Jack O'Brien, the impossibly demanding basketball coach at Charlestown High School in Boston, has led his team to five state championship titles in six years. Less talked about is O'Brien's other winning record: Nearly every one of the players who stuck with his program poor kids growing up in high-crime neighborhoods and saddled with the lousy educational system available in urban America managed to get to college. But O'Brien is no saint. Saints give without expecting anything in return. O'Brien needs his players and their problems as much as they need him.
Revolving around fascinating, complex characters, The Assist is a captivating narrative of a basketball team in pursuit of a championship that also drills down into the legacy of desegregation and explores issues of education, family, and race. O'Brien is a middle-aged white guy coaching an all-black team playing in an all-white neighborhood that three decades ago was at the center of the busing wars dividing cities across the country a time and place indelibly described in J. Anthony Lukas's powerful book Common Ground. It's the inspiring story of a man who makes a difference, and of boys surmounting nearly impossible odds; it is also the story of the ones who don't make it, and why.
Neil Swidey is a staff writer for the Boston Globe Magazine. His writing has won the National Headliner Award and been featured in The Best American Science Writing, The Best American Crime Reporting, and The Best American Political Writing. He lives outside Boston with his wife and three daughters.
Table of Contents
Prologue 1 The Pre-Season 7 Hood 9 Ridley 29 The Rules of the Road 45 O'Brien 57 The Season 71 Fits and Starts 73 A Taste of the High Life 85 Townies in Black and White 97 Rematch 115 Fathers, Sons, and Surrogates 129 The Post-Season 153 The Cities 155 Survive and Advance 165 Playoffs and Payoffs 183 Mind Over Matter 197 The Off-Season 209 Crime's Call 211 No Ordinary Summer 223 End Game 235 The Unraveling 237 The Tipping Point 257 The Decision 269 Blind Justice 283 Revise and Revoke 313 Epilogue 339 Research Methods 347 Acknowledgments 353