tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-24350662076750625672007-09-19T14:32:14.404-07:00betfootball bettinghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04764354479745848244noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2435066207675062567.post-7092399265950033762007-09-19T13:38:00.000-07:002007-09-19T13:43:01.107-07:00books on football<p align="center"><a href="http://www.enterbet.com/"><em><strong><span style="font-size:180%;">books on football</span></strong></em></a><br /><br /></p><p align="left">books on football<br />Titles reviewed include:<br />"The Miracle of Castel di Sangro" by Joe McGinnis"When Beckham Went To Spain" by Jimmy Burns"Pyramid Football Guide To Non-League 2004-5" by Joe Bush (Ed.)"Woody & Nord: A Football Friendship" by Gareth Southgate and Andy Woodman"Among The Thugs" by Bill Buford"Flick-to-kick: An Illustrated History of Subbuteo" by Daniel Tatarsky"Ultra Nippon: How Japan Reinvented Football" by Jonathon Birchall "Badfellas: FIFA Family at War" by John Sugden & Alan Tomlinson "The Best of Enemies: England v. Germany, a Century of Football Rivalry" by David Downing"Japan, Korea and the 2002 World Cup" by John Horne & Wolfram Manzenreiter"Fever Pitch" by Nick Hornby"Tor! The Story Of German Football" by Uli Hesse-Lichtenberger"The Fashion Of Football: Soccer From Best To Beckham, From Mod To Label Slave" Paolo<br />Hewitt & Mark Baxter "Those Feet - A Sensual History of English Football" by David Winner"Ajax, the Dutch, the War - Football in Europe During The Second World War" by Simon Kuper "The Fan" by Hunter Davies"National Pastime" by Hunter Davies"Calcio" by John Foot"Forza Italia" by Paddy Agnew"Farewell but not Goodbye" by Bobby Robson "Provided You Don't Kiss Me - 20 years with Brian Clough" by Duncan Hamilton"My Father and Other Working-Class Heroes by Gary Imlach" by Gary Imlach<br />Forza Italia: A Journey in Search of Italy and Its Football Paddy Agnew<br />Ebury Press<br />ISBN: 0091905613Paperback, 320pp<br />There could not be a timelier book as the Italian national team prepares to travel to the<br />World Cup in the midst of a scandal engulfing its entire football culture.Paddy Agnew is the perfect person to write this part memoir, part analysis of what makes<br />Italian football so unique: The Irish journalist has lived in Italy for twenty years and<br />during this time has encountered the likes of Diego Maradona, Sven-Goran Eriksson and<br />Silvio Berlusconi, whose political party - named after a football chant - gave the book<br />its name. He also has his eye on the ball and is eerily prescient about the current<br />scandal, which he saw coming over the horizon.Front line reports of the big names and events in Italian football are interspersed with<br />tales of Roman life seen through a foreigner's eyes. These interludes are fascinating and<br />sometimes jaw-dropping but serve to illuminate why Italian football is the way it is, an<br />enormous sub-culture that springs organically from its parent country.Brimming with colourful anecdotes and adroit analysis, Forza Italia is the must-read for<br />those with an interest in the pressure-cooker of calcio who want to know what it really<br />feels like on the ground. With the current mega-scandal exploding on the eve of another World Cup, tournaments which<br />tend to be cataclysmic affairs for the azzurri, there could be no better accompaniment.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Calcio John Foot<br />Fourth Estate<br />ISBN: 0007175744Paperback, 592pp<br />Tackling the Mount Everest that is Italian football has been a peak too high for English<br />authors in the past. If there is one country where football is more than life and death it<br />is surely Italy. This is the country where the best-selling newspapers are football ones,<br />where Abramovich-style industrialists were buying up clubs as far back as the 1920s and<br />where the Prime Minister not only owns the nation's top team but named his political party<br />after a football chant.But with "Calcio –- A History of Italian Football", John Foot has finally scaled the<br />mountain and 592 pages later planted a flag of academic authority at the summit.Highly readable, the book is part chronicle of the game in Italy and part probe into the<br />issues that make Italian football so particular. The early years of football have been<br />meticulously researched and throw up alternatively charming or eye-opening anecdotes, such<br />as Reading trouncing Milan 5-0 or a game between Lucca and Viareggio that ended with an<br />armed uprising the Italian army took two days to put down.Further chapters explore the famous teams, players and managers as well as the media,<br />political and commercial interference and the myriad scandals that have given calcio a<br />shady reputation overseas. The running theme is that football in Italy resembles a<br />gigantic bonfire, fuelled by an addicted population, bewitching everyone while growing<br />ever more grotesque and dangerous by the day. While our word fan is the shortened form of<br />fanatic, the Italian one, tifo, is short for typhoid-sufferer.If Foot has any axe to grind it is rightly with the ultras and their unacceptable grip on<br />Italian clubs, who are still running scared of them in 2006. One can only hope books like<br />this will help open Italian eyes to the outrageous way these semi-hooligans carry on with<br />impunity, and free tickets, while attendances across the board in Serie A are falling.At the end, Foot admirably confesses he has almost fallen out of love with his subject<br />matter, but like Italy itself, calcio goes on, ugly and beautiful in equal measure.There are several memorable photos throughout the book and an accompanying glossary of<br />Italian football terminology. "Calcio" is not just the first English-language survey of<br />Italian football but has set an impressive benchmark for football histories in general.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> My Father and Other Working Class Football HeroesGary Imlach<br />Yellow Jersey Press<br />ISBN: 0224072684Paperback, 256pp<br />One of only four football books to win the William Hill Sports Book of the Year award, My<br />Father and Other Working Class Football Heroes is a touching tale of a son's quest to know<br />his father, in the process painting a valuable canvas of the lost world of English<br />football.Imlach's father Stewart played for Scotland at the 1958 World Cup and won the FA Cup with<br />Nottingham Forest a year later, but the young Gary knew little of his life until he went<br />looking after his death, discovering amid yellowed newspaper files and recollections of<br />elderly colleagues an era of low-wage, grafting, bread & butter footballers, utterly<br />unrecognizable to today's 'baby Bentley' prima donnas.The final two chapters, recording how the stars of yesteryear have fallen as fast as they<br />had risen, and the author's melancholy admission that he was falling out of love with<br />football as his father was dying are particularly poignant.Like Tony Cascarino's extraordinary autobiography Full Time, this comes from an unexpected<br />source. But, like the former Irish international, sports presenter Gary Imlach has<br />produced a studied work of pathos and a considered reflection on the game's social<br />importance to those involved.Eschewing the conventional approaches to sports histories, Imlach's vested interest in<br />unearthing the past endows a football story with nostalgia-free emotion and creates an<br />instant classic of the genre.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> <br /> The Fan Hunter Davies<br />Pomona Press<br />ISBN: 1904590020 Paperback, 352pp<br />As a season-ticket holder for both Tottenham Hotspur and their North London rivals<br />Arsenal, Hunter Davies has a stronger claim than most to the title of "The Fan". His loyalties lie with Spurs (he shares his Highbury seat with another semi-regular), but<br />as he explains with his trademark good humour, his true passion is the game of football<br />itself. That love, though, is not unconditional. In his collection of observations of the game<br />between 1996 and 2003 - first published in his fortnightly column in The New Statesman -<br />the prolific and celebrated author is clearly unhappy with the direction the British game<br />has taken in an era when Sky dictates kick-off times and players earn tens of thousands of<br />pounds a week before the bum-fluff has been blown from their chins. Like many supporters with middle-class sensibilities, Hunter had a satellite dish<br />installed only when it dawned on him that any attempt to face down the Murdoch media<br />juggernaut would be self-defeating, depriving him, as it would, of his raison d'etre -<br />long afternoons and evenings in front of the box, soaking up anything from the Champions<br />League to the French lower divisions. The original format for his musings mean the chapters can seem unconnected - a diary this<br />is not. But all of the important occasions are there: Euro 2000, the departure of "our<br />Kev" and the arrival of Sven, the World Cup in Japan and South Korea, and the stirrings of<br />Rooney-mania. In between we are treated to entertaining digressions - set out in short, pithy chapters -<br />on everything from following Carlisle United, Davies's topsy-turvy diet, his neighbours in<br />the stands, the FA, Sky (again), Julie Burchill's excruciating attempt to explain David<br />Beckham's sex appeal, Prince William's support for Aston Villa and, in a more serious<br />vein, Spurs' latter-day neglect of their elderly former legend, Bill Nicholson. There are also vignettes from the Davies household, usually involving genteel digs at his<br />wife, who, despite her preference for evenings alone at the theatre or cinema, probably<br />knows more about football than her hubby lets on. Who, after all, could have lived with a man of Davies's obsessive nature for so long and<br />not be influenced by it? The reader's time in his company is limited to a few hours over 300-plus pages, but his<br />seductive techniques, buttressed by amiability and humour, are no less sharp for that. For<br />most of us a season spent watching football at White Hart Lane is a terrifying prospect,<br />but one imagines being able to sit next to Davies at his wryest every other Saturday would<br />make it more than bearable. Compared with the (surely worn-out) fandom genre whose writers delight in recalling pints<br />sunk and noses split, or miles clocked and funny foreigners encountered, Davies occupies<br />another football universe. As a highly recommended close-season read through "The Fan"<br />should prove, "Hunt" is no mere "supporter with a pen," but, happily for us, a first-rate<br />writer who happens to be barking about "footer".<br />Justin McCurry<br /><br /> Farewell but not GoodbyeSir Bobby Robson<br />Hodder & Stoughton<br />ISBN: 034082347XPaperback, 352pp<br />Sir Bobby takes us on a stroll down memory lane here in his 2005 autobiography, a<br />leisurely trip through a life steeped in football. From his days down North-Eastern mines<br />right through to his less than ceremonious exit from Newcastle United, the club he grew up<br />supporting, Robson's is an endearing story of a life far-travelled and come full circle.This is well-written, engaging and packed full of anecdotes and quips from the dressing<br />room and training ground involving younger versions of household names – certain misters<br />Gascoigne, Moore, Figo, Ronaldo and Mourinho are just a few – and reminders of those<br />half-forgotten in football history. Starting out at Fulham, by his own admission he had<br />less than an illustrious career playing club football (no medals and his best was a fourth<br />place finish with West Brom) before time with England as player then coach ("It wasn't the<br />hand of God, it was the hand of a rascal") and then off on his globetrotting international<br />career, battling cancer a couple of times on the way, the faithful Elsie, wife of fifty<br />odd years always by his side, propping him up when needed.You can't help but hear Sir Bobby's distinctive voice taking delight in recalling his<br />eventful life with relish, probably with a finger wagging and a glassy look in his eyes.<br />His age obviously comes in here, the book reading like a story that only an old man could<br />tell, but the beauty of this is you've got a get out card - it's a book. You don't have to<br />sit there awkwardly for that little bit too long stifling yawns, you can shut him up at<br />any time by just putting it down. But make sure you come back to it again later, because<br />it's good stuff.<br />Paul Robinson<br /><br /> National PastimeStefan Szymanski and Andrew Zimbalist<br />Brookings Institution Press<br />ISBN: 0-8157-8258-6263pp<br />“National cultures are built around national pastimes.” How we play games helps to define<br />how we perceive ourselves. This book analyzes the story of two great sports—America's<br />game, and the world's game.<br />Baseball is the national sport in America, a national obsession that remains limited to<br />North America, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, and several islands in the Caribbean. Soccer is<br />truly the world's game, a sport that no one nation can claim as its own (though some in<br />England might try). Unlike the World Series, the World Cup is truly international and<br />often a measure of national self-esteem. National Pastime is the first cross-cultural<br />comparison of these sporting passions and the mega-businesses they have spawned and<br />become.<br />Stefan Szymanski and Andrew Zimbalist examine how organizational structures have made<br />Major League Baseball a hugely profitable business—thanks in large part to its<br />monopolistic protection under US law—while soccer leagues around the world struggle to<br />break even. The authors go back to the beginning of baseball and British football—and how<br />these games became businesses.<br />In their final chapter, the authors discuss how baseball and soccer can learn from each<br />other. This is an engaging and fun read. Whether you are a baseball or soccer/football<br />fan, you will enjoy National Pastime.<br />C. Ogawa<br /><br /> The Miracle of Castel di SangroA Real Life Footballing Fairy TaleJoe McGinniss<br />ISBN: 0767905997Paperback, 416pp, 16pp b&w illustrations.<br />American journalist, Joe McGinnis spends the 1996-97 season in the Italian boondocks with<br />impoverished small town club Castel di Sangro, who by a 'miracle' have risen to the heady<br />heights of Serie B.More than a fly-on-the-wall account of proceedings on the pitch, McGinnis, like him or<br />loathe him, paints a tragi-comic picture of provincial life that tourists never see.<br />Tension mounts as the team face the drop back to obscurity while McGinnis draws the reader<br />deeper into the unfolding events, which climax in a sudden, unexpected and disturbing<br />finale. A classic footballing story with a human touch.<br /><br /> Provided You Don't Kiss Me 20 Years With Brian Clough Provided You Don't Kiss Me - 20 years with Brian CloughDuncan Hamilton<br />ISBN: 0007247109Fourth Estate; Paperback, 256pp<br />The legend of the green sweatshirt grows by the day but 'Provided You Don't Kiss Me - 20<br />years with Brian Clough' is the first book written by one of King Clough's inner circle.Throughout Clough's Nottingham Forest years, Duncan Hamilton was within spitting distance,<br />at first as a sheepish teenage reporter at the City Ground and before long traveling with<br />the players on the team bus and sitting across the desk from the boss every day. This is a riveting tale of how greatness rises and falls, a chronicle of how nagging<br />insecurities and internal weaknesses eventually conquering a publicly swaggering genius.<br />Touching and eloquently written, 'Provided You Don't Kiss Me' is Clough in close-up - a<br />painfully honest, word-for-word, as-it-happened history of an amazing man at his best and<br />worst.Anyone who remembers Clough should read this book, and anyone who doesn't too - for he was<br />one of the true characters of the English game.Every chapter reveals extraordinary incidents - vignettes of Clough's coaching genius, his<br />myriad eccentricities, moments of human pathos, drink-fuelled rages, bitter rants and<br />quarrels, or acts of family love and random kindness.While accepting the enigma of Clough will endure, Hamilton has probably come closer than<br />anyone ever will to distilling a remarkable football coach and unforgettable man.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Garrincha: The Triumph and Tragedy of Brazil's Forgotten Footballing HeroRuy Castro; Translated by Andrew Downie<br />ISBN: 0224064320Yellow Jersey Press; Paperback, 436pp<br />The 'little bird' won the World Cup in 1958, was the star of the 1962 Finals, scored 232<br />league goals and is considered by many Brazilians to be greater than Pelé. Yet his name<br />and fame were largely forgotten once television arrived and Ruy Castro has written an<br />important book to revive his reputation.Garrincha was a fine player indeed but that was nothing compared to what he did off-field.<br />To call his life a rollercoaster would be an understatement. Having grown up in rural<br />poverty he moved to the big city of Rio to become a footballer but never grew up. His life<br />involved a legion of lovers and numerous children, grinding poverty and fabulous riches,<br />astounding fame, success, addiction and finally tragedy. In comparison George Best has led<br />a quiet life.That Garrincha's sublime skill and remarkable story have been forgotten is wrong and this<br />meticulously researched book, charming and astounding throughout in equal measure, has<br />pleasingly set the record straight. A great tale about an exceptional human being.<br />Sean O'Conor<br />* USA currently only stocks the Portuguese language edition<br /><br /> Fever PitchNick Hornby<br />ISBN: 0140293442Penguin; Paperback, 256pp<br />You must've seen the movie, you must've read the book, he's a mellow yellow feline,well,<br />two of these lines apply to Hornby's Fever Pitch, still more than very probably the<br />world's most famous football book over ten years after its publication. Seen the film?<br />Haven't read the book? If not, why not and if yes, well it's about time you read it again.<br />Don't like football? Doesn't matter, read the thing anyway. A book not just about football<br />for football fans, but about obsession, about a burning, inexplicable (I mean I could<br />understand it with the Mighty Boro, but Arsenal,) passion and where it drags the author<br />over the years from his childhood in the sixties and seventies through to his continuing<br />childhood in the early nineties. Often hilarious, always engaging and well written, Fever<br />Pitch is Hornby's attempt at making sense of his obsession, to put it into perspective in<br />the grand scheme of things and maybe help people on the outside of this phenomenon to<br />understand somehow. But of course there is no sense to be made of it, it just happens, it<br />just is, and that's what makes it so interesting, so funny and a bloody good read.<br />Paul Robinson<br /><br /> When Beckham Went to Spain: Power, Stardom and Real Madrid Jimmy Burns<br />ISBN: 0718147472Paperback, 272ppMichael Joseph<br />The prospect of another hagiography of Goldenballs would sink the hearts of all but the<br />starry-eyed teenager, but this one is different. What makes this worth reading is the fact<br />that Becks' celebrity circus has touched down in Spain, a country a world away from<br />England, and specifically at Real Madrid, a galaxy away from Manchester United. In fact,<br />those of us jaded by the prospect of more Beckhamology will be pleasantly surprised by the<br />fact Jimmy Burns largely ignores him.Few are better qualified to write this tale than Burns. The author is half Spanish, grew<br />up in Madrid and has published a guide to Spanish literature as well as working for the<br />FT, BBC & The Economist amongst others. His two football works, 'Barça – A People's<br />Passion' and 'Hand of God - The Life of Diego Maradona' were top-drawer football texts and<br />not Harry Harris-style sycophantic potboilers. The book weaves between Beckham's celebrity<br />and Spain's story of Franco, Catalonia, corridas, cojones and futebol. Beckham comes across as a tool for Real, a man of little intrinsic substance who will<br />ultimately not amount to much. We learn little here we do not already know about<br />Goldenballs and there is more evidence that the end of his Real days will come to pass<br />thanks to the increasingly destructive provincial mindset and xenophobic tantrums of his<br />far from 'posh' wife Victoria.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Pyramid Football Guide To Non-League 2004-5Joe Bush (Editor)<br />ISBN: 0954346653Paperback, 190ppIBS Publishing<br />If you have yet to savour the delights of English lower league football, then what sublime<br />pleasures and delights await you: For here beats the true heart of English football with<br />its die-hard fans who wouldn't swap it for the Premiership any day. For the uninitiated,<br />there is no better starting-point than the Pyramid Football Guide to Non-League 2004-05, a<br />superb 200-page glossy guide to the teams and competitions below England's four full-time<br />professional divisions. Here you will find the Blyth Spartans, Hickley Towns and Leigh<br />RMIs of this world; as the cover says, “local clubs for local people”. There are six<br />divisions covered, plus resumes of all the major competitions, useful local information<br />and excellent directions for finding the stadia, never an easy task at this level! In the<br />introduction, editor Joe Bush rightly mentions the “value, history and unique nature” of<br />this level of football, “a culture”, he continues, “that you would struggle to find<br />anywhere else in the world and whose praises we should all be keen to sing.”<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Morbo: The Story of Spanish FootballPhil Ball<br />ISBN: 0954013468 Paperback, 256ppWSC Books<br />Having emerged from Serie A's shadow in the late 1990s, La Liga is Europe's No.1<br />destination right now with Real Madrid's Galacticos, Beckham and all, and a<br />Ronaldinho-inspired Barcelona at the helm of a new golden age of Spanish football.In this superb guide, Phil Ball really gets under the skin of el fútbol, tracking it from<br />its origins in the dusty town of Huelva in the 1880s to the Bernabeu and Nou Camp of today<br />via the fierce local pride of teams such as Athletic Bilbao, Valencia and Deportivo La<br />Coruña and the sorry saga of a national team that never delivers. As much a cultural history of modern Spain as a guide to its football, Ball proves that<br />the two in this case are one and the same.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Flick-to-kick: An Illustrated History of SubbuteoDaniel Tatarsky<br />ISBN: 0752860836112 pp<br />Ah, Subbuteo – the flicking of little figures around a crumpling sheet of green baize that<br />boys young and old recall so fondly. In the now forgotten age before computers, Subbuteo<br />was the closest approximation to soccer to be found in a game format and could also be<br />played alone, allowing the fan to indulge his own fantasies based on the beautiful game.<br />Everyone who was into football at school, it seemed, owned a Subbuteo set.This charming book, great value in hardback at £7.99 and wonderfully illustrated, retells<br />the history of this curious game. For so long a cottage industry of hand-painted<br />figurines, Subbuteo (Latin for 'hobby') was started in 1947 by a Kent man more interested<br />in ornithology than football who deliberately sited new factories in areas good for<br />bird-watching. As well as historical nuggets such as the police investigating the company over the theft<br />of the World Cup in 1966, there is plenty on those eccentric accessories plus its<br />lesser-known editions, which included speedway, angling and snooker! When its makers<br />announced in 2000 it was to be withdrawn there was an outpouring of piqued nostalgia, and<br />they were forced to retract. As the author triumphantly concludes, “As long as the game of<br />football is played I believe so will the game of Subbuteo”.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> The Fashion Of Football: Soccer From Best To Beckham, From Mod To Label SlavePaolo Hewitt & Mark Baxter<br />ISBN: 1840188073224 pp<br />Music and style journalist Paolo Hewitt and friend Mark Baxter decided to chart a<br />neglected theme running through modern football history: The clothes. From the wildly<br />dressed George Best in the swinging sixties to the Armani-ed Premiership boys of today,<br />sartorial style has accompanied footballers in England. And running parallel to the<br />players' styles is the story of the fans' attire. The Fred Perry and Tacchini tops of the<br />1970s through the 'casual' looks of the eighties to today's Stone Island-clad lads is an<br />equally important part of England's football culture that completes the picture of<br />football culture. But this is as much a book about style and youth culture itself than its<br />football-related history, written in a free and unchained style, where Soho's Bar Italia<br />rubs shoulders with 1960s London boutiques, '70s mods, Rodney Marsh and David Beckham.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Those Feet - A Sensual History of English FootballDavid Winner<br />ISBN: 0747547386288 pp<br />In a follow up to the magnificent “Brilliant Orange - The Neurotic Genius of Dutch<br />Football”, David Winner tackles the kaleidoscopic character of the English game, a far<br />from easy task.His excellent opening chapter on the Victorian origins of football is enough to shock<br />readers expecting a conventional narrative as it postulates the thesis that the aggressive<br />English style is a direct consequence of a long-held national angst about masturbation.Winner bravely tries to cover all bases in his psycho-analytical overview of the national<br />game. Other chapters address nostalgia, xenophobia, the weather, pessimism and the loose<br />concept of 'Englishness' forged in our imperial heyday. Whilst it is easy to pick holes in<br />many of Winner's ideas, at the same time books of this type have elevated football<br />literature to levels that would have been unthinkable twenty years ago.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Ajax, the Dutch, the War - Football in Europe During The Second World WarSimon Kuper<br />ISBN: 0752842749256 pp<br />Simon Kuper's second book after "Football Against the Enemy", a collection of intelligent<br />football essays that won the William Hill Sports Book of The Year Award is a heartfelt<br />study of football amidst society in World War Two. Kuper himself is a Jew who grew up in<br />Holland loving football and imbibing the national myth of the Netherlands as a beacon of<br />tolerance. In this book he shines an uncomfortable light on the truth of Dutch's less than<br />stellar war record - more Jews were deported per capita than in any nation outside Germany<br />whilst millions stood by and did nothing, all set alongside the parallel world of Ajax,<br />the 'Jewish club' of Amsterdam, who lost one of their players, Eddie Hamel, to the gas<br />chambers. A well-written and engrossing read that crosses the boundaries of sport, history<br />and politics.<br />Sean O'Conor<br /><br /> Woody & Nord: A Football FriendshipGareth Southgate & Andy Woodman<br />ISBN: 0141012145Paperback, 304ppPenguin<br />Woody & Nord tells the story of 2 very close friends - Gareth Southgate & Andy Woodman -<br />who met and became the best of friends as young, wide eyed apprentices dreaming of the<br />future at Crystal Palace, their contrasting career paths at different ends of the<br />professional football spectrum and the lasting bond of friendship between them. The book is a refreshing take on the footballer autobiography/ghost writer format,<br />providing an interesting look into the workings of the mysterious world of professional<br />football at the highest and lowest levels. Gareth with Aston Villa, Middlesbrough and<br />England while Andy struggles to earn a living in the lower leagues and stay in<br />professional football as long as possible - Southgate's search for professional fulfilment<br />versus Andy's fight for mere financial survival.The book does, especially towards the beginning, seem like it might become a tad too<br />sentimental any time soon, though they manage to veer away from that path in the nick of<br />time to make a very interesting and entertaining read, one of best football biographies,<br />and certainly the best autobiography (if you forget about the ever present lovely<br />assistant) out there at the moment.The one thing that appears to have remained constant throughout both players' turbulent<br />careers is their friendship, but this aspect isn't excessively pushed on the reader, it is<br />simply an onrunning thread that is worked quite subtly into the text, providing a link<br />between what are, on the surface, two very different footballing characters and careers<br />and giving an extra perspective on events. Don't worry, it doesn't become a full on<br />heartwarming Nick Hornby affair that it has the potential to do, but instead makes a much<br />more interesting propositon of each player's individual biography. Gareth himself admits<br />that his and Woody's own separate autobiographies would hardly have anyone but their most<br />diehard (Are there any of you out there?) fans waiting with baited breath. Both players manage very well to give a thoughtful, informed analysis of football's<br />disappointments, disillusionment and triumphs and the similarities and differences of very<br />different levels of the game through their own experiences, being two players who are very<br />much at critical points in their lives. They both have lot of serious thinking to do about<br />their futures making it the ideal time to look back.<br />Paul Robinson<br /><br /> The Best of Enemies: England v. Germany, a Century of Football Rivalry David Downing<br />ISBN: 0747549788Hardcover, 251pp<br />Downing's book is a fascinating and thoughtful look at one of football's most exciting/<br />passionate/ dull/ controversial/ over-rated (delete as you see fit) clashes - the England<br />vs Germany match. Downing examines England-Germany games at both international and club<br />level - the triumphs, the failures and the (gulp, swallow the pride and whisperingly admit<br />it) far too regular mediocrity of arguably the most eagerly awaited event in any English<br />football calendar - from their very first meeting in the death throes of the nineteenth<br />century up until the Euro 2000 group stage meeting in Charleroi. As an historian and football fan, he brings the best of both worlds together in writing<br />this book, giving us history without sterility and managing to conveying the excitement<br />and passion of the beautiful game without coming across as just another overzealous fan.<br />England & Germany meetings over the years are recounted in a refreshingly objective way;<br />accounts are presented from numerous sources from both sides of the divide and subtly<br />peppered with his own comment. The best way to put it might be that it's like the story's<br />told by a very knowledgeable bloke in the pub but without the droning on, repetition,<br />off-track ramblings or spit flying into your pint. And you can easily get away from it if you want. Downing writes about the actual football<br />in tandem with the games' social and political background, painting a vivid picture of the<br />times in which they were played and their importance (or lack of it). We go from the first<br />ever meeting with "youngish, fit-looking men" reading about the developments in the Boer<br />war as they travel to Berlin by a combination of train, horse-drawn cabs and foot, through<br />the "shameful salute", the world wars and the English-German sentiments left in their wake<br />and, of course, 1966 to the tabloid frenzies and penalty shootout disappointments of<br />recent years. It all adds up to give a fuller understanding of these games' effect on each<br />nation's psyche as well as being an utterly entertaining, revealing and often piss-funny<br />read. Stereotypes and the perceived differences of the two nations are presented and<br />deconstructed and, maybe surprisingly for some, a hell of a lot of similarities are<br />revealed (possibly the source of a lot of England-German animosity, but that's by the<br />bye). The Best of Enemies is a great book that manages to provide everything that a lot of books<br />try and fail to - it's got heroes, villains, highs, lows, cry-babies, bad losers,<br />blinkered idiots, inspirational mavericks, unsung heroes - and all with the added bonus of<br />being true! And about football! Woohoo!<br />Paul Robinson<br /><br /> Referee: A Year in the Life of David EllerayDavid Elleray<br />ISBN: 0747536929Hardcover, 256pp<br />Take a little trip down memory lane to the 1997-98 season and peek into the diary of one<br />of football's most respected and thus, on more than the odd occasion, hated professional<br />men in black (green/blue/yellow - delete as applicable). In "Referee: A year in the life»"<br />posh nob David Elleray gives a day to day account of refereeing at the highest level,<br />juggling the life of a Premiership match official with that of a Harrow Housemaster with<br />all the stress and reward that entails. Due to the diary format it occasionally gets<br />bogged down in the minutiae of daily affairs but the account gains momentum as the season<br />progresses and we follow Mr. Elleray to such far flung locations as Saudi Arabia, Brazil<br />and Keele University as well as all the usual Premier League haunts, ending with his<br />appraisal of the 1998 World Cup as viewed from the eyes of a referee who was unfortunately<br />unable to participate. It's an eye opener to see what a referee has to cope with when not<br />being screamed at and abused by all and sundry on a Saturday afternoon and may even,<br />horror of horrors, evoke a little sympathy in some football fans. Of course, not only the<br />pressures and the pitfalls of refereeing are covered here, but also the praise and reward<br />that comes from being one of the most respected figures in football, not just from the<br />powers that be but from fans too. Mr Elleray comes across as a serious professional whose<br />heart belongs to the game, though it causes no end of conflict with other aspects of his<br />life while at the same time providing him with life-affirming experiences that would be so<br />difficult to give up. Mr Elleray said in one TV interview, "The challenge was to say<br />something interesting without being too controversial", and that is what he has managed to<br />do here - there is a little bit of bitching and a good dose of personal opinion thrown in,<br />but nothing that could cause him grief in future seasons. An essential read for anyone who<br />has realised that they may never score for England and is thinking of refereeing seriously<br />and a good holiday read for fans of the game generally - no matter what your opinion of<br />the blokes with the cards. Even Mackems can find solace in Elleray's words and convince<br />themselves that the Stadium of Light is indeed one of the games "great footballing<br />cathedrals".<br />Paul Robinson<br /><br /> Among The ThugsBill Buford<br />ISBN: 0099416344Paperback, 316pp<br />Classic and often comic must-read account of American journalist meets British football<br />hooligans in the 1980s and 1990s. Ex-Granta editor Bill Buford begins his epic journey to<br />the ugly heart of fan violence with Manchester United in Turin in 1984 and the book<br />reaches a personal, painful climax with England in Sardinia at Italia 90. In a series of<br />thrilling narratives describing his dark odyssey of discovery into football mob violence,<br />Buford takes us along to comprehend the attraction and ultimate repulsion of that<br />oft-repeated euphemism 'crowd trouble'.If you only ever read one book about football this should be it.<br /><br /> England's Quest for the World Cup: A Complete Record 1950-2002, Third EditionClive Leatherdale<br />ISBN: 1874287619Paperback, 334pp<br />The FA's aloofness and wariness of 'Johnny-foreigner' kept England out of the first three<br />FIFA World Cups. Leatherdale's absorbing book kicks off in 1950 when the Home<br />Internationals were first used as World Cup qualifiers and Scotland declined to go to<br />Brazil in 1950 as 'runners-up'. Every subsequent England qualifying game and World Cup<br />match comes complete with a detailed and compelling match report and full statistics,<br />scorers and attendance. The strengths of the book lie in Leatherdale's precise and fluent<br />prose, which never lapses into any glorification of England's checkered history in the<br />competition and the intriguing subplot of England's continuing failure to adapt their<br />football for success on foreign fields.The appendix has a complete list of England's World Cup goal scorers, goalkeepers,<br />captains and records against other teams. The statistics reveal England have never beaten<br />Brazil in a World Cup game and the book as a whole reveals many of the reasons why.<br /><br /> World Cup Panini Collections 1970-1998Hardback, 290x230, 472 pages, full colour throughout.<br />The best-selling book on Soccerphile in 2002 and deservedly so!A superb and nostalgic collection of Panini stickers and cards of all the teams and<br />players from the 1970 World Cup in Mexico up to France 1998.Includes the official World Cup logos and posters. A true collector's item.The Italian company may have temporarily suspended sale of their stickers as a protest<br />against Italy's elimination in Korea, but don't miss out on this.<br />This book is available on Bol 's Italian site - search for "World Cup Panini".<br /> Ultra Nippon: How Japan Reinvented FootballJonathan Birchall<br />Paperback - 249 pages including 8 pages of b/w images.This edition 1 March, 2001ISBN: 0747264090<br />A forerunner of English language writing on Japanese football, BBC correspondent Jonathan<br />Birchall spends the 1999-2000 season following Shimizu S-Pulse as they pursue J.League<br />glory under English manager Steve Perryman. Birchall gets to grips with all the<br />now-familiar idiosyncrasies of Japan's football experience: fans who don't fight but sing<br />in unison and clean up after the game, passive players who lack initiative and the<br />strident foreigners struggling to get their message across at any given time, in this case<br />Perryman, Dragan Stojkovic and the 'evil' Dunga.While Birchall's narrative about Shimizu's ultimately frustrating season in particular and<br />the early years of the J.League in general is interesting enough, the author can't resist<br />telling us into the bargain what an odd place Japan appears to bemused Western<br />journalists. So be prepared for a few chortles at the expense of the usual targets -<br />salaryman suicides, fuzzed out pornography and space age vending machines selling sex<br />aids. Still Ultra-Nippon is a good place to start on Japanese football as the genre grows<br />after the World Cup.<br /><br /> Japanese Rules: Japan & The Beautiful Gameby Sebastian Moffett<br />Paperback - 232 pages (2 May, 2002)Yellow Jersey Press;ISBN: 0224062050<br />It is a somewhat brave move to release a book on Japanese football without covering World<br />Cup 2002, but for Moffett, the interest lies in the working week that made the big party<br />possible. Before Japan was ready to host the world's largest sporting event, football had<br />to be procured, promoted and popularised in a country that was, in many ways, unsuited to<br />the world's favourite sport. Japanese Rules tells us how the explosive but short-lived<br />boom for football came about and how the J-League stuttered along until the big event with<br />both the objective viewpoint of an anthropologist and the close focus of a documentary<br />maker. The stories of Japanese organisers, players and fans looking abroad for inspiration<br />and of foreigners coming to Japan and overcoming cultural obstacles tell the story of<br />Japan's love-hate relationship with the outside world in microcosm. So Japanese Rules is<br />not thin on historical, economic and cultural context, all essential for understanding any<br />phenomenon of modern Japan. Moffett, a long-term resident of Japan, was clearly following<br />events closely at the time which also gives his tightly-written prose vivid colour. His<br />match reports are filled with tension and there are moments in this book that are truly<br />moving, such as the account of Gary Lineker's last game for Grampus 8 - a must read for<br />any fans still smarting over that Graham Taylor substitution. But the real strength of<br />this book is just how much it allows its cast to speak for themselves. Moffett has<br />digested volumes of Japanese football books, news reports and has conducted many of his<br />own interviews of major figures in the football scene. The result is a text littered with<br />well-chosen quotes and revealing facts giving strength to insightful conclusions. This is<br />the definitive article in explaining how soccer secured its foothold in a most unlikely<br />corner of the world.<br />Will Yong<br /><br /> Tor! The Story Of German FootballUli Hesse-Lichtenberger<br />ISBN: 095401345XWSC Bookspp 304<br />“Tor! The Story of German Football”- is a fascinating account of the game in Germany: its<br />roots in the athletic clubs of the eighteenth century; World War 1; the rise of the Nazis<br />and World War II; the first international successes, especially the surprising win against<br />Hungary in 1954; the subsequent formation of the DFB in West Germany; the game in East<br />Germany; the lows of the 80s; and up to the present state of the game. Written by Dortmund<br />fan Hesse-Lichtenberger, who doesn't shirk passing judgment on those with whom he<br />disagrees or mentioning his own wardrobe of torn jeans, the book also goes into the<br />geo-political reasons for the health or otherwise of German football. Together with the<br />lesser-known figures he mentions, there are all the famous players of the game in Germany:<br />Günther Netzer, Overath, Paul Breitner, Berti Vogts, Uli & Dieter Hoeness, Rudi Völler,<br />Kevin Keegan, Effenberg, Jürgen Klinsmann, Fritz Walter, et al, as well as the five German<br />European Footballers of the Year – Gerd Müller, Franz Beckenbauer, Karl-Heinz Rummenigge,<br />Lothar Matthäus and Matthias Sammer. And the teams: amongst others, Borussia<br />Moenchengladbach, Borussia Dortmund, Werder Bremen, Hamburg, Nuremburg, Fürst,<br />Kaiserslautern, Schalke 04, Köln, Stuttgart, 1860, and, of course, the most powerful,<br />successful and hated team in the land: Bayern Munich.The book successfully manages to put many ill-conceived notions of the nature of German<br />football to bed, such as the aura of invincibility that surrounds it due to consummate<br />professionalism. In fact, the German leagues teams' players were still amateurs when the<br />national team won the World Cup in 1954, and corruption has surfaced periodically in the<br />game.At club level, German teams have not fared as well in European competition as English,<br />Spanish or Italian teams – a point overlooked by Hesse-Lichtenberger. However, it is in the international sphere where Germany has achieved real success, with<br />three World Cup victories to its name, equal to Italy and surpassed only by Brazil. Uli<br />Hesse-Lichtenberger recounts not only the excitement of the wins, but also details such as<br />the tentative national feelings aroused in the post-World War II period. It's a must-read<br />for anyone curious to know the game as it is played in Germany, and would be particularly<br />interesting for those fans planning to watch the upcoming 2006 World Cup in Germany.<br />That's four billion of us, then.<br />Peter Rodd<br /><br /> Dynamo: Defending The Honour Of KievAndy Dougan<br />Paperback - 254 pages (4 March, 2002)Fourth Estate; ISBN: 1841153192<br />This is a book for those interested in the space between football and morality. It's the<br />tale of everyday folk caught by surprise by Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union in June<br />1941. These shocked citizens included footballers, and these in turn included the talented<br />members of the Dynamo Kiev team. How did they react to the Nazi occupation of their<br />homeland? Under what conditions did they live and die? Dynamo starts brightly yet gently<br />with a sentence designed to catch the eye of a publisher: "Valentina and Alexei were very<br />much in love, a blind man on a galloping horse could see that."From this description of a wedding party the story wends its way to a darker, uglier<br />place. Author Andy Dougan seems to be playing the role of a counter-attacking sweeper in<br />his attempt to inform the reader of last thousand years of Ukrainian history whilst<br />blending in the personal tales of the footballers involved, the fear of Stalin's<br />legitimised thugs (the NKVD) and the death and terror brought by the brutal Germans. For<br />those acquainted with John Houston's 1981 film "Victory", in which a group of WWII<br />prisoners of war - including Pele and Mike Summerbee - play a match against the Germans<br />for propaganda purposes, this book will strike a chord.The film is pure invention, but Dynamo describes real matches between subjugated people<br />and the occupying 'master race'. Should the more highly skilled Kiev players let the<br />Germans win the game for fear of the consequences to themselves and the general<br />population; or should they soundly beat them to show they were not cowed? It's an exciting<br />read whether or not you are interested in history or football. Moreover it's a true story.<br />Dougan also has done his homework in refuting the official Stalinist line concerning the<br />events.There are, however, a few annoying features of the book. The Dynamo Kiev goalkeeper, we<br />are told, is not "unbeatable", as though there once existed a player possessing such a<br />quality, which I doubt. And there is a small but unnecessary amount of hyperbole: the same<br />keeper's "..eyes burned with a passion and intensity which spoke of his total love of<br />football" and "..they won the USSR Cup for the first time in 1954 trouncing Ararat<br />Yerevan.." A one-nil "trouncing"?! There is also, and strangely for a history book, no<br />index; and this despite the range of personalities mentioned: from the composer Mussorgsky<br />to the Mongolian Golden Horde, from Nazi film-maker Leni Riefenstahl to AC Milan star<br />striker Andrij Schevchenko. Editing quirks aside, this is a very interesting work that<br />reminds us that these evil happenings occurred only sixty years ago. It begs bigger<br />questions, too. Could the world slip back into the dehumanised chaos of state-sponsored<br />violence? Is the war-peace cycle inevitable? Verdict: one-nil to Andy Dougan.<br />Peter Rodd<br /><br /> Going Oriental: Football After World Cup 2002Edited by Mark Perryman<br />Paperback - 192 pages (30 September, 2002)Mainstream Sport; ISBN: 1840186771<br />From the man behind the "Philosophy Football" range of sporting attire comes a mixed<br />kitbag of writings analysing the multi-faceted fallout from Asia's first World Cup. A<br />major theme is the rehabilitation of Englishness as a result of an unexpectedly<br />trouble-free tournament. The book's title belies the fact that it is less about Japan and<br />Korea than it is about the foreign fans who either visited or stayed at home. Those<br />wishing to gain an insight into Japanese football would do well to pick up copies of<br />either Jonathan Birchall's "Ultra Nippon" or Sebastian Moffett's "Japanese Rules".FIFA corruption also looms large over many of the essays and one good reason to read this<br />book is David Conn's account of how Sepp Blatter got his sticky paws on World Cup 2002 and<br />how his fingerprints have been subsequently removed. What works less well is some<br />unnecessary intellectualising.David Winner's look at the tournament through the prism of Chaos theory is as<br />unenlightening as Wendy Wheeler's utopian argument that football is "a very significant<br />part of, how humans are to manage the complex world in which we now live". Luckily though,<br />most of the articles are immensely readable and all contain thought-provoking angles on<br />the World Cup experience: from home, away, Japan, Korea, heartfelt fandom and cynical<br />commercialism. As long as you don't mind Beckham on one wing and Baudrillard on the other,<br />this is a timely requiem for World Cup 2002 before the ball rolls on to Portugal and<br />Germany.<br />Will Yong<br /><br /> Kicking: Following the Fans into the OrientDavid Willem<br />Paperback - 208 pages (October 2002)Mainstream Sport; ISBN: 1840186232<br />A thick-leafed, deceptively short account of the World Cup through the eyes of an<br />ex-English teacher in Japan. Willem tells of how the World Cup brought foreigners<br />(especially the English) together with the Japanese on something of a cross-cultural first<br />date. One side of this story is the way in which Japan won over its foreign guests with<br />faultless organisation and countless random acts of "kamikaze kindness". In exchange,<br />foreign fans provided entertainment. For the Japanese, the (mostly) good-natured<br />irreverence of their guests constituted part of the World Cup circus. Willem describes<br />many instances of these kinds of cultural exchange with a sharp eye and a keen wit<br />although his photographs of the same are worthless.Willem does not, however, limit himself to "World Cup world" as he calls it. Like many<br />people who have lived in Japan for a couple of years, he has much to say about Japanese<br />culture too. Many digressions are distinctly non-World Cup related but this adds depth to<br />the overall World Cup experience by proxy that reading this book provides. But the<br />sinister turning point is when Willem attends the court hearing of an Ireland fan who runs<br />into trouble with the Japanese police for selling a single ticket. The Kafkaesque<br />machinations of the Japanese legal system shows something of what lay beneath the surface<br />glitter of the World Cup.<br />Will Yong <br /> My Big LilyKeith Norris<br />Paperback - 284 pages (2002)Big Lily Productions; ISBN: 095437620X<br />Husband, father, company man, dog and cat owner, and above all devoted Manchester United<br />fan, Keith Norris is the owner and creator of the eponymous flag Big Lily. Personified<br />throughout the book, Lily has gone on walkabout to Brazil, Spain, Thailand, Japan, Italy<br />and of course, much of England. Norris contends that Lily is 'the biggest Manchester<br />United supporter ever known;' at 100 feet long by 60 feet wide, in one sense he is surely<br />right. Norris has spirited this monster flag literally around the world to Man United<br />matches. In the process, he has been 'befriended' by such luminaries as Roberto Carlos,<br />Raul, and Fernando Hierro not to mention his Japanese wife. Although amusing in places -<br />and very well-meaning - this is a book primarily for FOK (Friends of Keith), diehard Man<br />United fans, or people on a beach with a lot of time on their hands. The book suffers<br />mainly from repetition and an obvious lack of an editor. Had there been fewer pub scenes<br />'having a laugh with' (fill in blank with FOK or footballer) and more on Northern Ireland<br />and the history of Man United (the stronger parts of the book), it would have been a far<br />better read.<br /><br /> Badfellas: FIFA Family at WarJohn Sugden & Alan Tomlinson<br />Paperback - 256 pages (2003)Mainstream Sport; ISBN: 1840186844<br />John Sugden and Alan Tomlison's account of FIFA's misrule of world football is the latest<br />addition to the sizeable collection of books that address sleaze and corruption in the<br />game. As such, it should appeal to anyone who enjoyed, say, David Yallop's 'How They Stole<br />The Game' or, more recently, Tom Bower's 'Broken Dreams'. As an independent, authoritative<br />history of FIFA and insight into the governing body's more illustrious characters,<br />Badfellas cannot be faulted. Tomlinson and Sugden, both professors at the University of<br />Brighton, write clean, measured journalese, while sparing us discussion of the minutiae of<br />FIFA's day-to-day administration. But their central charge, that FIFA's name has been<br />tarnished by a succession of megalomaniacs and creeping commercialism, though articulately<br />made, has been leveled so many times the shock factor has all but disappeared.There are several reasons for this, one of which is that Badfellas is not a new book, but<br />an updated, amended version of the 1999 work 'Great Balls of Fire: How Big Money is<br />Hijacking World Football'. Nevertheless, the new material is at times riveting; Sepp<br />Blatter's controversial reelection as FIFA president at the 2002 Congress in Seoul, the<br />collapse, on his watch, of FIFA's marketing partner ISL, the bidding campaign for the 2002<br />World Cup, and the successes and failures of the tournament itself. Interviews with<br />various FIFA luminaries (not all of them are smug mercenaries, it was pleasing to<br />discover) and first-hand accounts of the unsightly FIFA-corporate love-in that accompanies<br />all major tournament are a joy to read and will raise the hackles of any fan who cares one<br />iota about the game. Elsewhere, all of the familiar episodes in FIFA's Hall of Shame are covered: Sir Stanley<br />Rous's courting of white footballing authorities in apartheid South Africa, the rise and<br />rise of Joao Havelange and the shambolic, though at times brilliantly spun, rise to the<br />top of the Brazilian's prodigy Blatter. Some minor quibbles. The authors' failure to<br />recognize the vast array of sources they must have drawn on to supplement their own<br />interviews and research is poor form given their academic background, and the absence of<br />an index is an irritant in a book of almost 300 pages. The book could also have benefited from a more thorough edit to ensure that the inclusion<br />of recent developments did not sit awkwardly with material written in the late 1990s.<br />Parts of the chapter on the bidding war for last summer's World Cup were written as if the<br />tournament had yet to take place, even though Badfellas was published this year and<br />includes a chapter on Korea/Japan 2002. Early passages give the impression that Havelange<br />is still FIFA president and-god forbid-that Graham Kelly still occupies an office at the<br />English FA. The greed and corruption genus, like that of the hooligan memoir, is in danger<br />of reaching saturation point. For the current penchant for attacking those at the very top<br />of the game's administration to really invigorate football literature, the debate needs to<br />be moved along. Thanks to Sugden, Tomlinson, Bower et al, we now know the nature of the<br />problem and the identities of the chief culprits. So what, as fans, viewers and consumers,<br />are we going to do about them? Merely thinking about that question will prompt inward<br />groans of exasperation. But it needs answering.<br /><br /> She Stood There Laughing: A Man, His Son and Their Football ClubStephen Foster<br />Paperback - 208 pages (2004)Scribner UK; ISBN: 0743256832<br />From their glory days in the 1970s Stoke City fell into the lower leagues of English<br />football in the subsequent two decades, offering little joy to their loyal fans. In the<br />2003-4 season however,with an influx of Icelandic(!) money and backing the team found<br />itself in the First Division. She Stood There Laughing relates the tale of one man's<br />support for his beloved team over the season and his relationship with his son through the<br />medium of football. Unlike many football dads the writer doesn't force his affiliation on<br />his offspring. "It's lifelong pain pain, misery and despair you're looking at here, you<br />know that don't you?" he warns, further complicated by the fact that they live in Norwich<br />some 200 miles away from Stoke. Nevertheless his son agrees to go along for the ride which<br />includes trips to some of the less glamorous venues in England. The book is a reminder<br />that for millions of people the football fan experience is not about following the high<br />flying Man Uniteds and Real Madrids of this world but about devotion to underachieving<br />teams that, at best, offer the possibility of a reasonable cup run or the joyous relief of<br />avoiding relegation. In a kind of low-fi Fever Pitch the writer makes intellectual asides<br />without being pretentious and is often quite funny. A little more background about the<br />local Stoke-Port Vale rivalry might have been helpful for most readers but otherwise She<br />Stands There Laughing is one of the better additions to the 'fanlit' canon.<br />Michael Marshall<br /><br /> No More Buddha, Only FootballChris England<br />Hardback - 352 pages (2003)Hodder & Stoughton; ISBN: 0340825472<br />A late addition to the list of writers and journalists who are paying for their World Cup<br />jaunts by writing a book. Forget the guff on the dust jacket about “reliving the World<br />Cup”, Chris England's enjoyable diary gives us not so much the drama of the tournament as<br />the story of a likeable Englishman re-igniting his passion for the game on very foreign<br />ground. Managing to follow his team all the way to the quarter-final against Brazil, England<br />doesn't make it to Korea, referring to the events over there as “the other World Cup” and<br />like any other fan, his World Cup experience is viewed as much from the sports bar as the<br />stadium. Luckily for England and writers like him, the streets, hotels and watering holes<br />of Japan provide more than enough opportunities for anecdotes and observations. If you were an England fan at the World Cup, England's book reads like the diary you might<br />have written if you had a pen as sharp. You'll find all the encounters with inedible food,<br />hi-tech toilets and excessive politeness that you would expect from a first visit to Japan<br />with enough references to Benny Hill, Carry On and TV snooker to make an Englishman feel<br />at home. For those that didn't make it, it's an enjoyable chronicle of a discerning<br />football fan's first encounter with unfamiliar territory.The title comes from the mispronunciation of “no more borders” by an internationally<br />minded young Japanese and many cultures do appear in England's book -- though always seen<br />through the eyes of the quintessential Englishman. Noisy Americans, Ireland fans and<br />Mexican Wave-ers all find themselves on the receiving end. However, the humour is as<br />consistently warm as England himself is affable and readable. Icy satire is reserved for<br />Sepp Blatter, the Premier League moguls and Rivaldo - just where it's required.<br />Will Yong<br /><br /> Japan, Korea and the 2002 World Cupby John Horne, Wolfram Manzenreiter (Editors).<br />Paperback - 240 pages (2002)London: Routledge; ISBN: 0415275636<br />How did the border-crossing ambitions of Hideyoshi (Toyotomi) in the late-sixteenth<br />century influence whether or not Hidetoshi (Nakata) would be defending the national<br />colours on home turf? Why did it take until 1998 before Japan made an appearance at a<br />World Cup if the game of kickball (kemari) had been around since the sixth century? What's<br />the social movement behind the omnipresent and ever-smiling volunteers active at the<br />diverse venues? What drove the host cities to spend US$2,881 million of taxpayers' money<br />in order to build ten "White Elephants" without even bothering to look at their future<br />beyond the World Cup? John Horne and Wolfram Manzenreiter's "Japan, Korea and the 2002<br />World Cup", which appeared just before last year's finals, provides answers to these and<br />other questions. Thirteen chapters written mainly by academics offer an insightful and<br />detailed analysis of the greater implications of the four-yearly tournament. The volume is<br />organised thematically in four parts. The first part focuses on "the competition behind<br />the competition" and looks at the power struggles surrounding the organisation of the<br />tournament. The four chapters of the second section should appeal most to readers who are<br />interested in the historical development of football and its globalisation process in the<br />host nations. The third part deals with influences of the World Cup on national political<br />economy and civil society, such as its role in the growth of voluntary groups as a new<br />social movement in Japan. The final section looks at the tournament as a mega-event which<br />transforms urban spaces and as a media event with global sociological and commercial<br />implications. One theme the book fails to address thoroughly, however, is fan culture.<br />Shimizu Satoshi's chapter on the Urawa Reds fans provides a glimpse into the different<br />values, meanings and identities attached to football fandom in Japan, but only briefly<br />refers to national fan culture surrounding the national team. The behaviour and appearance<br />of both Japanese and Korean supporters was, from a comparative point of view, one of the<br />most striking features of the past World Cup and deserves further attention. "Japan, Korea<br />and the 2002 World Cup" is in the first place a scholarly publication on sports studies.<br />It is certainly no light poolside reading, but for those willing to make the effort it<br />does provide a deeper understanding into the larger social, economic, political and<br />cultural ramifications of "the people's game" in the two host nations.<br />Bart Gaens<br /><br /> Sexy Footballby Peter Gilmour<br />Paperback - 275 pages (1999)Naked; ISBN: 0953605108<br />Not only do we have to thank Ruud Gullit for coining such a marvelous phrase, but for<br />triggering the thought inside Peter Gilmour's head to write this wonderful book. Sexy<br />Football epitomizes everything a good novel of this genre should be, as too often football<br />novels have failed to deliver. This however is undoubtedly the best since Fever Pitch.<br />From a brilliant first chapter through to the last it is funny, witty, intelligent, and<br />takes you to many unexpected places that will make you laugh, cry and gasp in disbelief. A<br />story that is set around football and the role it plays in the protagonist's life, we also<br />follow him through his sexual rites of passage. Reading with the increased intrigue of a<br />voyeur who thinks they have just witnessed a murder across the street, we see him draw<br />parallels between the two and also how they manage to intertwine themselves to affect his<br />life.Sexy Football is a brilliant read. A must in fact! Regardless of whether you are a fan of<br />the world's greatest game or not, you will love it.<br />Paul Harvey<br />Publisher Comments<br />"Tedy gives you something to believe in. Whether we're winning or losing, he holds his<br />head high, and he knows himself and handles himself so well, others can't help but follow<br />him. The way he practices and plays forces you to become a better teammate, read more>>><br />War Without Death: A Year Of Extreme Competition In Pro Football's Nfc Eastby Maske, Mark$25.95 Sports - Football Noted Washington Post sports reporter and columnist Mark Maske has written the Moneyball<br />of professional football, a behind-the-scenes account of a year in the life of the on- and<br />off-field competition between four of the NFL's bitterest rivals: th, read more>>><br /> <br /> <br />Wins, Losses, And Lessonsby Holtz, Lou$14.95 Sports - Football Secure ShoppingAdd to Cart Publisher Comments<br />"When I die and people realize that I will not be resurrected in three days, they will<br />forget me. That is the way it should be. For reasons known only to God, I was asked to<br />write an autobiography. Most people who knew me growing up didn't think I would ever r,<br />read more>>><br /> <br />Additional Featured TitlesAdventure LiteratureAuto RacingBaseballBasketballBicyclingFishingFlyfishingFootballGolfHikingHuntingNautical LiteratureRunningSailingSoccerSurvival Skills<br />2007 Nfl Record & Fact Bookby Nfl (edt)$17.95 Brand Nfl: Making And Selling America's Favorite Sportby Oriard, Michael$29.95 Fantasy Football For Dummiesby Signore, Martin$16.99 Hurricane Season : A Coach, A Team And Their Triumph In The Time Of Katrinaby Thompson, Neal$26.00</p><p align="center"><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.enterbet.com/"><em><strong><span style="font-size:180%;">http://www.enterbet.com</span></strong></em></a></p><p align="center"> </p><p align="center"> </p><ul><li><div align="left">Sports Football, shop for Football Books, Books Compare products, compare prices,<br />read reviews , the web for Football Books.</div></li><li><div align="left">Books on football, reviews, FIFA, non-league, European football, good football book to<br />read. reviews some of our favourite books. </div></li><li><div align="left">Sports and fitness information, including, Football. 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