Episode 130 Notes and Links to Dan Grunfeld’s Work
On Episode 130 of The Chills at Will Podcast, Pete welcomes Dan Grunfeld, and the two discuss, among other topics, Dan’s connection to the NBA through his father, Dan’s pressures-internal and external-in playing basketball, his philosophy/mission in writing his book, his love and admiration for his heroic and inspirational grandmother, Dan’s family’s incredible, triumphant, and tragic stories involving the Holocaust, and basketball’s role in healing and publicizing the incredible saga of the Grunfeld family.
Dan Grunfeld is a former professional basketball player, an accomplished writer, and a proud graduate of Stanford University. An Academic All-American and All-Conference basketball selection at Stanford, Dan played professionally for eight seasons in top leagues around the world, including in Germany, Spain, and Israel. Dan’s writing has been published more than 40 times in media outlets such as Sports Illustrated, The Jerusalem Post, and NBC News. Dan earned his MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business in 2017 and lives with his wife and son in the San Francisco Bay Area, where he works in venture capital.
Dan Grunfeld’s Website
Buy By the Grace of the Game: The Holocaust, a Basketball Legacy, and an Unprecedented American Dream
Dan Grunfeld’s Wikipedia Page
Dan and His Book Featured on TMJ4 News
At about 2:05, Dan details his relationship with languages and reading-a fellow Matt Christopher
At about 3:50, Dan connects storytelling’s importance and growing up as the child of immigrants
At about 5:00, Dan gives info on where to buy his book, his “true labor of love” and the process of writing and publishing and the appearances he has made since the book was published
At about 7:30, Dan highlights his grandmother
At about 7:55, Dan is highly complimentary of the legendary Ray Allen, who wrote the book’s Foreword
At about 10:50, Dan gives background on what it was like to be the son of a NBA general manager
At about 13:25, Dan gives background on how the book was thought up
At about 15:15, Dan details his writing process, specifically how his formal and informal interviews took place
At about 16:30, Dan talks about food as a “vessel of love” and its importance in his book and in his life
At about 17:40, Pete parallels Dan’s love of his grandmother’s cooking
At about 18:55, Dan emphasizes the fact that his father and family stressed Dan’s academic excellence over putting pressure on him to be a basketball star
At about 20:05, Dan explains the internal pressure to “make it as a basketball player” and how his family’s histories brought on pressure
At about 21:05, Pete and Dan discuss connections between Anyu’s idyllic childhood and events from the iconic Night by Elie Wiesel
At about 23:10, Pete details, to Dan’s point about the importance of telling individual stories to better understand the unfathomable histories, the power of LA’s Museum of Tolerance
At about 24:35, Dan talks about the symbolism and importance of a family heirloom, a silver spoon
At about 26:25, Dan talks about pressures put upon him and connections to a NBA decision maker
At about 27:40, Dan recounts details of “the greatest game [he] ever played”
At about 29:30, Dan talks about the intersections of Adolf Eichmann, Raoul Wallenberg and Dan’s grandmother, Anyu, in Budapest
At about 31:55, Pete and Dan talk about chapters detailing Dan’s improvements in college hoops and the importance of the 1936 Olympics and Jewish NBA players
At about 32:50, Dan highlights the sad story of his uncle
At about 33:35, Pete and Dan talk about Dan’s huge leap in his Stanford career and the connection between his improvement and workouts with the eccentric and iconic genius, Frank Matrisciano, “Hell’s Trainer”
At about 40:10, Pete asks Dan to describe the “highs and lows” involved with his huge success his junior year that was in