20120529

From Tuffers to Hobbs via Fletcher and Flower: the latest in cricket books


NEW IN CRICKET BOOKS



The Sports Bookshelf spotlights a selection of new cricket books published during the last month.


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.



The Plan: How Fletcher and Flower Transformed English Cricket


Author: Steve James
Published by: Bantam Press

In 1999, after losing a home series to a modest New Zealand team, England were bottom of the world Test rankings, below even Zimbabwe. Yet only just over a decade later, England had reached the top in a transformation driven largely by two men, the coaches Duncan Fletcher and Andy Flower, both of who, ironically, emerged from cricket in Zimbabwe.  Journalist and former England batsman Steve James tells the story of the renaissance of English cricket from a unique perspective, as the former batting partner of ECB managing director Hugh Morris, a player under Fletcher at Glamorgan and Flower's closest confidant in the press corps. It is the tale of a refusal to be second best.


Jack Hobbs


Author: Leo McKinstry
Published by: Yellow Jersey

Cricket's appreciation of history tends to preserve the memory and reputation of its greats and yet time has done an injustice to Jack Hobbs, who remains the most prolific runscorer of all time even 78 years after he retired but somehow tends to be recalled less readily than Hammond, Hutton, Bradman and Grace, even though he was the first professional cricketer to be knighted.  McKinstry, a heavyweight among biographers with acclaimed works on Sir Alf Ramsey, Geoff Boycott and the Charlton brothers on his CV, seeks to put this right in a sweeping study that captures the spirit of a decent man from humble origins and of the times in which he lived.  Published in hardback in 2011 and shortlisted for the British Sports Book Awards, this is the paperback edition.


Third Man in Havana: Finding the Heart of Cricket in the World's Most Unlikely Places


Author: Tom Rodwell
Published by: Corinthian

Tom Rodwell spent his career in advertising but it was while he on a cricket tour of India that he began to believe his love of the game might be a force for change.  Inspired by the joyful reaction of some street kids when his team donated their kit to them, he hit upon the idea of setting up charity cricket programmes in parts of the world where daily life was dominated by hardship and conflict. Touching and amusing, Third Man in Havana describes Rodwell's experiences in such unlikely settings as Guantanamo Cricket Club in Cuba, whose opening bowler, called Stalin, played in Cuba's first ever match against an England XI, and Beersheva Cricket Club in Israel, where the pavilion was a converted nuclear bomb shelter. Tom Rodwell ran the charity Cricket for Change for eight years, and is now Chairman of The Lord's Taverners.


An Evening with Johnners


Author:  Barry Johnston
Published by: Quiller Publishing

Brian Johnston, the much-loved broadcaster, was most famous for being a member of the BBC's Test Match Special team for almost 30 years.  He died in 1994 but had he lived he would have been 100 years old this year.  To mark the occasion, the best-selling An Evening with Johnners, based on Johnston's touring theatre show of the same name, has been updated and republished by his son, Barry. It contains much material from the original sell-out tour, as well as additional stories from a second tour and Brian's skill and warmth as a master raconteur shine through on every page.  There are hundreds of hilarious memories, stories and anecdotes, all told in his inimitable, friendly style, including of course the famous 'leg-over' incident with co-commentator Jonathan Agnew.


In the Best Interests of the Game


Author: Darrell Hair
Published by: HarperSports

Few officials in international sport have been as controversial as Australia's Darrell Hair, the man at the centre of the storm when Pakistan refused to complete the 2006 Test match against England at the Oval. First published in Australia last year, this is the paperback edition of his story: the complete story that he feels some of cricket's most powerful decision makers and players may feel uncomfortable about. It was Hair's charges of ball tampering against Pakistan that led to unprecedented scenes and his description of what followed more befits a John Le Carré novel, as administrators went into almost unfathomable damage control that eventually forced Darrell into a premature retirement.


Warwickshire CCC On This Day


Author: Brian Halford
Published by: Pitch Publishing

One of a new batch of On This Day titles from Pitch Publishing, Warwickshire CCC On This Day offers a unique trawl through the long and colourful history of one of the world's most famous cricket clubs. The book embraces all of Warwickshire's most significant characters, its controversies and dramas, triumphs and struggles: from the unprecedented treble success of 1994 to the battle for survival in the early years; from Ian Bell and Jonathan Trott underpinning England's batting to Warwickshire mustering just 16 all out against Kent at Tonbridge in 1913. It has its quirkier tales, too, making reference, for example, to deliberations once conducted at committee level over the towels in the members' lavatory.  Author Brian Halford has covered the fortunes of Warwickshire CCC for the Birmingham Post and Mail since 2000.

There are also new On This Days for Nottinghamshire , Essex and Hampshire cricket clubs.

Click on the titles or picture links for more information or to buy.

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20120528

This week's bestsellers in sports books


TODAY'S TOP TEN BESTSELLING SPORTS BOOKS


Click on the title or picture link to buy



1 - Tom Daley: My Story



Author: Tom Daley
Published by: Michael Joseph

Tom Daley started diving at the age of seven. Specializing in the 10 metre platform event, he became the youngest British world champion in any sport. He represented Great Britain at the 2008 Summer Olympics, where he was Britain's youngest competitor, and won two gold medals for England at the 2010 Commonwealth Games. In 2007, 2009 and 2010, he was named BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year.   In this, his first official memoir, illustrated on many pages with his own photographs, he shares the pressures, challenges and fascinating experiences of his career as well as glimpses into his life away from his sport in the build up to the London Olympics.



2 - 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.



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 -- 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.



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 - Barca: The Making of the Greatest Team in the World



Author: Graham Hunter
Published by: BackPage Press

You might have thought that by now the full story of the world’s best football team must have been told but Spain-based British journalist Graham Hunter was so thorough in his research that he revealed things that even die-hard fans of the Blaugrana didn’t know. Hunter traces the story back from the 2011 Champions League final at Wembley to discover the people and events that played a part in the creation of a team that had its beginnings in the late 1980s, when Johan Cruyff was their coach, and offers some brilliant insights into the mind of their soon-to-be former coach, the extraordinary Pep Guardiola.



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 - 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.




10 - A Life Without Limits



Author: Chrissie Wellington
Published by: Constable

Chrissie Wellington, a former civil servant and hobbyist jogger, a complex character whose insecurities as a young woman led her to develop eating disorders, ran her first marathon 10 years ago and surprised herself by completing the course in three hours and eight minutes.  She tells a gripping and deeply human story of how ultimately she quit her job to train full time as a triathlete, became world champion within a year and is currently Ironman Triathlon world champion, the fastest on the planet for an event that comprises a 2.4-mile swim, an 112-mile bike ride and a 26.2-mile marathon run.


As listed by amazon.co.uk on May 28, 2012

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20120522

Tragic story of Robert Enke, biography of Fred Trueman and uplifting tale of Matt Hampson among winners at British Sports Book Awards


Already recognised for its outstanding quality by being crowned William Hill Sports Book of the Year last autumn, Ronald Reng’s brilliant biography of tragic German football star Robert Enke completed a memorable double when the judges at the 2012 British Sports Book Awards determined it to be the best in the Football Book category.



A Life Too Short: The Tragedy of Robert Enke (Yellow Jersey), the story of the German national team goalkeeper who took his own life while suffering from depression, was voted top of the pile among a strong field that included former Manchester City player Paul Lake’s wonderful autobiography I’m Not Really Here and Ian Ridley’s assessment of the impact of the Premier League, There’s A Golden Sky.

Cricket writer Chris Waters, meanwhile, scooped his third award when Fred Trueman: The Authorised Biography (Aurum Press) was named Cricket Book of the Year.

The Yorkshire Post cricket correspondent’s highly acclaimed life of the Yorkshire and England fast bowler has already been named Wisden Book of the Year and MCC-Cricket Society Book of the Year.

Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson (Simon & Schuster) won the Autobiography/Biography award for Paul Kimmage for his story of the life of the England Under-21 prop forward who was paralysed from the neck down in a freak training ground accident.


In an emotional acceptance speech, Matt Hampson said that he was ‘gobsmacked’ and speechless to win and added that it was fantastic to be at the awards and to be recognised for the book. Kimmage played tribute to Hampson’s spirit saying that he was an 'amazing person' who had been faced with the choice ‘to get busy living or get busy dying – Matt chose to get busy living.’

The New Writer award went to Bill Jones for his biography of John Tarrant, the banned marathon runner who became known as The Ghost Runner (Mainstream) after gatecrashing a series of major distance races.

Andy Farrell took the Golf Book of the Year prize for his excellent 100 Greatest Ever Golfers (Elliott & Thompson) and Clare Drysdale from Allen & Unwin won the award for best publicity campaign for her work promoting Run! on behalf of ultra marathon runner Dean Karnazes.

Higgy: Matches, Microphones and MS (A & C Black), the personal story of England rugby rugby turned commentator Alastair Hignell and his battle with multiple sclerosis won the Rugby Book of the Year award.

Best Illustrated title was judged to be Wimbledon: Visions of the Championships (Vision Sports Publishing), featuring photographs by sports photographer Bob Martin, while another heavily illustrated title, Beyond the Frame (Racing Post Books) won the Racing Book of the Year prize for Racing Post photographer Edward Whitaker.

Philip Porter's Ultimate E-Type: The Competition Cars (Porter Press International) was named Motorsports Book of the Year and Waterstones was named Sports Book Retailer of the Year.

The winners were announced last night at The Savoy Hotel in London at an awards ceremony to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the British Sports Book Awards.

All the category winners now go into a public online vote to find the best overall sports book of the year. The vote opened at 10am today and runs until June 10.

To vote go to: www.britishsportsbookawards.co.uk. The winner will be announced on June 11.

Last night’s ceremony also included a special presentation to Nick Hornby, author of Fever Pitch, of the inaugural Outstanding Contribution to Sports Writing award. The groundbreaking Fever Pitch, a biographical work in which Hornby, as an Arsenal fan, linked events in his life with a timeline of matches, was published 20 years ago.  Hornby recalled last night that the first time he went to an Arsenal match on his own 40 years ago it had cost him 15p.


Highlights from the British Sports Book Awards will be shown on Sky Sports on Friday and Saturday (May 25 and 26) at the following times:

Saturday: 18:30 Sky Sports 4; 21:00 Sky Sports 3.
Sunday: 02:00 Sky Sports 3; 07:00 Sky Sports 3; 10:00 Sky Sports 2.



The full list of winners (follow the links for more information and to buy).

Football: A Life Too Short: The Tragedy of Robert Enke (Yellow Jersey), by Ronald Reng
Cricket: Fred Trueman: The Authorised Biography (Aurum), by Chris Waters
Rugby: Higgy: Matches Microphones and MS (A&C Black), by Alastair Hignell
Golf: The 100 Greatest Ever Golfers (Elliott & Thompson), by Andy Farrell
Motorsport: Ultimate E-type: The Competition Cars (Porter Press International), by Philip Porter
Biography/Autobiography: Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson Book, by Paul Kimmage
Horse Racing: Beyond the Frame: More Racing Photographs (Racing Post Books), by Edward Whitaker
New Writer: The Ghost Runner: The Tragedy of the Man They Couldn't Stop (Mainstream), by Bill Jones
Illustrated Title: Wimbledon: Visions of the Championships (Vision Sports), by Bob Martin
Publicity Campaign: Clare Drysdale (Allen & Unwin) for Run!: 26.2 Stories of Blisters and Bliss, by Dean Karnazes
Best retailer: Waterstones
Special award: Fever Pitch, by Nick Hornby


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20120519

In the frame -- seven contenders for Illustrated Book of the Year

BRITISH SPORTS BOOK AWARDS 2012



A wonderfully nostalgic tour of some of Britain's lost cricket rounds by the journalist Chris Arnot that probably deserves to be among the cricket books of the year and an awe-inspiring celebration of some of Europe's most challenging competitive cycle climbs are among the frontrunners for Illustrated Book of the Year at the British Sports Book Awards 2012.

The Sports Bookshelf outlines the six shortlisted titles as the build-up to the announcement of the winners in all categories continues. These will be revealed at a black tie dinner at The Savoy Hotel in London on Monday (May 21), when Nick Hornby will also be presented with an award for ‘Outstanding Contribution to Sports Writing’ some 20 years on from the publication of Fever Pitch.

The winners from the 10 categories will then be entered into an online public vote to find the overall British Sports Book of the Year. Each winning title will be promoted in a media and retail campaign in the run-up to Father’s Day. The public vote will held on the official website – www.britishsportsbookawards.co.uk – the overall winner will be announced on June 11.

Follow these links for a detailed review of the other shortlists:

Autobiography/Biography of the Year
Cricket Book of the Year
Football Book of the Year
Golf Book of the Year
Horse Racing Book of the Year
New Writer of the Year
Rugby Book of the Year
Motorsports Book of the Year

The full shortlist

These are the contenders for Illustrated Book of the Year



1 - Britain's Lost Cricket Grounds: The Hallowed Homes of Cricket That Will Never See Another Ball Bowled


Author: Chris Arnot
Published by: Aurum Press

From county grounds where Denis Compton hit a century to the smallest village field, Britain’s Lost Cricket Grounds shows how picturesque greenery gave way to shopping malls and housing estates.  Hastings used to have a historic ground in the middle of the town surrounded by elegant houses; it is now the site of a shopping precinct with a branch of River Island where the wicket used to be. Yorkshire used to play at Sheffield’s Bramall Lane – until the football club built grandstands over it. Guinness closed their cricket ground at Park Royal and sold it for an industrial estate. Chris Arnot listened to the reminiscences from former players and spectators, and sought out what remains of these lost venues apart from poignant photographs from their heyday.



2 - From the Boundary's Edge


Author: Laurence Griffiths
Published by: Atlantic Publishing

A magical celebration of grassroots cricket by sports photographer Laurence Griffiths, who is often to be found training his lenses on the major sporting events but who here presents a collection of images that focuses exclusively on local cricket. It gives centre stage to the amateur game and a  cast of characters that includes umpires and scorers, schoolboys in whites with cricket bags in tow, players on the field and off it, sharing laughs, searching for lost balls or putting the world to rights, all captured in pictures that require few words of explanation. From Yorkshire clubs such as Booth, Sowerby Bridge, Mytholmroyd and Bradfield, and much further afield in Fife, Coniston, Bridgetown in Somerset and Lynton in Devon, it captures the very essence of a much-loved game.



3 - Great Olympic Moments


Author: Sir Steve Redgrave
Published by: Headline

Stunning, specially selected photographs accompany Sir Steve Redgrave's selection of favourite Olympic stories featuring stars of past and present including Seb Coe, Steve Ovett, Nadia Comaneci, Mark Spitz, Jesse Owens, Fanny Blankers-Koen, Bob Beamon, Florence Griffiths-Joyner, Michael Johnson, Eric Liddell, Daley Thompson, Cassius Clay and Kelly Holmes. Also included are some of the more infamous moments of Olympic history, including the Black Power salutes of 1968, the Munich hostage crisis of 1972, and Ben Johnson's disqualification at Seoul 1988.  Sir Steve, the only athlete to have won gold medals in five consecutive Olympics in an endurance event, explains why he thinks each moment has such significance.



4 - Mountain High: Europe's 50 Greatest Cycle Climbs


Authors: Daniel Friebe and Pete Goding
Published by: Quercus

The first book to cover in detail Europe's 50 greatest cycle climbs, including detail of the actual routes, with maps, and compelling descriptions focussing on the main points of interest along the route. Daniel Friebe's beautifully written text explains why each mountain pass merits inclusion in the top 50 with superb descriptions of the majestic scenery, the heroic deeds of legendary riders or the sheer endeavour of reaching the summit. With over 250 illustrations taken by specialist cycling photographer Pete Goding, this guide to Europe's 50 best climbs includes Tour de France icons Alpe d'Huez, Col du Galibier and Mont Ventoux; the Passo dello Stelvio, Passo Fedaia, Le Tre Cime di Lavaredo and other summits from the Giro d'Italia; plus Spain's formidable Alto de l'Angliru and Austria's Grossglockner.



     

5 - The TalkSPORT 100 Greatest British Sporting Legends


Author: Bill Burrows with Tom Bailey
Published by: Simon & Schuster

A celebration of all that is best about British sport, featuring the 100 greatest sporting legends since the war, with contributions from talkSPORT presenters including Alan Brazil, Darren Gough and Stan Collymore. The listing of Britain's top sports stars includes some surprising names and will spark fierce debate about their relative merits, as record-breaking javelin thrower Steve Backley, for example, is compared with darts champion Phil Taylor, and the great football legends are arranged according to what they achieved and contributed to the game.  Each of the 100 stars is fully profiled, with surprising and fascinating information revealed about all of them, and their individual ranking in the list fully justified.



6 - When Boxing Was Boxing: A Nostalgic Look at a Century of Boxing


Author: Adam Powley
Published by: Haynes Publishing

Once upon a time, the great and the good of the fight game were the biggest stars of their day, and a major bout was a global event that captivated and enthralled people on almost every continent.  This is a photographic celebration of the sport's heyday, a beautifully illustrated tribute to an age when the noble art was a little more dignified, and a little less preoccupied with money and the politics of sport. It's about a time when there weren't quite so many governing bodies, nor multiple world 'champions' viewed only by tiny audiences on pay-per-view channels; a time when boxing was once regarded as the pinnacle of professional sporting endeavour. The book does not ignore boxing's sometimes murky past but celebrates the atmosphere, raw spectacle and sheer excitement of this most brutal yet compelling of sporting theatre.



7 - Wimbledon: Visions of the Championships


Author: Bob Martin and Ian Hewitt
Published by: Vision Sports Publishing

Wimbledon: Visions of The Championships is a breathtaking photographic celebration of the world’s oldest and most famous tennis championships.  Featuring more than 300 photographs, the book captures the people, action and moods that make up the unique character and atmosphere of Wimbledon during the magical summer fortnight when a small corner of London SW19 becomes the centre of the sporting world.  Compiled by a team led by multi-award winning sports photographer Bob Martin, it is a book bursting with images featuring the stars of the game and going behind the scenes to new and varied vantage points to tell the story of The Championships, from dawn to dusk, through the lenses of some of the world's top tennis photographers.  Author Ian Hewitt is a committee member of the All England Club.

The British Sports Book Awards also recognises the part in promoting sports books and making sure they reach the widest audience by awarding a special prize for Best Publicity Campaign, for which the contenders are:


1 - A Life Too Short: The Tragedy of Robert Enke, by Ronald Reng - Fiona Murphy at Vintage
2 - I'm not really here: A Life of Two Halves, by Paul Lake - Charlotte Bush & Philippa Cotton at Cornerstone
3 - Jonny: My Autobiography, by Jonny Wilkinson - Helena Towers at Headline
4 - Racing Through The Dark: The Fall and Rise of David Millar, by David Miller - Angela McMahon at Orion
5 - RUN! 26.2 Stories of Blisters and Bliss, by Dean Karnazes - Clare Drysdale at Allen & Unwin
6 - Why We Run, by Robin Harvie - Lyndsey Ng at John Murray


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20120517

On the grid -- six in the hunt for Motorsports Book of the Year prize


BRITISH SPORTS BOOK AWARDS 2012



Books about Porsches, E-type Jaguars and Audis and the McLaren racing team are on the shortlist for the new Motorsports Book of the Year category of the British Sports Book Awards 2012. 

Today The Sports Bookshelf outlines the six shortlisted titles as the build-up to the announcement of the winners in all categories continues. These will be revealed at a black tie dinner at The Savoy Hotel in London next Monday, May 21, when Nick Hornby will also be presented with an award for ‘Outstanding Contribution to Sports Writing’ some 20 years on from the publication of ‘Fever Pitch’.

The winners from the 10 categories will then be entered into an online public vote to find the overall British Sports Book of the Year. Each winning title will be promoted in a media and retail campaign in the run-up to Father’s Day. The public vote will held on the official website – www.britishsportsbookawards.co.uk – the overall winner will be announced on June 11.

Look out for a run-down of the contenders in the Illustrated Book of the Year and the Best Publicity Campaign.

Follow these links for a detailed review of the other shortlists:

Autobiography/Biography of the Year
Cricket Book of the Year
Football Book of the Year
Golf Book of the Year
Horse Racing Book of the Year
New Writer of the Year
Rugby Book of the Year

The full shortlist

These are the contenders for Motorsports Book of the Year


1 - Ultimate E-type - The Competition Cars


Author: Philip Porter
Published by: Porter Press International

E-types kick started the careers of many Grand Prix drivers, including Jackie Stewart. They beat the Ferrari 250 GTOs, designed specifically for racing, and AC Cobras. Ultimate E-type tells the story, quotes more than 200 significant players, and traces the lives of the most important E-types.  With numerous unseen period photographs and original Jaguar reports, the glory years of the 60s are told as never before. Author Philip Porter is a lifelong E-type enthusiast who has written about the cars for more than 30 years and owns two fine examples: the oldest E-type in existence (the fixed-head coupe registered 9600HP) and a roadster that appeared in the film The Italian Job.


2 - Porsche at Le Mans: Sixty Years of Porsche Participation in the World's Greatest Motor Race


Author: Glen Smale
Published by: Haynes Publishing

Porsche has become synonymous with Le Mans, having competed in every running of the famous 24-hour sports car race since 1951. The streamlined 356 model entered in 1951 finished in 20th place, beating the coveted record for the shortest time spent in the pits. Since that memorable debut, Porsche has won outright at Le Mans 16 times, with a record series of seven consecutive victories from 1981 to 1987. This beautifully designed and extensively illustrated book provides the definitive history.  Award-winning author Glen Smale has a special interest in Porsche. His books for Haynes include Porsche 917: The Definitive History, Porsche: The Carrera Dynasty and Jaguar E-type: Portrait of a Design Icon.


3 - McLaren - the Wins


Authors: David Tremayne and William Taylor
Published by: Coterie Press

Only by counting McLaren’s victories since its inception in 1964 can you truly appreciate the depth of the marque's footprint in motorsport.  McLaren has been victorious in Formula 1, Formula 2, Formula 3, Formula A/5000, Indycars, Can-Am and Interserie sportscars as well as at the Le Mans 24-hour race. This landmark book painstakingly records all of McLaren’s contemporary victories from 1964 until 2011. Produced with the full co-operation and endorsement of the McLaren Group, McLaren - The Wins is beautifully laid out, with period photography and race results depicting every one of the 636 wins, up to and including the 2011 Chinese GP, spanning six momentous decades.


4 - Audi R8 (WSC Giants)


Author: Ian Wagstaff
Published by: Veloce Publishing

Before 1999 Audi did not have a sportscar in its range, let alone had raced one. Yet between 2000 and 2006 the Audi R8 won 63 of the 80 races in which it competed including five out of six Le Mans 24-hours, making it the most successful long-distance racing car of all time. The latest in Veloce's WSC Giants series, this book charts those races and describes the development of the R8, as well as profiling the 35 drivers who raced it between 2000 and 2006. Illustrated in colour throughout with many previously unpublished photos, the book features individual chassis details and results, plus observations from engineers, team managers and drivers connected with the car that transformed Audi.


5 - Driven by Desire: The Desiré Wilson story


Author: Alan Wilson
Published by: Veloce Publishing

The story of the driver rated by many as the best woman ever to race cars, and the most capable ever to have driven in Formula One. Her 50-year career began at the age of five in South Africa before she moved to Holland, England and then the USA, before her life in the sport gained new momentum at the famous Goodwood Revival historic race events. This fascinating story shows how a woman fought her way to the top of motorsport against the odds, from a five-year-old girl racing 60mph micro-midgets in South Africa, to the first and only woman ever to win a Formula One race.  Desiré Wilson was a winner bettered by very few of her male rivals.


6 - Driving on the Edge: The Art and Science of Race Driving


Author: Michael Krumm
Published by: Icon Publishing

Driving on the Edge is the definitive handbook on all aspects of competition driving for racing drivers, from novices to professionals, to engineers, track day participants and individuals who simply want to learn about the complexities and secrets of performance driving. Michael Krumm is a Formula Ford, Formula 3 and All-Japan Super GT Champion who is currently competing very successfully in the FIA GT1 World Championship. At 41 years of age, he has driven every type of racing car from Formula Ford to modern Formula 1 machines, and has analysed every facet of his own driving over 26 years of racing to develop his own skill set.

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Bookies' favourites among front-runners for Rugby Book of the Year prize


BRITISH SPORTS BOOK AWARDS 2012



The Rugby Book of the Year category of the British Sports Book Awards 2012 includes two of the favourites to win the overall Book of the Year award, which will be decided by a public vote.

Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson, by Paul Kimmage, is 4-1 with Ladbrokes, a long-standing supporter of the annual awards, who rate Racing Through the Dark: The Fall and Rise of David Millar as favourite at 3-1.

Jonny Wilkinson's autobiography 'Jonny' is priced at 5-1 alongside William Hill Sports Book of the Year winner A Life Too Short: The Tragedy of Robert Enke.

Gary Neville's Red: My Autobiography is 6-1, with The Breaks Are Off, by Graeme Swann, 7-1.

Today The Sports Bookshelf outlines the six titles shortlisted for Rugby Book of the Year as the build-up to the announcement of the winners continues.

These will be revealed at a black tie dinner at The Savoy Hotel in London next Monday, May 21, when Nick Hornby will also be presented with an award for ‘Outstanding Contribution to Sports Writing’ some 20 years on from the publication of ‘Fever Pitch’.

The winners from the 10 categories will then be entered into an online public vote to find the overall British Sports Book of the Year. Each winning title will be promoted in a media and retail campaign in the run up to Father’s Day. The public vote will held on the official website – www.britishsportsbookawards.co.uk – the overall winner will be announced on June 11.

Look out for a run-down of the contenders in the Motorsports Book of the Year, the Illustrated Book of the Year and the Best Publicity Campaign.

Follow these links for a detailed review of the other shortlists:

Autobiography/Biography of the Year
Cricket Book of the Year
Football Book of the Year
Golf Book of the Year
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The full shortlists

These are the contenders for Rugby Book of the Year


1 -- Engage: The Fall and Rise of Matt Hampson Book


Author: Paul Kimmage
Published by: Simon & Schuster

Matt Hampson, a 20-year-old tight-head prop from the Leicester Tigers club, was taking part in an England Under-21 training session when he suffered a freak accident that left him paralysed from the neck down.  Journalist Paul Kimmage visited Hampson as he recuperated, and wrote an article that won him the Sports Journalists’ Association interviewer of the year award. The friendship they struck up led Kimmage to tell Hampson’s full story, in all its harrowing detail, from the build-up to the fateful day, the drama of the accident itself, the incredibly long rehabilitation, and his struggle to adjust to what passes for him as a normal life.


2 -- Higgy: Matches Microphones and MS


Author: Alastair Hignell
Published by: Bloomsbury

Alastair Hignall had three highly successful careers in sport: as an England rugby player, a county cricketer and a sports broadcaster. A much-loved figure in the sporting world, he retired after being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.  Higgy's has been a tough journey, and his story is a fascinating example of strength and determination when faced with adversity. His story is about setbacks and triumphs, about making the shift from the athletic struggles of sport to the struggle of performing everyday tasks, the genuine and emotional story of how a highly successful sportsman faced up to a devastating illness and in so doing became an inspiration to others.


3 -- Joking Apart: My Autobiography


Author: Donncha O'Callaghan
Published by:  Transworld Ireland

Donncha O’Callaghan is one of Ireland’s leading international rugby players and a stalwart of the Munster side. But his success did not come easy. Although he became a well known player with a larger-than-life reputation, his long battle to make a breakthrough at the highest level is largely unknown. In this honest and revealing autobiography, Donncha talks in detail about the personal setbacks and disappointments at Munster and the unconventional ways he dealt with the frustration of his struggle to make the team in his early 20s. Joking Apart is a compelling read that shows how this apparent ‘joker in the pack’ has a very serious and intensely professional approach to the sport.


4 -- Jonny: My Autobiography


Author: Jonny Wilkinson
Published by: Headline

Written in collaboration with Times journalist Owen Slot, Wilkinson's autobiography takes readers on a candidly personal voyage into the farthest reaches of his complex character, setting out the inner torment that has accompanied much of his success as well as the long periods of physical injury.  It reveals the fears that have dogged him since childhood and tipped him sometimes into bouts of depression and which have made the goals of fulfilment and true happiness almost impossible to attain.   A gripping examination of the human psyche that throws up many thoughts and experiences that will be uncomfortably familiar to others haunted by self-doubt.


5 -- Southern Comfort: The Story of Borders Rugby


Author:  Neil Drysdale
Published by: Birlinn Ltd

For the last 130 years, the Borders has produced a long line of international class rugby players, out of proportion to the area's small population, and has long been considered the heartland of Scottish rugby.  Featuring interviews with Doddie Weir, Craig Chalmers, Peter and Michael Dods, John Jeffrey and many others, Neil Drysdale uncovers the passion for rugby in the Borders, and shows how the game in the region has been a microcosm of Scottish rugby as a whole, with the two Grand Slams of 1984 and 1990 built around men from the South of Scotland.  Southern Comfort reveals the hunger, humour, comradeship and local rivalries which fuels the region's love for rugby.


6 -- The Treasures of International Rugby Union


Author: Richard Bath
Published by: Carlton Books

A celebration of one of the world's oldest international team sports (pre-dating international football by a year), covering the development of the game from the moment William Webb Ellis is reputed to have picked up a ball and run with it during a football match at Rugby School in 1823 to the ultra professional game of today and all that happened in between. It focuses on the sport's biggest nations, provides a history of some of rugby's quirkier aspects - such as the British and Irish Lions and Barbarians, includes a section on sevens rugby, and contains a report on every Rugby World Cup.

Read more...

Engage: a harrowing story brilliantly told
Jonny: a fresh tour of a tortured soul

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