About this item
Highlights
- Atlanta insurance salesman George Burnett found himself at the center of a football scandal when he overheard a phone conversation between University of Georgia athletic director Wally Butts and University of Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant.
- About the Author: David E. Sumner is a professor emeritus of journalism at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, where he taught for 25 years.
- 234 Pages
- Sports + Recreation, General
Description
About the Book
"George Burnett found himself at the center of a football scandal when he overheard a phone conversation between University of Georgia athletic director Wally Butts and University of Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. Referencing more than 3,000 pages of letters, depositions and trial transcripts, the author reveals new information about this scandal and its resulting trial"--Book Synopsis
Atlanta insurance salesman George Burnett found himself at the center of a football scandal when he overheard a phone conversation between University of Georgia athletic director Wally Butts and University of Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant. Butts seemed to be giving Bryant play formations that would help Alabama defeat Georgia 35-0 in the 1962 season opener.
When the Saturday Evening Post published Burnett's story months later, Butts and Bryant successfully sued the magazine for libel. The case went to the Supreme Court where it was upheld in a landmark 5-4 decision that expanded the legal definition of "public figures."
Referencing more than 3,000 pages of letters, depositions and trial transcripts, the author reveals new information about this scandal and its resulting trial.
Review Quotes
"a very fascinating read.... Sumner leaves the reader with a significant amount to contemplate from all angles in the case, allowing the reader to become highly engaged...provides a gripping commentary of what occurred in the trial...well worth a read"-Journal of Sport History; "One afternoon I was so engrossed in [reading this book] on a MARTA train, I forgot to get off at my home station, so Sumner must be doing something right."-The Daily Report; "A fascinating case study for legal scholars and SEC football fans"-Journal of Magazine Media; "Capturing the history of one of the greatest controversies in SEC history is no easy task, but that's something David E. Sumner accomplished in his latest nonfiction book Fumbled Call. Does an excellent job of providing extensive background on all the players involved.... Any historical fan of the SEC, regardless of your allegiance to school, will enjoy this great read that combines football, history, intrigue, courtroom drama, and the fiery passion that's associated with the Southeastern Conference"-Saturday Down South; "Fumbled Call provides a thorough factual accounting of a colorful story that demonstrates the way ordinary moments of everyday life can wind up unexpectedly intertwined with complex legal proceedings-and produce precedent-setting cases that live on and on as the standards that decide countless cases thereafter."-Communication Booknotes Quarterly; "Fumbled Call is the fascinating tale of how an innocently captured conversation changed lives, livelihoods and the law of the land. A careful researcher with a flair for telling a story, David E. Sumner dodges the myths and runs down the truth, and the result is a courtroom drama about college sports, journalism and celebrity that should be of interest to all."-Peter C. Canfield, Atlanta First Amendment attorney; "What do you get when mystery and scandal merges with college football legend? One hell of a book. Fumbled Call is Sherlock Holmes meets George Gipp. Riveting, spellbinding, unique."-Jeff Pearlman, author of Gunslinger: The Remarkable, Improbable, and Iconic Life of Brett Favre and Sweetness: The Enigmatic Life of Walter Payton; "Dispensing with the conventional and trite narrative of two wronged southern football coaching giants, Fumbled Call is an exhaustively researched and eminently readable work which serves as the definitive record of an overheard phone call and the cascading consequences of same. The book will educate the reader on past and current American libel law, and is a template for reminding college football boosters, administrators and coaches that, when an issue of integrity arises within a program, the right solution is not always simply foreordained."-Michael D. Lee, Saturday Sportsline Memories on YouTube.
About the Author
David E. Sumner is a professor emeritus of journalism at Ball State University in Muncie, Indiana, where he taught for 25 years. He has written seven books.