Detroit Lions Mittens
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| NFL DETROIT LIONS YOUTH MITTENS BY REEBOK | $4.99![]() Sale Ends in 8d 14h 57m |
| DETROIT LIONS REEBOK FINGERLESS MITTENS - LARGE | $8.99![]() Sale Ends in 14d 9h 34m |
| DETROIT LIONS REEBOK FINGERLESS MITTENS - MEDIUM | $8.99![]() Sale Ends in 14d 9h 34m |
| Detroit Lions Convertible Mittens | $17.99![]() Sale Ends in 18d 17h 8m |
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Keep your hands nice and warm while having the luxury to text with these Detroit Lions Convertible Mittens. Made by Reebok, these Detroit Lions gloves can be worn as fingerless gloves or mittens. These gloves features embroidered graphics and they are made from a comfortable 100% polyester construction.
Protect your hands in style with this pair of team utility gloves. They are constructed of heavyweight cotton and feature team colors, logo and rubber-dotted palms for a sure grip all while showing off your team pride!
In the mid-'60s, Plimpton joined the Detroit Lions at their preseason camp as a 36-year-old rookie quarterback wannabe, and stuck with the club through an intra-squad game before the paying public a month later. The result is a literary masterpiece about professional football that not only elevated the art of participatory journalism to an art form, but also remains one of the most insightful and hilarious books ever written on the game. The Detroit Lions agreed to permit Plimpton-wearing Number 0-to join them for four weeks of training camp, and to culminate his apprenticeship by calling a series of plays in an intra-squad game in Pontiac Stadium. No holds are barred in this memorable, on-the-field look at football and how the professionals play it. Naturally, Plimpton didn't make it as a football hero; he barely affords himself a dignified account of his performance on the field, which is just as well. What remains is an enduring classic of professional football as it looks to a first-string writer trying out as a last-string quarterback.
Through the course of a long and distinguished career in letters, George Plimpton has crafted an art form from participatory journalism, and Paper Lion is his big touchdown. In the mid-'60s, Plimpton joined the Detroit Lions at their preseason camp as a 36-year-old rookie quarterback wannabe, and stuck with the club through an intra-squad game before the paying public a month later. What resulted is one of the funniest and most insightful books ever written on the game; 30 years later it remains a major model of what was then blossoming into New Journalism. Plimpton's breezy style wonderfully captures the pressures and tensions rookies confront in trying to make it, the hijinks that pervade the atmosphere when 60 high-strung guys are forced to live together in close quarters, and the host of rites and rituals with which football loves to coat itself. Of course, Plimpton didn't make it as a football hero; he barely accounts himself with dignity on the field, which is just as well. You don't have to be a lion when you've got a typewriter that can roar.





