Showing posts with label Jonathan Wilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jonathan Wilson. Show all posts

20131125

Under the spotlight - 10 matches that shaped the history of Liverpool Football Club

Jonathan Wilson's position as the pre-eminent thinking man's football writer is likely only to be reinforced by his latest offering, which applies the formula he employed so effectively in The Anatomy of England for the first time to the history of a club.

The Anatomy of Liverpool: A History in Ten Matches, which he has written in collaboration with another football writer, Guardian on-line's Liverpool-supporting Scott Murray, promises to be the first in a line of innovative club histories.

As with The Anatomy of England, this examination of Liverpool's evolution is constructed around 10 games the authors considered to have had particular significance, even if they are not always the most obvious or famous games.  The England book, for example, examined the 1966 World Cup through the prism of the quarter-final against Argentina, rather than the final.

"When I sat down with Scott over a meal to discuss which games we would include, we looked for a spread of games, not too close together if it was possible, that were outstanding or significant in their own right or that encapsulated a period in the history of the club," Wilson told The Sports Bookshelf.

"The game is the focal point for each chapter, in which we look at the details of the game itself and then spin off into the broader context.

"Hopefully it is a mix of the familiar with the less familiar."

The earliest match to come under the microscope is the concluding fixture of the 1898-99 season, away to Aston Villa, in which Liverpool needed to win to be champions of England for the first time.  They and Villa were level on points, but Villa won 5-0.  The most recent is the 2005 Champions League final in Istanbul.

Matches selected in between include the the FA Cup final victory over Leeds in 1965, the defeat to Red Star Belgrade in the European Cup in 1973, and the 4-4 draw against Everton in an FA Cup replay in 1991 that preceded the shock announcement that Kenny Dalglish had resigned as manager.

"We chose the Red Star game because although Liverpool lost the first leg in Belgrade 2-1 they were optimistic about overturning the score in the home leg," Wilson said. "Instead they were played off the park at Anfield and again lost 2-1. It was the catalyst for a change in tactics and thinking that was to define the way Liverpool played in Europe from thereon in."

The unforgettably dramatic Merseyside derby of 1991 was picked not only because it was such an outstanding game but for what happened two days later, when Dalglish, who had willingly been the club's figurehead in the aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster, admitted that the stress of the job had become too much for him.

"We decided not to do the Hillsborough semi-final itself," Wilson said. "We did not feel it was right to try to condense the disaster into just one chapter, but the Everton match enabled us to discuss the legacy of Hillsborough, particularly with regard to Dalglish and the effect the disaster and all the funerals that followed had on him.  Dalglish's exhaustion was the embodiment of what the club had gone through."

Researching the games presented its own challenges, although Wilson's resourcefulness and his contacts book enabled him to find video footage of all but the two earliest games.  Through a contact in Canada, he was able even to obtain a film of the first leg against Red Star, complete with Serbian commentary.

"It is surprising, too, how much there is on YouTube, even really old newsreel footage," he said. "And for the older games you can find newspaper reports that go into much greater detail in describing the action than today's match reports, largely because there was no film or tv pictures for anyone to watch."

The Anatomy of Liverpool is Jonathan Wilson's seventh book, his first written in collaboration with another author.

Wilson's study of football tactics through the years, Inverting The Pyramid, won Best Football Book at the 2009 British Sports Book Awards.  His backlist also includes books on football in Eastern Europe and his home-town, Sunderland, a full biography of Brian Clough and a history of the goalkeeper.

In the pipeline is a football history of Argentina and the next 'Anatomy', of which the subject will be Manchester United.

STOP PRESS:  Inverting the Pyramid is now available in an updated fifth-anniversary edition that includes an investigation of the modern-day Barcelona and how their style of play developed from Total Football, which itself was an evolution of the Scottish passing game invented by Queen's Park and taken on by Tottenham in the 1930s. It also analyses different styles in the early British game and the changing mentality of South American football in the 1970s, as well as looking at the birth of the 3-5-2 system so prevalent today.

The Anatomy of Liverpool: A History in Ten Matches, is published by Orion.

Also by Jonathan Wilson:

Behind the Curtain: Travels in Eastern European Football

Sunderland: A Club Transformed

Inverting the Pyramid: The History of Football Tactics

The Anatomy of England: A History in Ten Matches

Brian Clough: Nobody Ever Says Thank You: The Biography

The Outsider: A History of the Goalkeeper

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20130509

2013 British Sports Book Awards: 2011 winner Anthony Clavane makes the shortlists again

London 2012 headline-makers Sir Bradley Wiggins and Lord Sebastian Coe -- and Olympic TV presenter Clare Balding -- are among the nominees for the 2013 British Sports Book Awards.

A strong field for the 11th edition of the National Sporting Club's annual recognition of excellence in sports writing also includes a number of past winners, among them Duncan Hamilton, Anthony Clavane and Jonathan Wilson.

Hamilton, who won best football book in 2008 for Provided You Don't Kiss Me and best biography in 2010 for Harold Larwood, is nominated in the best biography or autobiography category for The Footballer Who Could Fly, which focuses on his own upbringing in the north-east of England.

Clavane, whose personal history of Leeds United, Promised Land, won best football book in 2011 and was voted overall sports book of the year in an online poll, is in the running again for best football book for Does Your Rabbi Know You're Here?, which examines of Jewish involvement in football.

Inverting the Pyramid, a history of football tactics, won best football book for Jonathan Wilson in 2009.  This time he has been nominated in the same category for The Outsider, a broad history of the goalkeeper in football.  Confusingly, The Outsider is also the title chosen by Geordan Murphy, the Irish rugby star, for his autobiography, which is shortlisted for best rugby book.

Other interesting nominations include fell runner Boff Whalley's Run Wild in the best new writer section, That Near Death Thing, Rick Broadbent's brilliant study of the Isle on Man TT races, for best motorsport book, and Stephen Cooper's The Final Whistle: The Great War in 15 Players, which tells the story of 15 members of Rosslyn Park rugby club killed in the First World War, a group of men from differing backgrounds linked in a common fight for Britain and Empire.

Coe's Running my Life and the Wiggins bestseller My Time are shortlisted in the  in the autobiography / biography category, which also includes the story of award-winning Sunday Times journalist David Walsh's pursuit of disgraced cycling champion Lance Armstrong, Seven Deadly Sins. 

Clare Balding's My Animals and Other Family finds a home on the shortlist for best horse racing book, although it would sit comfortably among the autobiographies too.

The most poignant title among the shortlisted titles is the best cricket book nominee, CMJ: A Cricketing Life,   the memoirs of Christopher Martin-Jenkins, former cricket correspondent of The Times and the BBC, who died in January.

In all, nine award categories will be contested by 56 titles. The winners will be announced at Lord’s Cricket Ground on May 21st.  The winners in each category will then go to an online public vote will determine the overall British Sports Book of the Year.

Full shortlists (Click on the links for more information):

Best New Writer:

Barca: The Making of the Greatest Team in the World, by Graham Hunter
Beautiful Brutality: The Family Ties at the Heart of Boxing, by Adam Smith
Run Wild, by Boff Whalley
Running with the Kenyans: Discovering the Secrets of the Fastest People on Earth, by Adharanand Finn
Shot and a Ghost: A Year in the Brutal World of Professional Squash, by James Willstrop
Sit Down and Cheer: A History of Sport on TV , on TV by Martin Kelner

Best Autobiography / Biography:

An Open Book - My Autobiography, by Darren Clarke
Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan
Merckx: Half Man, Half Bike, by William Fotheringham
My Time, by Bradley Wiggins
Running My Life - The Autobiography, by Seb Coe
Seven Deadly Sins: My Pursuit of Lance Armstrong, by David Walsh
The Footballer Who Could Fly, by Duncan Hamilton
This is Me: The Autobiography, by Ian Thorpe

Best Cricket Book:

CMJ: A Cricketing Life, by Christopher Martin-Jenkins
Gentlemen & Players: The Death of Amateurism in Cricket, by Charles Williams
On Warne , by Gideon Haigh
The Plan: How Fletcher and Flower Transformed English Cricket, by Steve James
The Valiant Cricketer: The Biography of Trevor Bailey, by Alan Hill
We'll Get 'Em in Sequins: Manliness, Yorkshire Cricket and the Century that Changed Everything, by Max Davidson

Best Football Book:

Barca: The Making of the Greatest Team in the World, by Graham Hunter
Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan
Does Your Rabbi Know You're Here?: The Story of English Football's Forgotten Tribe, by Anthony Clavane
Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning - The Biography., by Guillem Balague
Richer Than God: Manchester City, Modern Football and Growing Up, by David Conn
The Outsider: A History of the Goalkeeper, by Jonathan Wilson

Best Rugby Book:

Behind the Lions: Playing Rugby for the British & Irish Lions, by Stephen Jones, Tom English, Nick Cain and David Barnes
Brent Pope: If You Really Knew Me, by Brent Pope & Kevin MacDermot
My Life as a Hooker: When a Middle-Aged Bloke Discovered Rugby, by Steven Gauge
The Final Whistle: The Great War in Fifteen Players, by Stephen Cooper
The Outsider, by Geordan Murphy
Who Beat the All Blacks?, by Alun Gibbard

Best Motorsports Book:

My Chequered Career: Thirty-Five Years of Televising Motorsport, by Steve Rider
Team Lotus: My View from the Pit Wall, by Peter Warr
That Near Death Thing: Inside the Most Dangerous Race in the World, by Rick Broadbent
Formula 1: All the Races - The World Championship Story Race-By-Race: 1950-2012 , by Roger Smith
Lotus 72 Owners' Manual, by Ian Wagstaff
I Just Made the Tea: Tales from 30 Years Inside Formula 1, by Di Spires and Bernard Ferguson

Best Horse Racing Book:

A Weight Off My Mind: My Autobiography, by Richard Hughes with Lee Mottershead
Clive Brittain: The Smiling Pioneer, by Robin Oakley
Her Majesty's Pleasure: How Horseracing Enthrals the Queen, by Julian Muscat
My Animals and Other Family, by Clare Balding
Racing Crazy: The Best of David Ashforth, by David Ashforth
When Horse Racing Was Horse Racing: A Century on the Turf, by Adam Powley

Best Golf Book:

Out of Bounds: Legendary Tales From the 19th Hole, by Sam Torrance
An Open Book - My Autobiography, by Darren Clarke
Miracle at Medinah: Europe's Amazing Ryder Cup Comeback, by Oliver Holt
Bobby's Open: Mr. Jones and the Golf Shot That Defined a Legend, by Steven Reid
Seve: Golf's Flawed Genius, by Robert Green
The Bible of Golf, by Skellett & Weitzman

Best Illustrated Title:

21 Days to Glory: The Official Team Sky Book of the 2012 Tour de France, by Team Sky and Dave Brailsford
A Swing for Life, by Nick Faldo
Bike!: A Tribute to the World's Greatest Cycling Designers, by Richard Moore & Daniel Benson
Coppi: Inside the Legend of the Campionissimo, by Herbie Sykes
Frankel: The Wonder Horse, edited by Andrew Pennington
The Glory Glory Nights, by Martin Cloake and Adam Powley

Best Publicity Campaign:

Be Careful What You Wish For, by Simon Jordan – Bethan Jones
Between the Lines: My Autobiography, by Victoria Pendleton with Donald McRae -- Caroline March
Running My Life - The Autobiography, by Sebastian Coe – Karen Geary
he 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 – Alison Barrow
Tom Daley: My Story, by Tom Daley – Jo Wickham
Jessica Ennis: Unbelievable - From My Childhood Dreams to Winning Olympic Gold, by Jessica Ennis – Eleni Lawrence and Lucy Zilberkweit

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