20120625

This week's bestselling sports books


TODAY'S TOP TEN BESTSELLING SPORTS BOOKS


Click on the title or picture link to buy



1 -- A Weight Off My Mind: My Autobiography



Author: Richard Hughes
Published by: Racing Post Books

Richard Hughes is not only one of horseracing's most successful and talented riders but also one of sport's most unlikely success stories. In this frank autobiography, Hughes describes with stark honesty the battle he had to wage with his body and mind to become a top rider. Too tall and heavy to be a jockey but too talented a horseman to be anything else, Hughes offers insights into the life of a top jockey, and the personal story of his descent into prolonged and deep alcoholism, from the perspective of seven years' sobriety. Shocking but also uplifting, A Weight Off My Mind is the engrossing story of a man who has overcome extreme personal trauma to become a racing superstar. For fans of racing and readers new to the sport, it offers a turbulent ride.


2 -- Tuffers' Cricket Tales



Author: Phil Tufnell
Published by: Headline

Phil Tufnell used to be known as The Cat for his fondness for dressing room naps, when not sneaking off for a crafty cigarette. These and other examples of an unorthodox approach to cricket turned him into a cult figure as a spin bowler for Middlesex and England. Now more commonly referred to as Tuffers, he has developed a second career as a broadcaster and reality show contestant.  "Tuffers' Cricket Tales" is a deliciously eccentric collection of his favourite cricket stories, featuring a cast of colourful characters he has encountered in dressing-rooms and commentary boxes and who have provided him with dozens of entertaining and insightful anecdotes, told with warmth and humour.


3 -- London 2012 Olympic Games: The Official Book



Author: The Press Association
Published by: Carlton Books Ltd

A stunning illustrated guide to the world's greatest sporting event and essential reading for sports fans everywhere. Packed with glorious photography and expert analysis of the star athletes and their prospects at the Games, written by the specialist journalists of the Press Association, the UK's leading national news agency. An authoritative and comprehensive preview of the 30th Olympiad, featuring a guide to each of the Olympic Games sports and venues, a brief history of the Games and the full competition schedule, so that you won't miss a moment, whether you are watching live in London or from the comfort of your own living room.


4 -- Bounce: The Myth of Talent and the Power of Practice



Author: Matthew Syed
Published by: Fourth Estate

Matthew Syed, Times sports writer and former international table-tennis champion (after many hours of practice) explores the true nature of talent and attempts to reveal what really makes a champion, debunking the myths that we can be born brilliant and that genetic make-up and social background matter.  World record triple jumper Jonathan Edwards says: 'Intellectually stimulating and hugely enjoyable at a stroke… challenged some of my most cherished beliefs about life and success.’


5 -- Be Careful What You Wish For



Author: Simon Jordan
Published by: Yellow Jersey

Simon Jordan loved Crystal Palace. He grew up a stone's throw from Selhurst Park and his father was on the club's books.  Simon was not a footballer but his success in the mobile phone business enabled him to have a lifestyle all but the highest paid players would envy: 18 cars, six homes, a private jet on lease, a £2.5 million boat, a permanent suite at the Grosvenor House Hotel and the wherewithal to spend £100,000 on living costs.  Then he decided he would buy Crystal Palace.  Ten years later the bulk of his fortune was gone.   Be Careful What You Wish For lifts the lid on Jordan's story and how he discovered a world where hopes and aspirations sit alongside greed, self-interest, overpriced players, dodgy transfers and top-level incompetence. He doesn't hold back.


6 -- How to Watch the Olympics



Authors: David Goldblatt and Johnny Acton
Published by: Profile Books

David Goldblatt, author of the acclaimed football history The Ball is Round, teamed up with writer and former Times obituarist Johnny Acton to compile the perfect book for anyone looking for an armchair companion for London 2012, How to Watch the Olympics will guide them through every event, explaining taekwondo repechages and who's big in handball with equal attention to detail as the track and field events that make the headlines.  With a chapter on each of the 26 Olympic sports, Goldblatt and Acton explain both the basic rules and the finer points from archery to wrestling by means of witty, insightful prose and clever diagrams and historical background so that even Greco-Roman wrestling need not be a mystery.


7 -- Born to Run: The Hidden Tribe, the Ultra-Runners, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen



Author: Christopher McDougall
Published by: Profile Books

How an American former war correspondent with a love of running discovered a remote Mexican tribe, the Tarahumara, whose frugal, healthy diet was undermined somewhat by a love of grain alcohol but who achieved longevity through running extreme distances, barefoot, without the need for training schedules or recovery regimes. He finds them to be capable of running as fast and as far as the best prepared, most finely tuned marathon runners of the developed world and dreams of seeing them compete in the ‘greatest race’ of the title.


8 -- Racing Through the Dark: The Fall and Rise of David Millar



Author: David Millar
Published by: Orion

A compelling and at times harrowing account of cycling champion David Millar's fall into the murky world of doping. Banned for two years after being arrested in 2004 and admitting that he had taken the blood-boosting hormone, Erythropoietin -- better known as EPO -- Millar returned to racing and rebuilt his career, determined not only to compete without the aid of performance-enhancing drugs but to campaign against them.  In a powerful narrative, Millar describes the complexity of the circumstances in which he allowed himself to be drawn into the doping culture and offers considerable insight how drugs turned his sport rotten in a way that surpassed even the incidence of cheating in athletics.


9 -- The Big Miss: My Years Coaching Tiger Woods



Author: Hank Haney
Published by: Crown Archetypes

Hank Haney was swing coach to Tiger Woods for six years until their relationship broke down acrimoniously in 2010. During those years the supremely gifted golfer collected six major championships only to fall from grace over a series of scandals in his personal life.  Haney had the chance to observe Woods in nearly every circumstance: at tournaments, on the practice range, over meals, with his wife, Elin, and relaxing with friends. This is his candid account of what he saw.


10 - Merckx: Half Man, Half Bike



Author: William Fotheringham
Published by: Yellow Jersey

It says something about Eddy Merckx that Lance Armstrong, who won the Tour de France a record seven times, amassed fewer than a hundred career victories compared with 445 by the obsessive Belgian in professional races alone. His career brought outstanding success but also personal tragedy, horrific injury and a doping controversy, and masked a surprising level of insecurity. William Fotheringham, the Guardian cycling writer, speaks to those who watched and knew Merckx to produce the definitive biography.

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20120618

Engage: the moving story of paralysed rugby player Matt Hampson is sports book of the year


Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson, written by award-winning journalist Paul Kimmage and published by Simon & Schuster, has been named as the British Sports Book Awards overall 'Sports Book of the Year' for 2012 after a public online vote. 

Sports book fans were invited to name their favourite from the winning titles in each category from the British Sports Book Awards.

Engage, deemed by the awards judges to be the best biography of the year at last month's British Sports Book Awards ceremony at the Savoy Hotel in London, tells the moving story of Matt Hampson, a promising young rugby player who was paralysed from the neck down after an accident in an England training session.

Remarkably, Hampson has adjusted with enormous courage to a limited everyday life.  He is constantly attached to breathing equipment because the damage to his body left him unable to inflate and deflate his lungs unaided yet attended the awards dinner alongside Kimmage.

Mick Dennis, who chaired the BSBA biography judges, commented: "At the heart of Engage is a remarkable and inspiring story. You have to overcome that thought of 'do I really want to read that?'. Yes, you do! It’s outstandingly written and a life affirming book."

Kimmage, the former professional cyclist and a past winner of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year, said that writing Engage was "easily the most difficult thing I’ve ever done but also the most satisfying.

"It’s a great honour to win from such a strong shortlist of books but the real buzz is being able to share this award with Matt, a great friend and the most courageous and inspiring person I’ve ever met.”

Hampson himself commented: “The response we have received from all walks of life since the release of Engage has been overwhelming. We are delighted to receive this award, especially as it was voted for by the general public. Paul and I hope Engage will continue to inspire and touch many more people.”

Matt Hampson now works to offer help, advice and support to the victims of serious injury and disability, in particular in a sports context, through his charity The Matt Hampson Foundation.  To learn more or make a donation, visit www.matthampsonfoundation.org

All the category winners from the 2012 British Sports Book Awards, which celebrates its 10th anniversary this year, are described on this page, in the right-hand column.

To buy:


Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson by Paul Kimmage published by Simon & Schuster is out now in paperback and available to download as an ebook.



Read more about Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson.

Books by Paul Kimmage

20120605

This week's bestsellers in sports books


TODAY'S TOP SELLING SPORTS BOOKS



Click on the title or picture link to buy


1 - Be Careful What You Wish For



Author: Simon Jordan
Published by: Yellow Jersey

Simon Jordan loved Crystal Palace. He grew up a stone's throw from Selhurst Park and his father was on the club's books.  Simon was not a footballer but his success in the mobile phone business enabled him to have a lifestyle all but the highest paid players would envy: 18 cars, six homes, a private jet on lease, a £2.5 million boat, a permanent suite at the Grosvenor House Hotel and the wherewithal to spend £100,000 on living costs.  Then he decided he would buy Crystal Palace.  Ten years later the bulk of his fortune was gone.   Be Careful What You Wish For lifts the lid on Jordan's story and how he discovered a world where hopes and aspirations sit alongside greed, self-interest, overpriced players, dodgy transfers and top-level incompetence. He doesn't hold back.



2 -- London 2012 Olympic Games: The Official Book



Author: The Press Association
Published by: Carlton Books

A stunning illustrated guide to the world's greatest sporting event and essential reading for sports fans everywhere. Packed with glorious photography and expert analysis of the star athletes and their prospects at the Games, written by the specialist journalists of the Press Association, the UK's leading national news agency. An authoritative and comprehensive preview of the 30th Olympiad, featuring a guide to each of the Olympic Games sports and venues, a brief history of the Games and the full competition schedule, so that you won't miss a moment, whether you are watching live in London or from the comfort of your own living room.



3 - Born to Run: The Hidden Tribe, the Ultra-Runners, and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen



Author: Christopher McDougall
Published by: Profile Books

How an American former war correspondent with a love of running discovered a remote Mexican tribe, the Tarahumara, whose frugal, healthy diet was undermined somewhat by a love of grain alcohol but who achieved longevity through running extreme distances, barefoot, without the need for training schedules or recovery regimes. He finds them to be capable of running as fast and as far as the best prepared, most finely tuned marathon runners of the developed world and dreams of seeing them compete in the ‘greatest race’ of the title.



4 - Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2012



Editor: Lawrence Booth
Published by: John Wisden & Co Ltd

First published in 1864 and probably the world’s most famous sports book, Wisden Cricketers' Almanack has been in the hands for the first time of Lawrence Booth, the Daily Mail and former Guardian cricket writer who is its 16th editor. The 149th edition contains everything its readers have come to expect -- coverage of every first-class game in every cricket nation, reports and scorecards for all Tests and ODIs, the Cricketers of the Year awards and some of the finest cricket writing, its trenchant tone set by the Notes by the Editor.



5 -- Tuffers' Cricket Tales



Author: Phil Tufnell
Published by: Headline

Phil Tufnell used to be known as The Cat for his fondness for dressing room naps, when not sneaking off for a crafty cigarette. These and other examples of an unorthodox approach to cricket turned him into a cult figure as a spin bowler for Middlesex and England. Now more commonly referred to as Tuffers, he has developed a second career as a broadcaster and reality show contestant.  "Tuffers' Cricket Tales" is a deliciously eccentric collection of his favourite cricket stories, featuring a cast of colourful characters he has encountered in dressing-rooms and commentary boxes and who have provided him with dozens of entertaining and insightful anecdotes, told with warmth and humour.



6 - Inverting the Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics



Author: Jonathan Wilson
Published by: Orion

Perhaps benefiting from the appointment of the cerebral Roy Hodgson as England manager, Jonathan Wilson's history of football tactics has enjoyed a surge of fresh sales.  Despite many diagrams, Inverting the Pyramid rises above mere analysis. Wilson is an entertaining writer with a gift for concise explanation and a clever turn of phrase, as a consequence of which his wide ranging account of the evolution of football tactics -- from the 1-2-7 line-up favoured by England in 1872 to the 4-3-3 favoured by José Mourinho at Chelsea -- is a compelling read.  Dissecting an enormous wealth of material, Wilson will provoke debate and disagreement but it is difficult not to admire the thoroughness of his research.



7 - Bounce: The Myth of Talent and the Power of Practice



Author: Matthew Syed
Published by: Fourth Estate

Matthew Syed, Times sports writer and former international table-tennis champion (after many hours of practice) explores the true nature of talent and attempts to reveal what really makes a champion, debunking the myths that we can be born brilliant and that genetic make-up and social background matter.  World record triple jumper Jonathan Edwards says: 'Intellectually stimulating and hugely enjoyable at a stroke… challenged some of my most cherished beliefs about life and success.’



8 - Strong Woman: Ambition, Grit and a Great Pair of Heels



Author: Karren Brady
Published by: Collins

Karren Brady did not become Britain’s best-known businesswoman by being a pussycat and her autobiography reveals she had a hard-nosed streak even when she was a child. When she entered the world of work, it enabled her to form the partnership with David Sullivan that led her to become managing director of Birmingham City at the age of 23. Lord Sugar, with whom she worked on TV show The Apprentice says: ‘Karren’s story will be an inspiration to women everywhere.’


9 - Her Majesty's Pleasure: How Horseracing Enthrals the Queen


Author: Julian Muscat
Published by:  Racing Post Books

Seldom has a nation's affection for their monarch been voluntarily expressed on such a scale as Britain has witnessed in the last few days, yet few of the Queen's admirers enjoy the privileged position occupied by the racing community, in whose company she is at her most relaxed. A patron of Royal Ascot and the Derby, she enjoys nothing more than 'talking horses' with trainers and jockeys or watching engrossed through her binoculars as a race unfolds. The racing world thus has a unique insight into Her Majesty at leisure. Journalist Julian Muscat has gone behind the scenes, talking to those who look after her own horses and others with whom she is in regular contact to bring to life a beautifully written portrait of the Queen away from the public eye, against the background of the sport she loves.


10 - Born to Ride: The Autobiography of Stephen Roche



Author: Stephen Roche
Published by: Yellow Jersey

On 6 September 1987, the Irishman Stephen Roche touched greatness, winning at the World Cycling Championship in Austria to complete a near-unprecedented 'triple crown' that included against-the-odds triumphs in the same year at the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia.  Roche's victory in Austria confirmed his virtuosity. In Born to Ride, his first full autobiography, Roche uses his best year as the starting point to explore the rest of his life, examining the ups and downs of his time on and off the bike, scrutinising victories, defeats, rivals, serious injury, doping allegations and agonizing family breakdown.  He reveals a character who combines charm and rare, natural talent with an incredible tenacity and determination.

As listed by amazon.co.uk on June 5, 2012

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20120601

New biography puts the fighter Trevor Bailey under the Hill spotlight


NEW CRICKET BOOK




The Valiant Cricketer: The Biography of Trevor Bailey


Author: Alan Hill
Published by: Pitch Publishing

Alan Hill has twice won the prestigious Cricket Society Literary Award for his biographies of the Yorkshiremen, Hedley Verity and Herbert Sutcliffe.  His work also includes portraits of Surrey legends Peter May, Jim Laker, Tony Lock and the Bedser twins, as well as Brian Close, Johnny Wardle, Bill Edrich and Les Ames.

His latest subject is the three-times Ashes winner Trevor Bailey, regarded as second only to Ian Botham among England's premier post-war all-rounders.

A multi-talented sportsman, a schoolboy prodigy at Dulwich College, Bailey won cricket and soccer blues at Cambridge University and an FA Amateur Cup winners medal with Walthamstow in 1951-2.

He was regarded as a fighter, a loyalist who served England and Essex, his home county, particularly well in a crisis. He was at his most competitive when tensions ran high, as was emphasised in one of the most celebrated rearguard actions against Australia at Lord's in 1953, alongside another footballer-cricketer, Willie Watson. Bailey's role in regaining the Ashes was acknowledged when he headed a national newspaper poll to name the most influential player in the series.

He played in 61 Tests and was only the second Englishman after Wilfred Rhodes to score 2000 runs and take 100 wickets. In retirement, he forged a broadcasting career as a member of the BBC's Test Match Special team.

Alan Hill is a senior member of the Cricket Writers' Club and his other affiliations include membership of the MCC and the Masters Club at the Oval.

Buy The Valiant Cricketer: The Biography of Trevor Bailey direct from amazon.co.uk