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The Heart of the Game is a 2005 sports documentary film about the Roosevelt Roughriders girls basketball team directed by Ward Serrill. The movie is centered on their star player Darnellia Russell and the Roughriders new coach Bill Resler. The film is narrated by Ludacris.
High school sports are an integral part of the town's fabric and pride, but girls' sports are an afterthought and receive little attention. The girls' team is more akin to a gym class than a basketball program. Clay is crushed by the news that the job he came for has gone to “someone more qualified”, and he sees no future in coaching the girls.
TV sequel to the 1979 movie. Laker Girls: 1990 Drama Television film about the Los Angeles basketball dance team. Willing to Kill: The Texas Cheerleader Story: 1992 Drama TV film based on Wanda Holloway's 1991 attempt to hire a hit man to kill the mother of her daughter's cheerleading rival. With Lesley Ann Warren as Holloway.
Pacquiao: The Movie; Paper Lion (film) Pelé: Birth of a Legend; Perfect Game (2011 film) Phantom Punch (film) Il Pirata: Marco Pantani; The Pistol: The Birth of a Legend; Prefontaine (film) Pride (2007 film) The Pride of St. Louis; The Pride of the Yankees; The Program (2015 film)
Young Woman and the Sea is a 2024 American biographical sports film directed by Joachim Rønning and written by Jeff Nathanson, based on the 2009 book by Glenn Stout.Produced by Walt Disney Pictures and Jerry Bruckheimer Films, the film stars Daisy Ridley as Gertrude Ederle, an American competitive swimmer who became the first woman to swim across the English Channel.
A scientifically enhanced girl (Susan Anton) trains for the 1980 Moscow Olympics. A Shining Season: 1979 Biographical Running True story of John Baker, a girls' track coach dying of cancer. Chariots of Fire: 1981 Drama Sprints True story set during 1924 Olympics. Four Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Graduation Day: 1981 Horror Track
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These athletes also give interviews for the film. It was created by the "Peabody Award-winning creative team at HBO Sports" and "follows the 18-year journey of the U.S. women's soccer team from obscurity in the late 1980s to its second Olympic gold match in 2004." [1] The DVD of the film was released on 19 September 2007. [2]