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  • Spar 22%
    av Peter Buckley
    275,-

    King of the Journeymen is the gripping autobiography of Peter Buckley, a pro boxer who fought 300 times and was a 'stepping stone' for world champions such as Naseem Hamed and Duke McKenzie. As a boy, Buckley shone as an amateur boxer, but outside the ring he was heading for trouble. He was suspended numerous times from school and sent to prison at age 15 for assault and robbery. Whilst inside, his father died. His life felt hopeless and seemed to be going nowhere. But after his release he turned to professional boxing and things started to improve. Labelled a journeyman, he fought often and lost often, whilst earning more money than he'd thought possible. Buckley never refused a fight, often accepting bouts at a few hours' notice or after a night out. King of the Journeymen is an inspirational tale of a man tenaciously fighting for a better life. Although he lost more fights than he won, Buckley persevered with his career and attained widespread respect from boxers and fans alike.

  • av George Mallett
    226

    Potter, Hopcutt and a Desk in East London is the ultimate underdog story, charting the unlikely rise of Graham Potter's OEstersunds FK. Over six seasons the Swedish side rose from the fourth tier to qualify for the Europa League in 2017. This book tells the tale from the perspective of two friends seeking a distraction from their nine-to-five grind.

  • av David Herd
    276

    1977/78 tells the story of a historic season for Rangers FC on and off the pitch. Manager Jock Wallace and legendary captain John Greig took the team to treble glory, playing entertaining and attacking football. It marked the end of Greig's stellar playing career, and he replaced Wallace as manager just weeks after the season ended.

  • av Jane Purdon
    166

    The Homecoming is Jane Purdon's passionate, heartfelt account of the summer of 2022, when the Lionesses dazzled the nation and brought football home. It's also Jane's personal story. Jane, a true football insider for more than 20 years, looks at what's changed since the win, and the future of the women's game.

  • av Peter Prickett
    276

    This is a detailed study of the 'what-if' moments that have shaped football - the bounce of a ball, an ill-timed injury or a contentious decision are just a few examples. Each moment has been chosen to guarantee discussion and debate among fans. There are even fantasy match-ups between the great teams of different eras.

  • Spar 13%
    av Doug Richards
    185

    Having realised his dream of running at least a half marathon on all seven continents before his 70th birthday, Doug Richards - author of Running Hot & Cold and Can We Run With You, Grandfather? - travels to new remote locations for his next challenge... to complete 24,902 miles, the equivalent of the circumference of the Earth's equator.

  • av Scyld Berry
    296,-

    Disappearing World is a heartfelt celebration of what county cricket has been for more than a hundred years - an integral part of English life. Threatened by the growth of T20 franchise tournaments and by the governing body's move to cut the championship to ten games a season, county cricket will only survive if it is fully appreciated.

  • av Ian Ridley
    166

    Jimmy Armfield was one of the greats of English football - England captain before Bobby Moore, member of the 1966 World Cup squad, one-club man with Blackpool. In Pantomime Hero, Ian Ridley tells the remarkable story of when Armfield took over at Leeds and came up with a novel idea to restore the morale of a club in turmoil.

  • av Norman Giller
    276

    It was the funniest fight build-up of Muhammad Ali's career - and publicist and writer Norman Giller saw it all. Britain's Richard Dunn was facing Ali for the world heavyweight crown, and Giller hired the eccentric hypnotist Romark to convince Richard he could topple 'The Greatest', not realising Romark planned to put a curse on Ali.

  • av Andy Bollen
    246

    The Number Ten is an enlightening and entertaining study of the classic playmakers. Andy Bollen forensically details their win-at-all-costs mentality, their twisted logic and drive to overcome adversity. He discusses their lives, careers, artistry, genius and creativity but also their destructive brutality.

  • av Dev Bajwa
    276

    The Conquerors charts the rise, fall and rejuvenation of AC Milan across one of the club's most legendary eras, under manager and former club favourite Carlo Ancelotti. It's a story of incredible talent, iconic moments and the kind of improbable redemption usually reserved for Hollywood movie scripts.

  • av Bob Phillips
    246

    Bob Phillips takes us on an exhilarating journey through the history of marathon running. Through a compelling blend of personal memoirs, anecdotes, runner biographies, torrid tales and extraordinary facts and figures, the book charts Britain's role in the development of the marathon, from 1896 through to the Olympic marathons of the 1950s.

  • av Johnnie Lowery
    267,-

    Match Fit takes an in-depth look at mental health in football, from the Premier League down to five-a-side, in the hope of destigmatising this much-neglected topic, with candid contributions from the likes of Chris Kirkland, Paul Lambert and Marcus Bent. Subjects such as the issues facing footballers after retirement and the rise of social media are placed under the microscope, and we discover how being a football fan can benefit your mental health. Seasoned pros discuss the challenges they've faced in football, speaking openly about personal experiences most of us wouldn't associate with the glamour of the beautiful game. From a grassroots perspective, there are uplifting stories of how people have learnt to manage their mental health, with football as a key tool to help them get through their day-to-day lives. If the interviewees - involved in a sport that has traditionally lauded masculinity and the absence of so-called weakness - can open up about their mental health, then so can anyone.

  • av Shareef Abdallah
    241,-

    The King Takes Over: Liverpool and the Dalglish Years 1985-1991 is a fast-paced and nostalgic account of a time when Liverpool were the best team in the land, and played a brilliant style of football still talked about more than 30 years on. It is the story of how Liverpool's greatest player became one of its greatest managers.Taking a wistful look back at the glory years of 1985-1991, the book revisits the great games and goals of the Kenny Dalglish era. It examines the circumstances of the Heysel tragedy and how Dalglish became Liverpool's first player-manager in the darkest period in both the club and the city's history, amid the chaos wrought by Thatcher's government.How did the Hillsborough disaster impact Dalglish, the club, players and fans? How did John Barnes, the first black player signed by Liverpool, overcome racism from the terraces to become a legend in red? Why did the Reds not win the championship for 30 years after 1990? What were the real circumstances behind Dalglish's shock resignation in 1991?

  • av Matt Coughlan
    196

    According to Eric Cantona, 'You can change your wife, your politics, your religion, but never, never can you change your favourite football team.' Matt Coughlan never had much time for Cantona and planned to break this taboo. Disillusioned with Arsenal, he went in search of a new team to support and embarked on a journey of discovery.

  • av Ben Isaacs
    267,-

    The American Football Revolution is the remarkable story of how the USA's biggest sport converted a soccer-mad nation. In 1982 NFL highlights hit British homes. Now, 40 years on, the UK is the NFL's second home. These are the stories of the fans who transformed the NFL from a curiosity to a British obsession.

  • av Alex Ireland
    346

    Pretty Poly tells the story of the football shirt, charting its dramatic evolution over a 150-year period, from modest beginnings to a product at the centre of a billion-dollar industry. Packed with facts, figures and anecdotes, it uncovers the history embedded in every feature of modern-day strips, from necklines to namesets.

  • av Rich Chamberlain
    226

    When the Sky Was Blue celebrates Coventry City's nine-season adventure in the Premier League, from founder members to relegation, through a compelling array of brand-new interviews with managers, players and other key figures from the time.While not the most glamorous club to have played in the division, few can match the Sky Blues for madcap tales. This book tells those stories through the memories of those who were there.Hear how Bobby Gould's decision to hold pre-season in an army barracks led to near-death experiences and career-ending injury. Savour the glitz and glamour of Ron Atkinson's whirlwind spell at Highfield Road. Relive Gordon Strachan making Robbie Keane Britain's most expensive teenager. Oh, and there's also those heart-stopping relegation battles, FA Cup heartbreak and the time Coventry City became 'The Entertainers'.

  • av Simon Lloyd
    267,-

  • av Alistair Aird
    346

    In Safe Hands is the story of Rangers' goalkeepers past and present, going back to the club's origins in 1872. This exhaustive account charts the contribution each and every goalkeeper made to the rich history of Scotland's most successful side, brought to life by personal insights from Rangers players past and present.

  • av Aaron Moore
    188

    A Sprinkle of Magic tells the fascinating stories of non-league clubs who defied the odds and dared to dream big in the world's oldest cup competition. Stretching back to the 2009/10 season, the stories include FA Cup runs from Bath City, Redbridge, AFC Totton, Stourbridge, Hendon and of course history-makers Lincoln City.

  • av Anthony Broxton
    346

    Hope and Glory is the untold story of rugby league in Thatcher's Britain. Against the backdrop of social upheaval, the sport of the working class transformed itself. Broxton's book recreates the era with the dramatic tension of a novel, revealing a critical moment where despite losing everything, anything still seemed possible.

  • av John Jarrett
    346

    The story of arguably the most incredible fighter in the history of boxing, told by one of the few surviving writers to have been around during Henry Armstrong's era. In 1938, he became the first boxer to simultaneously hold world titles at three different weights. Nobody since then has replicated this amazing feat. It's likely no one will.

  • av Mark Peel
    346

    Yorkshire Grit: The Biography of Ray Illingworth traces the rise of a brilliant Yorkshire cricketer from humble origins to the England captaincy and his triumph in regaining the Ashes in Australia in 1970/71. But the qualities that made him a fine captain, paradoxically, were the undoing of his time as manager both at Yorkshire and with England.

  • av Llew Walker
    327,-

    Mr Corinthian is the first-ever biography of Nicholas Lane ('Pa') Jackson, founding father of the celebrated Corinthian Football Club. For the last 100 years, Jackson's version of the Corinthian story has been accepted as a faithful record of the famous club's history - but it wasn't. This book is a search for the truth.

  • av Gary Jordan
    276

    Box! Box! Box! tells the story of the 2022 Formula One championship. It captures the drama on and beyond the Grand Prix circuit, from high-speed accidents to the glamour of Monaco. More than a race review, this book shines a light on what makes the sport tick away from the circuits. So, strap in as we revisit the 2022 campaign.

  • av Matt Bozeat
    241,-

    Snooker's Bad Boys looks at the feuds, fist fights, fixes and playboys who put the sport on the front and back pages of the national press, as told by those who were there, with colourful tales of the rogues who drank, gambled, partied and potted their way into the hearts of millions, from the sport's peak years in the 1980s up to the present day.

  • av Gary Jordan
    296,-

    When Dave Went Up is the fairy-tale story of Wimbledon's famous 1988 FA Cup win over Liverpool, and how a small team overcame the giants of English football. More than just a recollection of the final itself, the book takes you through the tournament round by round, with tales from the key players in the side, staff and fans.

  • av John Broom
    366,-

    From Darkness into Light tells the fascinating story of how a handful of intrepid cricketing soldiers helped save the game from oblivion. The Australian Imperial Forces cricket tour of 1919 helped to resurrect not only the English domestic game but Test cricket itself. The book fills an important gap in cricketing historiography.

  • av Louis Foster
    246

    Fear and Loathing at Goodison Park chronicles the David Moyes era at Everton, when a fallen giant of the English game fought to re-establish itself among football's elite. Impaired by financial limitations in a league dominated by billionaire takeovers, the people's club's ambitions faded, leaving only fear and loathing at Goodison Park.

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