![]() Open looks to be a unique thrill for the kid journalists who made such a splash at the NCAA basketball championship. ![]() Stevie and Susan Carol's press contacts get them up-close access alongside the adult reporters, and Susan Carol's Uncle Brendan, an up-and-coming tennis agent, grants them personal interviews with the modest stable of players he represents. ![]() The sport's biggest stars are set to compete, some who were actual professional players-Serena Williams, Andy Roddick, Maria Sharapova, Lisa Raymond, Thomas Johansson, Jonas Björkman, and Roger Federer, to name a few-and others made up for this book. And that's precisely what happens in Flushing, New York, at America's most prestigious annual tennis tournament. Open several months after the NCAA adventure, their reputation as extraordinary journalists would be sealed if they were to untangle another case of skullduggery blind luck couldn't explain that happening again to the same two kids. When Stevie and Susan Carol negotiate an arrangement to have them cover the tennis U.S. ![]() The two thirteen-year-old sportswriters improbably leveraged their wits and pluck to break wide open a story of major corruption in college basketball after winning a contest allowing them special access to the Final Four NCAA tournament, but that's the way luck works sometimes. This book is where Stevie Thomas and Susan Carol Anderson's legacy as journalists is defined. ![]()
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