Snake: The Legendary Life of Ken Stabler
Snake: The Legendary Life of Ken Stabler book cover

Snake: The Legendary Life of Ken Stabler

Hardcover – November 15, 2016

Price
$33.98
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Dey Street Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0062484253
Dimensions
6 x 0.93 x 9 inches
Weight
15.2 ounces

Description

Review Previous Praise for Mike Freeman “Mike Freeman is one of the nation’s best sports writers, and he proves it once again here.” — Jef Pearlman, author of Sweetness: The Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton and From the Back Cover He was a giant among men, a symbol of a different era in sports . . . The NFL in the 1970s was a ruthless league, rife with concussions, broken bones, unmatched egos, and frequent racial strife. In the midst of this madness, commanding the Oakland Raiders (perhaps the baddest team of them all) was quarterback Ken Stabler—aka Snake—an unassuming and lethal threat as a player. On the field, he was cool and con-fident, but off of it he was a legendary woman chaser and babe magnet, carrying a larger-than-life persona at odds with the performance-drenched focus that characterized the rest of the NFL. Yet the Stabler that would eventually emerge was more than a playboy. No quarterback was tougher or more uniquely talented; his accuracy, particularly with deep throws, was as good as any quarterback’s the league had ever seen; he’d won 100 games faster than any quarterback in history, as well as a Super Bowl, and most of all, he helped redefine the Raiders from losers to champions. In Snake, Bleacher Report columnist Mike Freeman details Stabler’s childhood in racially segregated Alabama, his emergence as a rare high school talent, his raucous college days under the legendary Bear Bryant at the University of Alabama, and his famed career as a quarterback for the Raiders and, later, the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints. Freeman expands his story by offering a rare, personal look at Stabler after his football days—including his warm affection as a husband, father, and grandfather—and even describes how Stabler’s death, and subsequent Hall of Fame induction, paved the way for greater CTE awareness, as a 2016 autopsy revealed Stabler had been suffering from the disease. This work examines the complete Stabler portrait: the good, the bad, and the unbelievable. Poignant, blunt, and eye-opening, Snake is a towering biography about a man who forever left his mark on football, the quarterback who studied his playbook by the light of a jukebox. About the Author Mike Freeman is an NFL Insider for CBSSports.com. Before that, he was an NFL writer, investigative reporter, and columnist for the New York Times ; a columnist for the Florida Times-Union ; and a sports reporter, features writer, and investigative writer for the Washington Post , Boston Globe , and Dallas Morning News . He lives in New Jersey. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The first in-depth biography of one of the most talented and infamous legends to play in the National Football League—the life and times of pro football’s first bad boy, famed Oakland Raiders quarterback Ken Stabler.
  • Ken "The Snake" Stabler was the embodiment of the original Men in Black—the freewheeling, hard-hitting Oakland Raiders. The league’s first swashbuckling pass thrower, the mythical southpaw Southerner famous for come-from-behind drives late in the game, Stabler led the Raiders to their first Super Bowl championship in 1977. In an era dominated by gentleman quarterbacks like Roger Staubach and Bob Griese, this 1974 NFL MVP, four-time Pro-bowler, and Super Bowl champion was an iconoclast who partied as hard as he played and lived life unapologetically on his own—not the NFL’s—terms.
  • Though Stabler’s legacy is larger-than-life, there has never before been an exclusive account of him, until now.
  • Snake
  • goes deep under the surface of Stabler’s persona to reveal a man who, despite his penchant for partying and debauchery, was committed to winning and being the best player he could be. From his college days playing for Bear Bryant at Alabama to his years with the Raiders under coach John Madden, his broadcasting career to his death in 2015 and the revelation that he suffered from chronic traumatic encephalopathy, known as C.T.E.,
  • Snake
  • probes the myriad facets of Stabler’s life on and off the field to tell his complete story, and explores how his legacy and the culture and times that pivotally shaped it, continues to impact football today.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(115)
★★★★
25%
(96)
★★★
15%
(58)
★★
7%
(27)
23%
(88)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Keep on looking

This book is terribly written. Facts were not checked (Raiders never could have played the Dolphins in the Super Bowl), grammar is horrid, sentence structure is at times non-existent.
11 people found this helpful
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Wait for paperback

Great subject, fun book, but not the definitive biography that I was hoping for. This is hardly Kreigel's "Namath". It is what it is, but for such a short, quick read, I'd wait for the paperback version.
I wish that we'd get some serious, in-depth reporting on the great Raiders teams as we haven't seen much besides, some lite, "they had long hair and abused drugs and alcohol while the won", books. True, but yeah, we already knew that. How about some details about drafts, game plans, biographies of the players and coaches, etc...? These teams played some epic games, and it was fueled on more than just booze. There was a lot of talent and hard work going on as well...

Great subject, fun read, but too expensive in hardcover.
9 people found this helpful
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do not waste your time with this book

Read the book. A toddler could have written more compelling stories. If I am not mistaken, the author has written for Bleacher Report which explains everything. Seriously, do not waste your time with this book. While there are some cool stories, it doesn't dive into anything. It skims the surface and then on to the next chapter.
8 people found this helpful
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Stories Great; Geneaology Could Use Some Work

Would love to give this 5 stars -- Snake is the reason I'm a pro football fan. Fact-checking in this book missed a few key points. There are contradiction when the same story is referenced in multiple places, and this happens for several stories. I'm not criticizing Snake's life -- that's part of what drew me to being a fan of his (and developing a taste for whiskey myself!). Loved Snake. What I am criticizing is the lack of thoroughness of the research. The worst one in my opinion is this:

P. 22 The Italian Campaign:

Sometime between 1926 and 1930 he (William Edgar Stabler) moved his family of two sons and three daughters to Foley, in Baldwin County. There the youngest son, Jimmy, was born. … Jimmy was Kenny’s grandfather.”

Not possible. Snake was born Dec. 25, 1945. Yet, Leroy ‘Slim’ Stabler (Snake’s dad) was in Europe, including fighting in Anzio, from late November 1943 to mid-July 1944. If Jimmy was really Kenny’s grandfather, and was thus born in 1930 or later, there’s no way Jimmy would have a son old enough to enlist to fight in WWII in 1943. Hell, Jimmy himself wasn't old enough to enlist to fight in WWII. Jimmy has to be Snake's uncle.

Rather, using Ancestry.com’s records, this appears to be the case:

2 May 1923, Leroy Stabler was born in Alabama; his father was (William) Edgar Stabler (Snake's grandfather, born in 1894), his mother Marie Williams. Leroy’s wife was Myrtle Margaret Osborne Stabler. A 1923 birth for Snake’s dad makes a lot more sense.
7 people found this helpful
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Poorly Written and Not Worth Your Time

Full disclosure...when I purchased this book I was under the impression that it was an updated version of Stabler's autobiography. Turns out the writer just used a very similar name, probably to increase sales.

But don't waste your time. The book is poorly written and seems to borrow the same stories found in other books on Stabler. It recycles cliches that are tired and outdated. So do yourself a favor and don't buy it. Instead buy Stabler's autobiography.
5 people found this helpful
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Maybe the single worst written book that I've read

Maybe the single worst written book that I've read. The adulation is excessive which is redundant but it is so bad. Facts are inaccurate. Do not mistake this book for The Snake's autobiography. Sorry that i wasted my time reading this.
4 people found this helpful
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A Missed Opportunity

The book glossed over Stabler's career and barely got into the relationships he had with his teammates. Pete Banaszak and Fred Biletnikoff are barely mentioned. Phil Villapiano isn't at all. We knew the Raiders were renegades, but Freeman hardly covered this angle, which is an important part of the story with Snake at the center of it all. The best parts of the book were Snake's daughter's reflections and the end, covering Stabler's post playing career. However, Snake's time as an Alabama football color analyst doesn't even come up!

Parts of the book were repetitive. Did this book even have an editor? Stabler is my favorite non Patriot player of all time, and I finished this feeling disappointed.
3 people found this helpful
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Amateur Hour

The author is in way over his head, in terms of both story-telling and the written word. I am quite surprised a publishing house signed up for this. Not a high-quality effort or output. An enthusiastic thumbs down.
2 people found this helpful
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RICK “SHAQ” GOLDSTEIN SAYS: THE ONLY RAIDER WHOSE FACE COULD REPLACE THE RAIDER LOGO & HAVE EQUAL RESPECT ON & OFF THE FIELD!

As a true Silver & Black Raider fan from their inception… and an original PSL season ticket holder upon their journey back to Oakland… I’ve seen and cheered them all on. But the one player… above… and…. beyond… them all… who I idolized on AND off the field… was the one… and only… the inimitable “Snake”! The coolest man on the field… even with seconds remaining… in game after game… and the outcome on the line… every Raider looked to… believed in… and followed… the now *LONG-OVER-DUE-HALL-OF-FAMER*… KEN “THE SNAKE” STABLER!... The Snake was also the coolest man in every bar in town… and I idolized him for that too!

Potential readers… who are reading this review… please believe me… that my feelings for “The Snake”… will not influence my review of the quality of the book. First let me point out that this is a short book… that if you take away the bibliography/sources pages is only 227 pages… and if you take away the three pages (two blank and one wasted with simply a small title) between each of the four “sub-book” dividers… and it’s even twelve pages less than that. There are about five pages (an estimate) telling about Stabler’s ancestry dating back to the 1600’s and 1700’s… that I thought would never end… and seemed like a hundred pages. Now that I got those two things out of the way… everything else is… UNBELIEVABLE!!

Being Kenny’s life and career is history… much of what is written… has been written before…. (and duly noted)… but interspersed… are many personal interviews and discussions directly with the author. The personal admiration for Stabler by the author… is not only informative… but to me highly admirable. In my opinion… it’s that very combination of history… and true heartbeat… that make *this-book-on-this-subject-at-this-time* even more impactful and enjoyable. Poor Kenny… and his lifelong fans… which include me AND the author. The author could be me or many other fans… that have stood at bars… at ballgames… in airports… at the Thanksgiving dinner table… and argued… and/or simply proclaimed… THAT KEN STABLER SHOULD HAVE BEEN IN THE HALL OF FAME DECADES AGO!

The author covers all the bases including the saga of Stabler’s Father Slim… who did not come home from World War II… unscathed. In those days… there was no PTSD… you either had scars that you can see… missing appendages… or you didn’t get special care. Slim’s inner ticking time bomb… when mixed with alcohol.. affected the entire Stabler family for life. The author does a wonderful job extrapolating out… why “The Snake” became who he was… on and off the field. Kenny was a great high school baseball pitcher as well as a great football player. In fact Stabler was the only high school pitcher to ever beat future baseball Hall of Famer Don Sutton. “The Snake” struck out 16 batters in that game compared to Sutton’s 14. From there to the University of Alabama… and the special relationship… again… on and off the field… with the legendary Bear Bryant. There are some great heartfelt stories from that time period… and of course later on… there’s the special relationship with Hall of Fame Raider coach John Madden.

Of course no story of Stabler or the all-time classic Silver and Black teams that Stabler spearheaded… could leave out the literal all-time-all-time… classic… plays and games… such as THE HOLY ROLLER… THE GHOST TO THE POST… THE IMMACULATE RECEPTION… **OR AS MANY RAIDERS AND FANS CALL IT… “THE IMMACULATE DECEPTION”… but what true Raider… or simply true old-school football fans… will be impressed with… is among other things… that Stabler called his own plays… every player looked up to him… and would follow him to hell and back… that he was cooler and calmer than the coach with the game on the line. The utter respect that opposing players had for him is legendary… which has made it even more disdainful… that “The Snake” didn’t get into the Hall of Fame until after he died. After one game against the Bears in which… “he was picked up and tossed on his head. When he awoke, he was helped off the field, only to return in time to help the Raiders win. After the game, the Bears’ Walter Payton approached Snake as he was walking off the field, and then came one of those small but powerful moments that often go unnoticed. “YOU’RE SUCH A GREAT FIGHTER,” PAYTON TOLD SNAKE, “IT WAS AN HONOR TO BE ON THE SAME FIELD AS YOU.”

Perhaps the greatest accomplishment by the author Mike Freeman in this book is showing without a shadow of doubt… how much “The Snake” loved football. Whether he just got done studying his playbook by the light of a jukebox… whether he only had an hour of sleep… he was always ready to win on that football field. Two quotes from this book that I will highlight here… show the range of Stabler’s wit and true emotions…

One year the Raiders were in the Super Bowl that was played in Pasadena, California… during Super Bowl week… he (Stabler) paid a visit to the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles and he said… “Just went to share a few thoughts about football with some of the librarians there!”

And… “A friend of Stabler’s once read him a quote from writer and social activist Jack London: “I would rather be a meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet. The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days trying to prolong them, I shall use my time.”

“What does that mean to you?” Stabler was asked.
“He thought and contemplated. Seconds passed.”

………. “THROW DEEP,” He said.

To me… that says it all! Rest in peace… My Brother… thanks for all the Silver and Black memories.
Rick “SHAQ” Goldstein
2 people found this helpful
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This might be the worst book I've ever finished

It's lazy, with other sources quoted heavily. There are blunders as well. Two women are listed as Stabler's first wife. Also, Freeman has the Raiders playing the Dolphins in the Super Bowl. Not only has that never happened, that's not even possible. Other than a never-before-heard story of Stabler stopping Gene Upshaw from beating up a racist at a bar (Stabler feared Upshaw would be blamed for it), there's not much here that you can't find elsewhere. Even though I haven't read Stabler's autobiography (even though Stabler later regretted writing it), I'll say you're probably better off reading that. Unless you're a big Stabler fan, pass.
1 people found this helpful