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The Outsider

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The Outsider is a no-holds-barred memoir by the original bad boy of tennis, Jimmy Connors.

Connors ignited the tennis boom in the 1970s with his aggressive style of play, turning his matches with John McEnroe, Bjorn Borg, and Ivan Lendl into prizefights. But it was his prolonged dedication to his craft that won him the public's adoration. He capped off one of the most remarkable runs in tennis history at the age of 39 when he reached the semifinals of the 1991 U.S. Open, competing against players half his age.

More than just the story of a tennis champion, The Outsider is the uncensored account of Connors' life, from his complicated relationship with his formidable mother and his storybook romance with tennis legend Chris Evert, to his battles with gambling and fidelity that threatened to derail his career and his long-lasting marriage to Playboy playmate Patti McGuire.

When he retired from tennis twenty years ago, Connors all but disappeared from public view. In The Outsider, he is back at the top of his game, and as feisty, outspoken, and defiant as ever.

This autobiography includes original color photographs from the author.

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    • Kirkus

      July 1, 2013
      Four decades after his heyday, the controversial tennis star serves up a suitably cocky autobiography. It doesn't take Connors long--three pages, in fact--to get to the word "arrogant," which might have been coined to describe him. He delivers numerous reasons for why he might have been overweeningly proud, including the fact that he rose from a not-so-nice childhood in not-so-nice East St. Louis to become one of the most lauded players of the day. Repeatedly, however, he tells us that he has OCD ("Yup. I have it. Didn't know that, did you?"), which, if not entirely effective as an excuse for some of his bad behavior--including, as he later admits, a gambling addiction--at least explains some of it. If readers soon get the feeling that Connors wouldn't be the ideal choice of seatmate on a long plane ride, the better parts of his book describe not his prideful unpleasantness, but the business of tennis, from the importance of early coaching (in his case, by both his mother and grandmother) to the deep rivalries that exist among champions. One whom Connors says didn't like him one bit was Arthur Ashe, who had good reason, since Connors once painted Romanian tennis star Ilie Nastase in blackface before a doubles game with Ashe. ("We weren't all that bright back then, to say the least," he writes.) Connors is chatty, gossipy--Nastase thoroughly disliked German player Hans-Jurgen Pohmann, he writes, and even called him a Nazi after a match--insightful and often, yes, arrogant, which makes this book a solid match of object and subject. It could have benefited from the self-reflection of an R.A. Dickey, but a readable autobiography all the same.

      COPYRIGHT(2013) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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