Showing posts with label Simon Jordan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Jordan. Show all posts

20130103

The best sports books of 2012 -- a Sports Bookshelf selection

As we welcome 2013 and a whole new raft of sports literature, time to reflect on the best of 2012, or at least those that appealed most to The Sports Bookshelf.

Not surprisingly, the short and longlists from the William Hill Sports Book of the Year awards are well represented, most prominently by the winner of that prize, the extraordinary exposé of chemical cheating that helped bring down one of sport's biggest names in the cyclist Lance Armstrong.

In the words of the judges, The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France won the William Hill prize for self-confessed doper Tyler Hamilton because it 'fundamentally changed the sport it described' but it stands as a great read, too, irrespective of the impact of its content.

Skilfully crafted by the journalist Daniel Coyle, Hamilton's account of his time alongside Armstrong in the US Postal Team has the style and suspense of an espionage novel as Hamilton, who was right at the heart of the most sophisticated and long-running programme of organised dishonesty in the history of all sports, describes the extraordinary life of subterfuge that Armstrong and his cohort pursued to put themselves on top of their sport and protect the secrets of how they did it.

Drugs in cycling is not a new theme but no book before The Secret Race explored it in such detail or with such devastating consequences.

Richard Moore has written a number of fine books on cycling but The Dirtiest Race in History is not one of them.  The focus of his investigative spotlight instead is the other arena damaged by the curse of drugs, that of athletics.

The race in question is the 1988 Olympic 100 metres final, won by the subsequently disqualified Ben Johnson.  Until Armstrong's catalogue of misdeeds was exposed, Johnson was the highest profile cheat in the history of competition and Moore, reasonably enough, chose an Olympic year to dig deeper into the scandal than any previous research had gone, drawing upon countless interviews and a meticulous exploration of the story and its background.

He could never hope to match Hamilton's impact. Moreover, in a year determined to celebrate all that is good about the Olympics, he was seeking to appeal to a potential audience perhaps less interested in the dark side of the Games than he might have anticipated.  Yet there is much to commend it, not least in the questions raised over the legitimacy of the test that brought about Johnson's downfall.

The Dirtiest Race in History is from the Wisden Sports Writing series also responsible for We'll Get 'Em in Sequins, Max Davidson's clever and amusing dissertation on manliness, viewed through the lives of iconic Yorkshire cricketers, and for Martin Kelner's lovely romp through the history of sport on television, Sit Down and Cheer.

Kelner -- whose Screen Break column for The Guardian has sadly fallen foul of the paper's latest round of cost cutting -- is a naturally witty writer who often needs to resort to little more than his sense of humour to engage the reader.  Sit Down and Cheer has more to it than that, with input from many of those involved in bringing sport to our screens as it charts the evolution of sport on television, which is, after all, how the majority of fans get their fix.  Yet it is no less funny and entertaining for that.

Humour of a different kind is central to Clare Balding's memoir of childhood, My Animals and Other Family.  The radio and television presenter's early life was dominated by various pets - largely dogs - and the horses her father trained at the racing stables that doubled as the family home, visited from time to time by The Queen among other patrons.  Strictly speaking it isn't a sports book -- Balding's career behind a microphone will doubtless provide a sequel -- but the fact that the equine characters include Mill Reef and other stars of the track gives it authenticity of a kind.

When Simon Jordan, the former mobile phone entrepreneur and chairman of Crystal Palace, published the story of his 10 disastrous years at Selhurst Park, it was difficult to imagine it could possibly have a claim to be the football book of the year.  Jordan, famous for his unnaturally tanned skin and unfeasibly blond hair, at one time seemed to represent much of what there was to dislike about football but his story, Be Careful What You Wish For, deserved its place on the William Hill shortlist.

Jordan employs a ready fund of clichés and at times you may find yourself cringing at his behaviour but there are some jaw-dropping tales of what serves as acceptable business practice in a football world populated by sharp agents and officials of questionable competence.

Yet, for all the praise bestowed on Be Careful What You Wish For by the bookie prize panel, the Sports Bookshelf would place it no higher than third among the best football books of 2012.

Of greater literary merit, certainly, are Anthony Clavane's Does Your Rabbi Know You're Here and Duncan Hamilton's The Footballer Who Could Fly.

Clavane, whose brilliant Promised Land was Best Football Book at the 2011 British Sports Book Awards, developed the theme of Jews in football that was central to Promised Land by embarking on a history of Jewish involvement in English football from east London parks in the late 19th century to the boardrooms of the present day, each of the 11 chapters focusing on a key individual.  Clavane tells some fascinating stories and reveals himself again to be a fine writer.

The same can be said of Duncan Hamilton, already an award-winner several times over, who intertwines the development of football in his lifetime with poignant memories of his struggle to forge a close bond with his father when all they had in common was a love of the game.

Although he has been accused at times of being a little too much the misty-eyed nostalgic, Hamilton is capable of delivering a wonderful turn of phrase and The Footballer Who Could Fly recreates the age of Jackie Milburn as vividly as the modern world of Lionel Messi.

Also recommended is Life's a Pitch, an engaging collection of essays by assembled by Michael Calvin, who asked 18 football writers to reveal the secret which professionalism demands they keep to themselves while going about their daily business, namely the club with which their personal allegiance lies.

Rory Smith, John Cross, Martin Lipton, Ian Ridley, Janine Self and Jonathan Wilson are among those who consented to shed the cloak of impartiality.  Their confessions have provided many an entertaining hour.

Greatly enjoyable, too, was El Clasico, a detailed study of the rivalry between Real Madrid and Barcelona in which Barcelona-based journalist Richard Fitzpatrick delves deep into the history and background to arguably the world's most intense, most keenly felt football enmity, explaining all its social and political dimensions.

Cricket rarely fails to serve up a gem or two.  David Warner's The Sweetest Rose is among them, written to mark the 150th anniversary of the formation of Yorkshire County Cricket Club, on January 8, 1863.

Warner is the doyen of the Yorkshire press box, who has been recording the fortunes of the county of the white rose on a daily basis -- at least in the summer months -- since he became cricket correspondent of the Bradford Telegraph and Argus in 1975.

No one is thus more qualified to chart the colourful and often stormy history of the world's most famous cricket club than Warner and he does so diligently, faithfully and even-handedly, recording the great matches, the great deeds and the great characters, from Lord Hawke to Michael Vaughan and all those in between -- Wilfred Rhodes, Len Hutton, Fred Trueman and, of course, Geoffrey Boycott, to name but four. It is a fine record that will endure among the definitive works on Yorkshire cricket.

The Sports Bookshelf was also taken with Gentlemen and Players, in which Charles Williams, also known as Lord Williams of Elvel and, on cricket scorecards in the 1950s, CCP Williams, recalls the decline and eventual death of amateurism in cricket.

Williams, educated at Westminster School and Oxford University, had a successful career in business and later became an eminent biographer of 20th century political leaders and cricketers.  Before that, he represented Oxford University and Essex at cricket as an amateur and appeared in one of the last Gentlemen versus Players matches.

Far from penning a lament for some lost golden age, Williams has produced a notable social history in which he points up the hypocrisy of the amateur era and hails the advance of professionalism as essentially good for the game.

Somewhat unheralded when it appeared on the shelves in October, the biography of the year is undoubtedly Gideon Haigh's On Warne, which is the wonderful Australian cricket writer's view on the life and times and complexities of Shane Warne, the brilliant spin bowler and at his peak one of the best known sportsmen on the planet.  Anything written by Haigh is a pleasure to read; this combines elegance with considerable wisdom and insight.
In the days mourning his woefully premature passing, it is of some small consolation to recall that the writer and broadcaster Christopher Martin-Jenkins managed to add a personal memoir to the vast number of words he wrote about cricket to a life cut tragically short by cancer on New Year's Day.

CMJ -- A Cricketing Life, which was published in April, revealed much more of himself than might have been expected of a man with a natural reserve.  There is plenty about cricket and many strong but well thought-out opinions, the expression of which was fundamental to his devotion to the game, but also a good deal about the upbringing and his private life behind one of Test Match Special's best-loved voices, some details of which shattered a few misconceptions.

Away from cricket,  no list of the best sports books of 2012 should fail to include That Near-Death Thing, Rick Broadbent's fine study of the Isle of Man TT motorcycle races through the compelling stories of four riders, nor Touching Distance, the extraordinary story of Olympic rower James Cracknell's voyage of recovery from a serious, personality-changing brain injury suffered in 2010 when he was hit by the wing mirror of a truck while undertaking an endurance challenge in Arizona.

Those with a taste for the adventurous, meanwhile, should try Nick Hurst's Sugong: The Life of a Shaolin Master, a gripping tale in which the author, having quit his job in advertising to train in martial arts in Malaysia, ends up writing in effect a biography of his grand master, whose life story could have been the plot for a thriller, spiced with political strife, gangland feuds and fraught love affairs.

Among the welter of Olympic books, special mention should be made of My Time, the full story of the growing up and competitive life of Bradley Wiggins -- now 'Sir' Bradley, of course -- in his own words, and of Yorkshire's Olympic Heroes, by Nick Westby of the Yorkshire Post newspaper, who quite rightly decided that the astonishing medal haul acquired by that one county -- including a staggering seven golds -- should be celebrated with a book of its own.

With two silvers and three bronzes for good measure, Yorkshire -- the county of Jessica Ennis, Nicola Adams and the Brownlee brothers among others -- would have finished 12th in the medals table had it been an independent country, a status for which many of its residents believe it has been qualified for years.


Click on the titles for more information or to buy

The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France, by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle (Bantam Press)
The Dirtiest Race in History: Ben Johnson, Carl Lewis and the 1988 Olympic 100m Final , by Richard Moore (Wisden Sports Writing)
Sit Down and Cheer: A History of Sport on TV , by Martin Kelner (Wisden Sports Writing)
My Animals and Other Family
Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan (Yellow Jersey)
Does Your Rabbi Know You're Here?: The Story of English Football's Forgotten Tribe, by Anthony Clavane (Quercus)
The Footballer Who Could Fly, by Duncan Hamilton (Century)
Life's a Pitch, edited by Michael Calvin (Integr8 Books)
El Clasico: Barcelona v Real Madrid: Football's Greatest Rivalry, by Richard Fitzpatrick (Bloomsbury)
The Sweetest Rose: 150 Years of Yorkshire County Cricket Club, by David Warner (Great Northern Books)
Gentlemen & Players: The Death of Amateurism in Cricket by Charles Williams (Weidenfeld & Nicholson)
On Warne, by Gideon Haigh (Simon & Schuster)
CMJ: A Cricketing Life, by Christopher Martin-Jenkins (Simon & Schuster)
That Near Death Thing: Inside the Most Dangerous Race in the World, by Rick Broadbent (Orion)
Touching Distance, by James Cracknell and Beverley Turner (Century)
Sugong: The Life of a Shaolin Grandmaster, by Nick Hurst (SportsBooks)
My Time: An Autobiography, by Bradley Wiggins (Yellow Jersey)
Yorkshire's Olympic Heroes, by Nick Westby (Great Northern Books)

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20121211

Pep Guardiola -- Christmas reading for Roman Abramovich and Sheikh Mansour?


SPORTS BOOKS FOR CHRISTMAS: FOOTBALL BIOGRAPHIES



No one would dispute Barcelona's status as the greatest club team of the century so far and two books in 2012 have gone a long way to explaining why the pride of Catalonia came to symbolise both power and artistry in football.

Graham Hunter's Barca: The Making of the Greatest Team in the World (Back Page Press) draws on the considerable knowledge of the club Scottish journalist Hunter has accumulated since deciding to base himself in Spain. Hunter was the only English-speaking  journalist to interview Pep Guardiola during his time as coach at the Nou Camp.

Yet, perhaps inevitably, Hunter's admirable book is eclipsed by Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning (Orion), written by the Spanish journalist Guillem Balague -- who is based in England, as it happens.

Balague, well known to English television viewers as one of the presenters of Spanish football on Sky Sports, won the trust of Guardiola in a way that no other journalist has managed to achieve.  Balague's analysis of the character and methodology of the most coveted coach in world football ought to be required reading for any of Guardiola's prospective employers, revealing an obsessive, somewhat tortured individual who will emerge somewhere in 2013 to find a football world eager to learn whether he can replicate his Barcelona success at another club.

If Balague's portrait of Guardiola raises much food for thought, then Philippe Auclair's portrait of Thierry Henry, Lonely at the Top (Macmillan), may similarly challenge a few preconceptions.

Auclair, the France Football correspondent who wrote a notable biography of Eric Cantona, began his Henry project feeling only warmth towards the former Arsenal striker but finished with a certain ambivalence towards him, based on what he learned about his character, yet with his admiration for Henry as a footballer undiminished.

There has been no more exhaustively researched and detailed biography in 2012 than Jonathan Wilson's 576-page portrait of Brian Clough, Nobody Ever Says Thank You (Orion), in which Wilson, already respected for his expert knowledge of Eastern European football and for his studied, historical analysis of football tactics, attempts to construct a level-headed portrait of a character surrounded by myth more, perhaps, than anyone in football history.  He succeeds.
Wilson is the first writer to have told the Clough story in full, from his debut as a player for Middlesbrough all the way through to his retirement, as a sorry, sozzled shadow of his former self, as manager of Nottingham Forest.  Along the way he challenges many of the preconceptions about Clough as man and manager, looking beyond the anecdotes to reveal that the legend often obscures the truth.

Among the year's crop of autobiographies, Fabrice Muamba's I'm Still Standing (Trinity Mirror Sport Media) is by some way the most inspiring story of 2012.  Skilfully ghost-written by sports journalist Chris Brereton, this book has at its heart the moment that allowed football to put rancour and rivalry to one side and show its best colours.

As a refugee from the war-torn African Republic of Congo, the former Bolton Wanderers footballer already had a story worth telling. But then came his collapse on the field during an FA Cup match at Tottenham, when he effectively 'died'. His heart stopped for 78 minutes, yet Muamba survived due to the extraordinary work of doctors and paramedics who kept his brain and body functioning while they fought to restart his heart.

The story united the game in the same way that the tragic death of Gary Speed in 2011 touched football fans regardless of their allegiances, with the notable difference of a happy ending.

The biography that should be remembered as one of the year's unexpected pleasures is The Binman Chronicles (de Coubertin), by Neville Southall, the former Wales and Everton goalkeeper, who set out with the help of journalist James Corbett to "show who I really am" after a career in which he was labelled as so many different things that he felt he had become almost a living caricature, painted usually as an eccentric of one kind or another, mostly by people who did not know him at all.

He did so, you sense, not out of bitterness at any misconceptions -- "I suppose at various times I fitted all the descriptions" -- nor out of any desire to reinvent himself, but simply because he is a thoughtful, reflective person with more sides even to the complicated character his friends and teammates knew.

The book begins on a non-league football ground in Kent where Southall is engaged in his new vocation, as a teacher working with disengaged teenagers, not just giving them something to take them off the streets for an hour or two but as part of a programme lasting six months that aims to equip young people cast out by society in one way or another with the skills needed to release the potential Southall believes they all have, to some degree, to make something of their lives.

He goes on to tell the story of his life and career as you would expect but somehow, as you begin to understand him a little more with each chapter, it all leads back naturally to that football ground in Kent and his concluding assertion that "this old goalkeeper has still got plenty of living to do."

Special mention should also be made of former Crystal Palace chairman Simon Jordan's Be Careful What You Wish For (Yellow Jersey), his autobiographical tale of how football stole his fortune, which was shortlisted unexpectedly but deservedly for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year 2012.


For more details and to buy any of the titles above, follow the links below or go to the Football Page at the Sports Bookshelf Shop.

Barca: The Making of the Greatest Team in the World, by Graham Hunter
Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning: The Biography by Guillem Balague
Thierry Henry: Lonely at the Top: A Biography, by Philippe Auclair
Brian Clough: Nobody Ever Says Thank You: The Biography, by Jonathan Wilson
Fabrice Muamba: I'm Still Standing, by Fabrice Muamba
Neville Southall: The Binman Chronicles, by Neville Southall
Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan

More reading:

William Hill Sports Book of the Year 2012

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20121124

Make millions and buy a football club - a chairman's tale of how to win and lose a fortune

WILLIAM HILL SHORTLIST



Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan (Yellow Jersey)



When Simon Jordan bought Crystal Palace in 2000 he believed he could change football.  Just 32 years old, his bank balance swollen from the £73 million sale of the mobile phone retailer he had built up with business partner Andrew Briggs, he was ready to take on everyone he loathed in the game, from the establishment figures he felt put their own interests ahead of the game, down to the agents he saw as nothing better than leeches.

Blond-haired, perma-tanned and brashly opinionated, it was inevitable he would encounter suspicion and distrust in the world he had infiltrated.  Yet he loved Crystal Palace, the club he had supported all his life and where his father had once been a player, and was determined not only that he would turn them into a thriving Premier League club but that he would do it on his terms.

Of course, it all ended in tears.  Jordan fulfilled his promise of taking Palace into the Premier League within five years, thanks to the startling run of form generated by the appointment of Iain Dowie as manager in December 2003, but could keep them there for only one season. By 2010 they were in administration, as they had been immediately before Jordan bought the club, and Jordan's fortune had disappeared.

For all his determination not to be sucked into the whirlpool of over-spending that appeared to be a pre-requisite for any football club of ambition at the time he became involved, Jordan still wound up parting with vast sums for mediocre players, although problems might have been avoided if he had succeeded in buying the freehold for the club's Selhurst Park ground.

As it was, the worldwide recession began to make an impact at just the wrong moment and Jordan was soon chasing his losses in the hope that the club's fortunes would turn. It never happened. Frustratingly, with Palace having climbed to eighth in the Championship after Neil Warnock had inspired another unlikely transformation, a return to the Premier League was beginning to seem possible just as matters came to a head. Instead, the club were pushed into administration by one of their creditors, docked 10 points and plunged instantly into a relegation battle.

Only when a Creditors' Voluntary Agreement was accepted in the summer of 2010 was the future of the club secured under new ownership.  Under the terms of the agreement Jordan, having plunged at least £35 million of his own money into the club in his ill-starred decade, would have walked away with less than £150,000.

Jordan pulled no verbal punches either in the boardroom or during his brief stint as an Observer columnist and Be Careful What You Wish For offers more of the same, sparing few of the many in football who met with his disapproval.  Some critics have been snooty about his writing style but the combination of juicy gossip and eyebrow-raising revelations is a potent mix and most have agreed on one thing - that it makes a cracking read.

Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan, is published by Yellow Jersey. For more information and to buy, visit amazon.co.uk or the William Hill 2012 page at The Sports Bookshelf Shop.

The full shortlist for the 2012 William Hill Sports Book of the Year award is:


  • That Near-Death Thing – Inside the TT: The World’s Most Dangerous Race, by Rick Broadbent (Orion)
  • The Secret Race – Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France: Doping, Cover-ups, and Winning at All Costs, by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle (Bantam Press)
  • Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan (Yellow Jersey)
  • Fibber in the Heat, by Miles Jupp (Ebury Press)
  • A Life Without Limits – A World Champion’s Journey, by Chrissie Wellington with Michael Aylwin (Constable & Robinson)
  • Shot and a Ghost: A Year in the Brutal World of Professional Squash, by James Willstrop with Rod Gilmour (James Willstrop / Rod Gilmour)
  • Running With the Kenyans - Discovering the Secrets of the Fastest People on Earth, by Adharanand Finn (Faber & Faber)


The 2012 winner, which will receive a £24,000 prize, will be announced at a lunchtime reception at Waterstones Piccadilly (London), Europe’s largest bookstore, on Monday, November 26.

More reading

James Willstrop -- Hidden star of the sport the Olympics left behind (Shot and a Ghost)
Tyler Hamilton and the Lance Armstrong scandal (The Secret Race)
A cheeky adventure turns into a cautionary tale (Fibber in the Heat)
Fatal attraction of the world's most dangerous race (That Near-Death Thing)
One man's quest to learn the secrets of the swiftest (Running With the Kenyans)

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