cover image The Miracle of St. Anthony: A Season with Coach Bob Hurley Inside Basketball's Most Improbable Dynasty

The Miracle of St. Anthony: A Season with Coach Bob Hurley Inside Basketball's Most Improbable Dynasty

Adrian Wojnarowski. Gotham Books, $25 (400pp) ISBN 978-1-59240-102-4

The Bob Hurley profiled here isn't as well known to the average sports fan as his son, Bobby, the Duke University basketball superstar. But the elder Hurley's profile should rise quickly, thanks to sportswriter Wojnarowski's fine and detailed look at the ""miracle"" Hurley has achieved as coach for more than 30 years of the men's basketball team at St. Anthony's High School in Jersey City, NJ. Wojnarowski provides an excellent look at the phenomenon of the school itself, which Hurley and two Felician nuns managed to keep open even after it lost funding from the church, educating ""the poorest of the poor"" (more than 50% of the students' families lived below the poverty line). He delivers a finely etched portrait of Hurley, whose passion and drive enabled him to construct ""a national powerhouse program out of an enrollment that struggled to stay at 200"" and keep the school's decade-long streak of 100% college acceptance. But Wojnarowski's main focus is on the 2003-2004 season, in which a varsity team that Hurley considered ""the most academically, athletically and socially underachieving in St. Anthony basketball history"" overcame its ""dysfunctional"" nature and had an undefeated season. Wojnarowski's sensitive, insightful look at the social backgrounds and emotional development of the varsity players-and Hurley's remarkable understanding of them-will keep readers riveted throughout this book, which is one of the best recent pieces of sports journalism.