of what Bill Riley relays in The Milan Miracle. Despite a glorious past, things aren't quite so glamorous for the Milan Indians these days. -Chris May, Executive Director, Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame This book takes us to the small town that inspired Hoosiers, that Hollywood crowd pleaser to measure the burden of a once and former glory. In mellifluous prose, Riley shows us that it takes as much humility as grit and determination to live under the shadow of a nearly sixty-year-old sports legend. Riley shows us that the real drama of sports less often lies in the last-minute shot than in the long run of acceptance of circumstances that are usually beyond our control. -Kirk Curnutt, author of Raising Aphrodite Here's a book that reveals something about what makes a young man keep playing for a team that he suspects will most likely lose its next game, while introducing us to a coach who tries to right the ship while knowing the same thing.This is a story about losing, but it's not about losers.It's about grit, and getting back up. -Greg Schwipps, author of What This River Keeps For a game that is so centered around arcs and geometry, numbers and statistics, there is a permeating mythos that transcends through the game of basketball--of shots that go in from impossible angles, dead spots on the floor, ghosts in the rafters. Riley's book is an examination of what happens when the odds are defied: instead of the game being forever changed, the anomaly resets--that sometimes instead of focusing on the outlier, there is beauty and fascination found in the status quo; the consistency of layup lines, the players and coaches scrapping to break even. -Brian Oliu, author of Enter Your Initials for Record Keeping In this mesmerizing book about hope, dreams and community, Bill Riley creates an unforgettable portrait of tiny Milan, IN, a town sliding into poverty and lost illusions but still carried by the memory of one long-ago championship season. Writing with steely honesty, rich empathy and deep intelligence, Riley explores the heartland of contemporary America and tests the endurance of a particularly American dream. -Erin McGraw, author of Better Food for a Better World: A Novel Bill Riley's carefully observed and often lyrical book makes us feel what's at stake for the players, coaches, and families of 21st century Milan. We're given access to the sounds and sights of the small town gym: those strangely beautiful and often struggling cathedrals of Indiana's state religion. And we watch as the town and team work to forge a new identity while shadowboxing with the mythology of the miracle of Milan. This book is an important addition to the literature of basketball. -Susan Neville, author of Butler's Big Dance: The Team, the Tournament, and Basketball Fever Bill Riley tells a very compelling story about the small town of Milan, Indiana where residents still believe in the message of Hoosiers, the movie, and the mythologizing that has surrounded Milan since the school won the Indiana state basketball championship in 1954. Riley is an excellent author to explore the subject, having grown up in Indiana with a heartfelt love of basketball and a long held belief in the Milan Miracle. -Mike Roos, author of One Small Town, One Crazy Coach: The Ireland Spuds and the 1963 Indiana High School Basketball Season


Bill Riley tells a very compelling story about the small town of Milan, Indiana where residents still believe in the message of Hoosiers, the movie, and the mythologizing that has surrounded Milan since the school won the Indiana state basketball championship in 1954. Riley is an excellent author to explore the subject, having grown up in Indiana with a heartfelt love of basketball and a long held belief in the Milan Miracle. -Mike Roos, author of One Small Town, One Crazy Coach: The Ireland Spuds and the 1963 Indiana High School Basketball Season Bill Riley's carefully observed and often lyrical book makes us feel what's at stake for the players, coaches, and families of 21st century Milan. We're given access to the sounds and sights of the small town gym: those strangely beautiful and often struggling cathedrals of Indiana's state religion. And we watch as the town and team work to forge a new identity while shadowboxing with the mythology of the miracle of Milan. This book is an important addition to the literature of basketball. -Susan Neville, author of Butler's Big Dance: The Team, the Tournament, and Basketball Fever In this mesmerizing book about hope, dreams and community, Bill Riley creates an unforgettable portrait of tiny Milan, IN, a town sliding into poverty and lost illusions but still carried by the memory of one long-ago championship season. Writing with steely honesty, rich empathy and deep intelligence, Riley explores the heartland of contemporary America and tests the endurance of a particularly American dream. -Erin McGraw, author of Better Food for a Better World: A Novel For a game that is so centered around arcs and geometry, numbers and statistics, there is a permeating mythos that transcends through the game of basketball--of shots that go in from impossible angles, dead spots on the floor, ghosts in the rafters. Riley's book is an examination of what happens when the odds are defied: instead of the game being forever changed, the anomaly resets--that sometimes instead of focusing on the outlier, there is beauty and fascination found in the status quo; the consistency of layup lines, the players and coaches scrapping to break even. -Brian Oliu, author of Enter Your Initials for Record Keeping Here's a book that reveals something about what makes a young man keep playing for a team that he suspects will most likely lose its next game, while introducing us to a coach who tries to right the ship while knowing the same thing.This is a story about losing, but it's not about losers.It's about grit, and getting back up. -Greg Schwipps, author of What This River Keeps This book takes us to the small town that inspired Hoosiers, that Hollywood crowd pleaser to measure the burden of a once and former glory. In mellifluous prose, Riley shows us that it takes as much humility as grit and determination to live under the shadow of a nearly sixty-year-old sports legend. Riley shows us that the real drama of sports less often lies in the last-minute shot than in the long run of acceptance of circumstances that are usually beyond our control. -Kirk Curnutt, author of Raising Aphrodite The accomplishments of a group of young men in 1953-1954 forever put Milan on both the Hoosier and national basketball maps. Numerous authors have revisited Milan to contrast its' current condition with those of the 1950's, but none have quite honestly captured the full view of what Bill Riley relays in The Milan Miracle. Despite a glorious past, things aren't quite so glamorous for the Milan Indians these days. -Chris May, Executive Director, Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame


Author Information

Bill Riley is a writer and teacher originally from Greenfield, Indiana. His work has been featured in Punchnel's, Prime Number, Spry Literary Journal, and Terre Haute Living Magazine. Connect with the author on his website, www.authorbillriley.com.

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