
Dan Patrick (1)
Author of The Big Show: Inside ESPN's SportsCenter
For other authors named Dan Patrick, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Dan Patrick
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Pugh, Daniel Patrick
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Eastern Kentucky University
University of Dayton (Broadcast Journalism) - Occupations
- sportscaster
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Mason, Ohio, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Ohio, USA
Members
Reviews
The Occasionally Accurate Annals of Football: The NFL's Greatest Players, Plays, Scandals, and Screw-Ups (Plus Stuff We Totally Made Up) by Dan Patrick
The Occasionally Accurate Annals of Football, by Dan Patrick and Joel H Cohen, is a fun semi-factual look at football. I listened to the audiobook, narrated by Patrick.
My rating is an average of what I would give the audiobook alone and what I would give the paper version alone. Patrick does a fine job narrating, but the book is composed of little snippets with illustrations around them. These are grouped into chapters. In addition to not having the mostly fun illustrations, we lose some of show more the feel of these being a lot of short anecdotes (usually with a germ of truth that gets embellished, shall we say). The physical book would be one you might want to dip into periodically for fun. The audiobook is set up, and read, as chapters. That is just a bit more than I wanted to handle. It isn't that Patrick doesn't usually try to pause between pieces, but when listening it all gets to be a long stream of fun but absurd jokes.
I did find myself looking up a lot of stuff to see where exactly the facts end and the fiction begins, which was fun. I've followed and read about football since I was a child and there was a lot I learned here.
My recommendation is split. I recommend the audiobook with the warning to take breaks far more often than every chapter, which becomes a bit cumbersome. The physical or ebook, however, I recommend highly, the format keeps you from reading straight through and adds some whimsy.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
My rating is an average of what I would give the audiobook alone and what I would give the paper version alone. Patrick does a fine job narrating, but the book is composed of little snippets with illustrations around them. These are grouped into chapters. In addition to not having the mostly fun illustrations, we lose some of show more the feel of these being a lot of short anecdotes (usually with a germ of truth that gets embellished, shall we say). The physical book would be one you might want to dip into periodically for fun. The audiobook is set up, and read, as chapters. That is just a bit more than I wanted to handle. It isn't that Patrick doesn't usually try to pause between pieces, but when listening it all gets to be a long stream of fun but absurd jokes.
I did find myself looking up a lot of stuff to see where exactly the facts end and the fiction begins, which was fun. I've followed and read about football since I was a child and there was a lot I learned here.
My recommendation is split. I recommend the audiobook with the warning to take breaks far more often than every chapter, which becomes a bit cumbersome. The physical or ebook, however, I recommend highly, the format keeps you from reading straight through and adds some whimsy.
Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 4
- Members
- 239
- Popularity
- #94,924
- Rating
- 3.2
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 15









