Showing posts with label New books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New books. Show all posts

20160208

Fifty years on: England's World Cup triumph in 1966 dominates 2016's new football books

No prizes for guessing the dominant theme among football books due to appear on the shelves in 2016, when the state of English football comes under the spotlight not only because of the European championships due to take place in France in the summer but because half a century has now passed since the most glorious of all the nation's summers, when England won the World Cup.
Captain Bobby Moore receives the Jules Rimet Trophy from Her Majesty the Queen at Wembley in 1966
Captain Bobby Moore receives the Jules Rimet Trophy
from Her Majesty the Queen at Wembley in 1966

A rash of titles marks the 50th anniversary, some a celebration, others a lament, given that the national team has won nothing since.

Definitely leaning towards the latter category, Henry Winter’s Fifty Years of Hurt, an analysis illuminated by interviews with some of the biggest names in English football, is due to be published by Transworld under the Bantam imprint in June.

Winter, who recently moved from the Daily Telegraph to The Times and is generally seen as the English media's foremost football commentator, describes Fifty Years of Hurt as "a journey into a national obsession."

"I've travelled everywhere from Wembley to LA to try to understand why England keep failing," Winter says. "It's not just penalties. I talk to players and managers about how much England means to them and how to end the years of hurt. I'm delighted that Transworld have given me the opportunity to tell such an important story.”

Pre-order Fifty Years of Hurt, by Henry Winter (Bantam)

Relive 1966 as if it were now


Winter's book will be jostling for shelf space with a host of other World Cup titles, the first of which appears later this month when Pitch Publishing releases 66: the World Cup in Real Time, by Ian Passingham.

This book is a fascinating attempt to take the reader back in time 50 years to relive the 1966 finals and the build-up as if they were happening today, telling the story in newspaper-style reports, not only revisiting the matches themselves but what was happening off the field too.

There are some familiar themes, with tales of players breaking curfews, football's first-ever drug-testing programme, the England WAGS of the day and FIFA coming under fire.  All are skilfully put together by Sun journalist Passingham, who draws on his 30 years' experience in newspapers to give the reports a real authenticity.

Look out also for The Boys of '66 - The Unseen Story Behind England's World Cup Glory, due to be published by Penguin in April.  Written by John Rowlinson, the book takes a story of which everyone knows the ending back to its beginning and the long road followed by manager Alf Ramsey to build the team that walked out on to the Wembley turf on that historic July afternoon.  In just over three years Ramsey selected no fewer than 50 players before arriving at his final XI.  This book charts the chequered path to eventual victory, assesses both the players who made the final squad and those who lost out.

Rowlinson is a former journalist and television executive who enjoyed a long career with BBC TV Sport, where he was responsible for World Cup, Wimbledon and Olympic coverage among other events, and later became Director of Television at the All England Club, before joining the Organising Committee for the Olympic and Paralympic Games as Head of Broadcast for London 2012.

Geoff Hurst's hat-trick stole the headlines on the day of the final itself and, as captain, Hurst's West Ham teammate Bobby Moore became a football icon the moment he received the Jules Rimet Trophy from Her Majesty the Queen.

Yet the player who did more than any to win the World Cup for England was undoubtedly the brilliant Bobby Charlton, the attacking midfielder from Manchester United, who shares his own personal memories of the tournament and everything that surrounded it in 1966: My World Cup Story, to be published in in June by Yellow Jersey.

How 1966 changed football and changed the nation


Still with the World Cup anniversary as the point of reference, in Four Lions, to be published in May by Head of Zeus, the cultural historian Colin Schindler explores the changing landscape of postwar England through the careers of four iconic England football captains: Billy Wright, Bobby Moore, Gary Lineker and David Beckham.

Schindler argues that in England, more than any other nation, the man with the captain's armband has symbolic significance in that he embodies the nation beyond just football.  The four lions he has selected embody half a century of change: Wright smoked a pipe and had a side parting; Moore, the hero of '66, exuded the cool of his era but never found a role beyond football; the savvy, telegenic Lineker hung up his boots to become the face of BBC football; while in the tattooed body of Beckham can be read the impact of commercialisation, corporate sponsorship and the cult of celebrity.

Also in May, financial journalist and football fan Peter Chapman looks back to the World Cup year in a broader socio-economic and cultural context in Out of Time: 1966 and the End of Old-Fashioned Britain (Wisden Sports Writing).

Chapman, whose previous books include The Goalkeeper's History of Britain as well as a history of the Lehman Brothers, grew up in north London and was 18 in 1966.  He paints a vivid and beautifully written picture of how life was in Britain in the 60s and the impact that summer had on British society.

Look out too for 1966 and Not All That (Repeater Books), a collection of new writing and newspaper reporting from the tournament, both in the English and foreign press, that aims to bring new perspective to the 1966 World Cup and the evolution of the game in the last 50 years.

And Steve Mingle, who has written a number of books on Manchester City, takes a different angle in When England Ruled the World: 1966-1970 (Pitch Publishing), out in June, which looks at the impact of England's success on football at club and international level in the years that followed.

The English missionaries who gave football to the world


Away from the 1966 theme, April sees the publication by Simon and Schuster of Mister: The Men Who Gave The World The Game, in which the popular Times football writer Rory Smith examines how the countries that became the dominant powers in world football in many cases owe their success to the pioneering work of English football coaches inspired by the growing popularity of the game in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to travel abroad, men who became known not as 'coach' or 'boss' but 'the mister' as they spread the gospel of football to far flung countries around the globe.

Also in April, Trinity Mirror Sports Media publishes former Southampton manager Lawrie McMenemy’s long-overdue autobiography, plus Two Tribes: Liverpool, Everton and a City on the Brink (Bantam), in which Times writer Tony Evans goes back to 1985-86, in which the combined achievements of Liverpool and Everton brought back pride to a city shamed by the Heysel Stadium disaster.

Later in the year, look out for Ring of Fire (Bantam), the latest instalment of Simon Hughes’ decade-by-decade retelling of the Liverpool story through the eyes of the players.  After Red Machine revisited the 1980s and Men in White Suits recalled the teams and players of the 1990s, Ring of Fire, due out in August, takes the story forward into the 21st century.

Other autumn highlights include Angels With Dirty Faces (Orion), Jonathan Wilson’s history of the Argentina national team, and The Wenger Revolution: Twenty Years of Arsenal (Bloomsbury), in which Amy Lawrence, author of Invincible: Inside Arsenal’s Unbeaten 2003-04 Season, combines with club photographer Stuart MacFarlane and manager Arsene Wenger to produce a sumptuous record of Arsenal’s last two decades.

Books featured on The Sports Bookshelf are also available from Waterstones and WHSmith.

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20150805

Usain Bolt, Kevin Keegan, Ingemar Johansson and English Leg Spin come under the spotlight in a quartet of new titles

NEW BOOKS

A selection of new sports books

The Bolt Supremacy: Inside Jamaica's Sprint Factory, by Richard Moore (Yellow Jersey) £18.99


Available from Amazon, Waterstones, WHSmith and other retailers

In nine of the last 11 years, the fastest time of the year for the men's 100m has been set by a Jamaican; seven times in the same period, the fastest time for the women's 100m has also been set by a Jamaican.  The latest phenomenon, Usain Bolt, is not only the fastest of them all but possibly the most recognisable sportsman or woman on the planet.

Sprinters define Jamaica. So what is the secret of this one island's incredible success?  Genetics? Diet? The island's love of athletics that sees crowds of 35,000 turn up for high school championships? Or something more sinister?

Richard Moore, who learned a good deal about success achieved by unfair means in previous books about cyclist Robert Millar and the banned Olympic 100m champion Ben Johnson, does not shy away from awkward questions in his quest to discover what lies behind Jamaica's extraordinary ability to produce the fastest human beings on the planet.

He is right to do so.  Since the 2008 Olympics, more than 20 Jamaican runners have tested positive for banned substances, including Bolt's training partner, Johan Blake, and Shelly-Ann Fraser-Price, the double Olympic 100m champion.  Bolt, it should be stressed, has been tested more than 100 times and always been clean.

Moore does not reveal any vast scandal, although inevitably there are not many willing to talk about such a possibility. Moreover, he does find is a history of chaotic drug testing procedures, which does not help in quelling suspicions.

However, this highly readable book should not be disparaged for the lack of career-ending evidence of the kind that some recent cycling books have been able to present.  Success on the track is not all about cheating and Moore outlines many quite plausible and yet entirely innocent possibilities behind the Jamaican phenomenon.

Touching Distance: Kevin Keegan, The Entertainers and Newcastle's Impossible Dream, by Martin Hardy (de Coubertin) £18.99.


Available from Amazon, Waterstones, WHSmith and other retailers

In February, 1992, facing relegation to the third tier of English football for the first time in their history, Newcastle United were also on the point of financial collapse.  Were they to go down, the club would probably go out of business.  Sir John Hall, whose Magpie Group were gradually winning a long battle to take control of the club, took an enormous gamble by appointing Kevin Keegan as manager.

Keegan, twice European Footballer of the Year, had played for the club between 1982 and 1984, during which time he had become a talismanic figure for Newcastle fans, helping them win promotion in his second season.  Yet he had been out of football since and was completely new to management.

Incredibly, Keegan saved them from relegation, Newcastle beating Leicester City away on the final day of the season to ensure their survival.  Yet it was only the beginning of an incredible era in the club's history. Exactly four years after Keegan's return to the north east,  Newcastle were top of the Premier League, nine points clear of Manchester United, having played a game less.

Now they were on the brink of a fairytale.  Keegan's team had thrilled the crowds with wonderful, exuberant attacking football.  Sky TV dubbed them The Entertainers.  They would take part in a game at Anfield that became widely recognised as the best the Premier League has ever seen.  Yet they lost that game and the season too would end in glorious failure as Manchester United, winning 13 of their last 15 games in that 1995-96 season, relentlessly chased them down.

Yet should such a memorable season really be recalled in terms of failure?  Martin Hardy, a north-east journalist, does not think so.  He believes some of the comments made about Keegan in the last 20 years, that his teams could not defend or that he crumbled in the face of Sir Alex Ferguson's mind games, are harsh and that going so close deserves to be celebrated.

Touching Distance, based on extensive interviews with Sir John Hall, with Keegan and other members of his coaching staff, and with many of the players, sets out to do that.   Hardy sets their recollections within a clever framework, with each chapter, more or less, based on a significant match, some historical -- it opens, for example, with Kevin Keegan's debut as a player in 1982 -- others providing a background narrative to the 1995-96 campaign.  For Black and White fans it will make compelling reading.

The Strange Death of English Leg Spin: How Cricket's Finest Art Was Given Away, by Justin Parkinson (Pitch Publishing) £12.99


Available from Amazon, WaterstonesWHSmith and other retailers

From the moment he delivered That Ball to Mike Gatting at Old Trafford in 1993, in every Test he played in thereafter it took only the announcement of his name over the public address to set off a murmur of anticipation: Shane Warne, the leg spinner, was coming on to bowl and anything could happen.

List the top 10 leg spinners of all time and, as well as being Australian or Asian, the majority are players from the last 20 or 30 years. Yet in the last half-century, England have used only seven specialist leg-spin bowlers, who have made just 24 Test appearances between them, even though, as Justin Parkinson explains, leg spin was originally the invention of an Englishman.

Between the wars, Yorkshire apart, every county had at least one proficient leg spinner, some more than one.  Parkinson theorises on what happened to change all that -- much of it down to lack of trust on the part of modern captains and coaches -- and comes up with some suggestions of his own as to how the trend might be reversed.  These include, intriguingly, compulsory participation in a game called twisti-twosti, without which the googly, it transpires, might never have been invented.

Ingemar Johansson: Swedish Heavyweight Boxing Champion, by Ken Brooks (McFarland) £27.50


Available from Amazon, Waterstones and other retailers

Ingemar Johansson’s right hand - dubbed “The Hammer of Thor” - was the most fearsome in boxing, and Johansson’s three fights with Floyd Patterson rank among the sport’s classic rivalries.

Yet most fans know little about the Swedish playboy who won the world heavyweight championship in 1959 with a shocking third round knock-out of Patterson.  He held the title for six days short of a year but during his brief reign he became a familiar figure in fashionable nightspots in New York and back at home.  He had a romance with Elizabeth Taylor and refused to kowtow to the mobsters who controlled boxing.

Ken Brooks's biography chronicles Johansson's rise to fame as a teenage prodigy in Gothenburg and how he had to be persuaded not to give up boxing after his humiliating disqualification in front of home fans at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics, when his tactics in a match against the American Ed Sanders were interpreted as not putting up sufficient fight.  It charts his professional career and his life after boxing, which suffered when he began to develop dementia in his early 60s, almost certainly the consequence of blows to the head.

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20150520

Fotheringham on Bernard Hinault, David Gower on his 50 best cricketers and Norman Giller on Muhammad Ali among latest titles

NEW BOOKS - SOME HIGHLIGHTS


Cycling

Bernard Hinault and the Fall and Rise of French Cycling, by William Fotheringham (Yellow Jersey)

The striking from the record of Lance Armstong's seven wins reinstated Bernard Hinault as the champion of multiple Tour de France victories, jointly with his French compatriot Jacques Anquetil, the legendary Belgian Eddy Merckx and Spain's Miguel Indurain, all of whom won the race five times.

Yet three decades on from his retirement, Hinault remains the last Frenchman to win the Tour. His victory in 1985 marks the turning point when the nation who had dominated the first eight decades of the race they had invented suddenly found they were no longer able to win it.

Hinault was a larger-than-life character from a working-class background.  Nicknamed the 'Badger' for his combative style, he led a cyclists’ strike in his first Tour and instigated a legendary punch-up with political demonstrators who brought the 1982 race to a halt.  Hinault's battles with team-mates Laurent Fignon and Greg LeMond provide some of the greatest moments in Tour history.

In Bernard Hinault and the Fall and Rise of French Cycling, the author and journalist author William Fotheringham, whose back catalogue includes a best-selling portrait of Eddy Merckz, unravels this fascinating character and explores the reasons why the nation that considers itself cycling’s home has found it so hard to produce another champion.

Fotheringham, who covers cycling for the Guardian and Observer, is the author of Merckx: Half Man, Half Bike as well as Fallen Angel: The Passion of Fausto Coppi and Put Me Back On My Bike: In Search of Tom Simpson, plus Roule Britannia: Great Britain and the Tour de France.

Cricket

David Gower's 50 Greatest Cricketers of All Time (Icon Books)

David Gower, the former England captain and batting stylist, attempts to name his 50 greatest players of all time, a task he confesses what much more difficult even than he imagined.  it was, he says in the introduction, subject to several revisions, which should at least reassure the reader that he took the process seriously.

The list covers every era, not only his own, although his descriptions of his contemporaries benefit from some illuminating first-hand recollections and anecdotes. Who was the best of the great West Indian quicks? Have England heroes like Geoff Boycott, Kevin Pietersen and Andrew Flintoff made the cut? Who has been the greatest Australian batsman, post-Bradman? All is revealed in this lively and contentious celebration of cricket's true greats.

Pietersen does make the list, coming in somewhat further down the pecking order than some would put him.  Gower admits there were grounds for leaving him out over his behaviour but reckons it would have been unjust to do so, not least because the outrageous talent that many assume was a gift was actually developed through endless hours of practice.

Gower's top 10 reveals, not surprisingly, a bias towards batsmen.  It also contains four West Indians, three Englishmen, two Australians and one Indian. but that's where the clues end.

Boxing

The Ali Files: His Fights, His Foes, His Fees, His Feats, His Fate, by Norman Giller (Pitch Publishing)


Although it is more than 30 years since Muhammad Ali last threw a punch, he remains probably the best-known sportsman of all time.  A whole generation now only know the legend of The Greatest, never saw him fight, and yet are in awe of the man, his fantastic feats and his unique character.

Norman Giller, the British journalist and author, became friends with Ali when he worked as his European publicist, and he has gathered many other intimate eyewitnesses, among them opponents, referees, trainers, sparring partners, celebrity fans and ringside reporters, to recall Ali's astonishing adventures in and out of the ring.

Millions of words have been written about ringmaster Ali, but few books have concentrated on the 61 professional contests that turned him into a sporting legend. The Ali Files will give you a ringside seat to the greatest boxing career of all time.

Athletics

Athletics 2015: The International Track & Field Annual, edited by Peter Matthews (Sportsbooks)

Now in its 129th year, the 2015 edition of the athletics bible features French pole vaulter Renaud Lavillenie as its front cover star, following his 2014 achievement that many thought was impossible, namely to break the great Sergey Bubka’s world record. 

Not only that he had the nerve to better it in Bubka's hometown of Donetsk, Ukraine. He also claimed his third European title, won the overall Diamond League title and extended his unbeaten streak to 21 competitions before he failed to clear a height in Stockholm. As usual the annual is packed full of essential information for the track and field enthusiast, with results and reports from all major championships.



Motor Racing

Stirling Moss: My Racing Life, by Sir Stirling Moss with Simon Taylor (Evro Publishing)

In a book published to mark the 60th anniversary of Moss' famous win in the 1955 Mille Miglia road race in a Mercedes 300SLR, Stirling Moss guides the reader through his motor racing life with a fascinating, insightful and often amusing commentary to an unrivalled collection of over 300 photographs, many of which will be unfamiliar to even his most ardent fans.

He takes us from his childhood to the height of his fame as 'Mr Motor Racing' and then to the sudden end of his career with that crash at Goodwood in 1962. Along the way, the reader can dwell on his finest moments as well as the setbacks, including that 1955 Mercedes season and its twin highlights a winning the Mille Miglia and the British Grand Prix and his two brilliant Formula One seasons with the British team Vanwall, as well as his two celebrated Monaco Grand Prix wins for Rob Walker.

There is a foreword by 2014 Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton.

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20150310

Beyond the Test arena: wonderful stories and astute analysis from frontiers of cricket

NEW CRICKET BOOK

  • New book offers fascinating insight into cricket outside elite

  • Second XI: Cricket in its Outposts highlights passion for game

  • Comes as ICC plan to cut back World Cup


Jon Culley

As much as gloating or despairing over England's woeful World Cup performance has been the dominant talking point in cricket these last few days, there should be no overlooking the development that has befuddled onlookers even more perhaps than Eoin Morgan and company failing to score 276 runs to beat little Bangladesh on a flat wicket in Adelaide.

The International Cricket Council, with total disregard, apparently, for the excitement generated by participation of Ireland and Afghanistan, Scotland and the United Arab Emirates in the current tournament, wants to cut the number of teams in the next World Cup in 2019 from 14 to 10.

Coming at a time when the trend in major sports around the world is to expand and explore new frontiers -- Luis Figo, a candidate to be the next President of FIFA, wants the football World Cup finals enlarged from 32 to 40 or even 48 teams -- the ICC's plan has been dismissed in some quarters as "bonkers".

That was the word used by Martin Crowe, a member of the successful New Zealand side of the 1980s, in a column he now writes for the ESPN Cricinfo website.   There are plenty who share his sentiment, although the interests of cricket's lesser nations could do with a few more.

Cricket as a world game is in the grip of a self-interested elite, among whom much of the power now resides with the so-called 'big three' of India, Australia and - whisper it - England.

At Test level, the highest level of the game, there are only 10 participating nations, and even though World Cups pique the interest of the media every four years, not too much is written about cricket elsewhere and few cricket followers have much knowledge or understanding of the game outside the established powers.  Yet there are 106 members of the ICC.
Picture of ex New Zealand cricketer Martin Crowe
ICC plan 'bonkers'
 - Martin Crowe

An attempt to put this right is made by the authors of Second XI: Cricket in its Outposts (Pitch Publishing), a collection of essays that will leave the reader much better informed as to the state of the game in its far flung reaches.

It has a narrow focus in that it is limited to only 10 nations from the 96 that do not play at the top level but they are a carefully chosen 10, comprising the four so-called 'minnows' at the current World Cup, plus two whose fortunes have faded after earlier success in Kenya and the Netherlands, two who can be identified as 'on the up' in Papua New Guinea and Nepal, plus China and the USA, the two most obvious nations with vast potential for growth.

The chapters on each are written by five journalists - Tim Wigmore, who contributes four, Peter Miller (three), Sahil Dutta, Tim Brooks and Gideon Haigh, who allowed the publishers to reproduce an article he wrote about Papua New Guinea for The Nightwatchman quarterly in 2013 and who also wrote the foreword.

There are inspirational stories on many levels, not least the one Wigmore recounts in his essay on Afghanistan, in which a young man carrying an AK47 as he watched a game returns to take part at a later date without his weapon, explaining that as he was playing cricket he did not need it.  Even the Taliban, despite their opposition to most things rooted in Western values, approve of cricket.  Just as in Ireland, where the team drew players from both sides of the border even at the height of the troubles, cricket is a force for unity.

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There are cautionary tales, too, such as that of the Netherlands, whom many would probably still have supposed to be, along with Ireland, the top cricket-playing nation outside the established Test nations but where cricket's popularity is in sharp decline.  Ireland beat England in a World T20 match in 2009 and defeated Bangladesh in a one-day international the following year but did not qualify for the 2015 World Cup, losing their ODI status with the ICC as a result.  Cricket did not feature among the top 20 pastimes in the Netherlands in a recent poll and fewer than 6,000 Dutch people now play the game. Scotland, by comparison, has an estimated 60,000 active cricketers.

In a recent review, Gideon Haigh, while admitting that his assessment was not entirely without bias, declared Second XI to be "one of the more important and timely cricket books to be published in a long while."  There are plenty who would agree.

Buy Second XI: Cricket in its Outposts from Amazon or Waterstones.

More reading on new cricket books:

Sex & Drugs & Rebel Tours: David Tossell's latest among new titles from Pitch Publishing

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20150309

Warriors on Horseback: bravery in the saddle from the champions to the also-rans

HORSE RACING BOOK

  • New book looks at the lure of a life in racing

  • Why jockeys willingly risk life and limb

  • How most riders make only a modest income



Jon Culley

As the horse racing world decamps to Cheltenham for the intensely competitive yet spectacularly beautiful National Hunt Festival, with the richest prizes of the year on offer for the stars of the saddle to pursue, John Carter's latest book considers the life of the majority of Britain's 450 professional riders, those who chase the dream of kicking home the winner of a Gold Cup or a Champion Hurdle but for whom the day-to-day realities are a long way from glamorous face of jump racing on view this week.

Warriors on Horseback: The Inside Story of the Professional Jockey is unashamed in its admiration for all of those men and women who, in the author's words, place themselves "in mortal danger every day".

A P McCoy, riding at his final Festival before retiring next month, is reckoned to be worth in excess of £12 million after winning a staggering 19 consecutive jockeys' championships, shortly to become 20.  He had paid a heavy price in broken bones - ankle, tibia, fibula, both wrists, several vertebrae, both shoulder blades, both collar bones and both cheekbones -- and many would say he has earned every penny.
The champion: A P McCoy

But, Carter argues, McCoy's list of mishaps is not unusual.  Falling from a horse travelling at in excess of 30 miles per hour is not something for which the human body was designed and every rider expects from time to time to be leaving the track in an ambulance.  On any given day, 10 per cent of those 450 jockeys will be out of action through injury.  There has been concern in rugby union lately over the number of players suffering concussion; in jump racing, the frequency of concussion injuries is six times rugby's rate.

Yet the average Flat race jockey -- and they're in the better paid part of the business -- makes only £30,000 a year.

Add to that the daily necessity of rising before dawn to work the horses on the gallops, the constant battle to remain muscularly strong yet with the body weight of a child, and the hours spent on the motorways and it is no wonder that Carter asks why they do it.

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It is the answer to that question he pursues through a series of interviews, some with famous names such as Frankie Dettori, Martyn Dwyer, Steve Smith-Eccles, Bob Champion and the leading female rider, Hayley Turner, and many more with the lesser-known figures who pass through the weighing rooms each day, the foot soldiers who make up the numbers.

What he discovers is that the majority of jockeys, even those who never rise above the status of journeymen in their profession, love racing and the adrenaline rush that comes with competitive race riding almost to the point of addiction.

Buy Warriors on Horseback: The Inside Story of the Professional Jockey, published by Bloomsbury, from Amazon, Waterstones or WHSmith.

The Cheltenham Festival takes place from Tuesday March 10 to Friday March 13.

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20150305

Sex & Drugs & Rebel Tours: David Tossell's latest among new titles from Pitch Publishing

NEW IN CRICKET BOOKS


  • Tossell turns his attention to England cricket team of the 1980s

  • A new biography of Barry Richards from Andrew Murtagh

  • Dan Whiting's follow-up to Cricket Banter


Jon Culley

Rarely does a year pass without the name of David Tossell appearing on the shortlist for one of sport's literary prizes.

The 53-year-old author and journalist has been nominated five times at the British Sports Book Awards for books on cricket, football and rugby, as well as being on the shortlist twice for the MCC/Cricket Society Book of the Year.

The Great English Final, which looked at the 1953 FA Cup final, the Matthews final, in the context of Britain's post-War recovery, made the shortlist in the best football book category at the British Sports Book Awards last year.

This year he returns to cricket with the publication this week of Sex & Drugs & Rebel Tours: The England Cricket Team in the 1980s.

It was a tumultuous decade, one in which England enjoyed the highs of three Ashes victories and reached a World Cup final yet twice suffered the humiliation of 5-0 series defeats against the West Indies and managed to work their way through 10 different captains, including four in one series.

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Off the field, it was a time of tabloid scandals, notably embroiling two of those captains as Ian Botham, who began the decade establishing cricketing immortality in the summer of 1981, was suspended for smoking marijuana and Mike Gatting was sacked after an alleged dalliance with a barmaid.

For Gatting, in particular, it was an extraordinary decade, involving a famous Ashes win in Australia, an infamous row with an umpire in Pakistan and a decision he would later regret to lead one of the decade's two England rebel tours, which resulted in a three-year ban from playing in Tests.
Gatting fires off in Faisalabad

Experienced journalist Tossell, at one time executive sports editor of the Today newspaper, has interviewed many of the principal characters and Sex & Drugs & Rebel Tours tells the story.

Sex & Drugs & Rebel Tours is published by Pitch Publishing, who have simultaneously released two more cricket titles as part of their spring output.

Andrew Murtagh, the former Hampshire cricketer and uncle of Middlesex fast bowler Tim, has written a biography of the man he regarded as the best cricketer he ever played with or against, the brilliant South African who scored more than 28,000 first-class runs, including 80 centuries, but took part in only one Test series before South African was banned from international sport over apartheid.

Sundial in the Shade: The Story of Barry Richards, the Genius Lost to Test Cricket tells the story of the batsman who formed one of county cricket's most prolific opening partnerships alongside the West Indian Gordon Greenidge during his 10 years with Hampshire, where he made 15,600 of his first-class aggregate.   It is a life overshadowed by personal tragedy and controversy and one defined by the frustration that he could never achieve the international success that would have surely come his way.


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Murtagh is the author of two previous cricket biographies, of George Chesterton, which was shortlisted for MCC/Cricket Society Book of the Year,  and of Tom Graveney.

The third offering from Pitch released this week is the story of a controversial figure from the Edwardian era, who became England's youngest Test player when he was selected at 19 years and 32 days to play against South Africa Johannesburg in January 1906.

A Flick of the Fingers: The Chequered Life and Career of Jack Crawford is Michael Burns's biography of a player who was regarded as perhaps the finest schoolboy cricketer of all time, who made his debut for Surrey aged 17 and completed the double of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets in a season before he was 20.

Short-sighted, he played always in spectacles yet was a ferocious hitter, a skilful medium pace bowler and a forthright character whose outspokenness at being given a weakened team to captain in a match against the touring Australians in 1909 resulted ultimately in him being banished by the county, whereupon he emigrated to Australia.  There he enhanced a reputation for fast scoring that would have made him a hot property in today's game.

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Representing an Australian XI on tour in New Zealand, he hit 45 fours and 14 sixes in an innings of 354 that included a staggering partnership with Victor Trumper that added 298 runs in just 69 minutes.

More controversy dogged Crawford, who married but then deserted a teenage girl he met in Adelaide and left Australia for New Zealand after a row over money.  He returned to England after the First World War, made his peace with Surrey, re-married and ultimately faded into obscurity, but not before playing two of the most remarkable innings of his life.

On a lighter note -- much lighter if his first book is anything to go by -- Dan Whiting returns with Characters of Cricket (The History Press), which is his first solo effort after he and Liam Kenna combined their talents and a wide circle of friends in the game to produce Cricket Banter.

Where Cricket Banter enabled Whiting and Kenna to expand on the eye for a funny story that has made their blog The Middle Stump (www.themiddlestump.co.uk) so popular, with hits in excess of half a million, Characters of Cricket is a series of portraits of some of the game's more interesting participants, the mavericks who refused to allow their individuality, sometimes their eccentricity, to be swallowed up by the demands of a team game.

Such characters are increasingly hard to find with the game these days embracing much more professional disciplines than once was the case, but Whiting can name a few even from the most recent generation, including England's recently-retired off-spinner Graeme Swann and the flame-haired former Yorkshire, Gloucestershire and Somerset fast bowler Steve Kirby.

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Waterstones
WHSmith

Whiting is a keen advocate of moves to raise awareness of skin cancer, especially the danger it poses to cricketers, and having recently survived a scare himself he has pledged to donate a portion of the book’s royalties to Melanoma UK, a skin cancer charity.

He is also organising Pushing the Boundaries, a charity fundraising event on Friday, April 10, at the Walker Cricket Ground in Southgate, at which the guests will include the aforementioned Kirby along with Middlesex players Tim Murtagh and John Simpson and the county's managing director of cricket, the former England fast bowler now selector, Angus Fraser.

Cricket Banter is also available from Amazon, Waterstones or WHSmith.

For more information...

See Andrew Murtagh's page at Amazon, Waterstones or WHSmith

See David Tossell's books at Amazon, Waterstones or WHSmith






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