The Book of Basketball


The Book of Basketball: The NBA According to the Sports Guy is the second book by former ESPN columnist Bill Simmons. Published in 2009, it covers the history of the National Basketball Association. In 2019, Simmons launched a sequel podcast series, Book of Basketball 2.0, which analyzes the evolution of the league since the book was published.

Background

At the time of the book's publishing, Simmons had been writing under the name “The Sports Guy” for 12 years, 9 of them with ESPN, and was receiving 1.4 million page views per month. In 2006, he started developing the idea for The Book of Basketball, spending three years reading over 80 books on basketball and watching 400 game tapes.
Simmons's goal in the book was to figure out why some players or teams matter more than others. The original premise for the book was to "blow up the Basketball Hall of Fame and reconstruct it like an Egyptian pyramid." As he continued his research, he realized that there was "no real way to compare players from different eras without a common theme in place." Simmons derived an idea that he admitted was not perfect, but helped in finding a fair ranking system for players past and present. He took into account NBA championships, regular season and playoff statistics, as well as longevity and flair.
While the book's Hall of Fame-related sections comprise about half the pages used, the book leads into this by covering several key matters in NBA history. These involve Simmons' recounting of his father purchasing a season ticket for only $4 a game as the Celtics rose and fell and rose ; a meeting with Simmons' non-fan Isiah Thomas that turned into a surprisingly friendly discussion about "The Secret of basketball"; an overview of how Bill Russell was the greatest center of all-time ; a history of how the NBA evolved between 1949 and 1984 into what it is today; dozens of what-if scenarios for the NBA ; and a breakdown of past Most Valuable Player awards that were divided into completely deserving winners, winners who were questionable but ultimately all right and winners who were travesties of justice. Stories are included of "The first time I witnessed this player live" moments that Bill recounts from his childhood, as well as anecdotes from his professional career in sports writing.
In 2010, Simmons released an updated paperback version of the book, cutting out 30 pages from the original, fixing factual errors, adding new material, including fixing footnotes, updating his Hall of Fame Pyramid, and including a virtual guide. This updated version was released on December 7th, 2010.

Synopsis

From The Wall Street Journal:

Reception

The Book of Basketball debuted at #1 on the New York Times bestseller list and spent 6 weeks in the top 15. It was named to Amazon's "Best Books of the Month" for October 2009. The Book of Basketball has been profiled in The Wall Street Journal, Deadspin, Dallas Morning News, The New York Times and The Washington Post.
Reviews for The Book of Basketball have been mostly positive, although it has been criticized for its length and editing. The Wall Street Journal notes that "Mr. Simmons may not resolve every long-standing hoops debate—who could?—but he compensates with plenty of detail and humor. And he has produced enough provocative arguments to fuel barstool arguments far into the future."
Several writers in New York's Vulture Blog objected to sexism in the book. Tommy Craggs found Simmons' sexism "astounding", citing Simmons' quote: "Every time I watch Jason Kidd play, initially it's like seeing a girl walk into a bar who's just drop-dead gorgeous, but then when he throws up one of those bricks, it's like the gorgeous girl taking off her jacket and you see she has tiny mosquito bites for tits." Ben Mathis-Lilley found Simmons' sexism "intrusively abhorrent", stating that "I actually stopped bothering to copy down the most egregious comments and figured I'd just note when Simmons mentioned a woman for any reason other than evaluating her appeal as something to put a penis in. I'm open to correction on this, but I believe it was when he praised Meryl Streep's acting somewhere around page 500."

Book of Basketball 2.0

On October 30, 2019, Simmons announced the sequel, "Book of Basketball 2.0", as a podcast which would consist of interviews with players, coaches, and top media members to determine how the league has evolved and where it’s headed.