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Books > Sport & Leisure > Sports & outdoor recreation > Ball games > Football (Soccer, Association football)
Rhapsody in Blue is a joyous celebration of growing up in the late
1960s and early 70s in the aftermath of England's 1966 World Cup
victory. It was a time when football and pop culture merged - an
era of smoke-filled pubs, when Fray Bentos pies and fry-ups were
consumed without guilt and parents had no fear of letting their
kids stay out after dark. It was also a time without live TV
football, when being a fan meant traipsing through the turnstiles
every week. The book vividly recalls how a boy fell in love with
Chelsea Football Club, cheering the Blues on week after week, while
at the same time becoming immersed in the culture of street
football. Neil Fitzsimon skilfully transports us to the Stamford
Bridge of his youth, when the likes of Ian Hutchinson and Peter
Houseman lit up the pitch. Away from the terraces, he played in his
own street team in bitterly contested games against rival street
sides. Rhapsody in Blue is a moving and nostalgic tribute to a lost
era and way of life.
Presenting an empirically underpinned synthesis of research and
theory, while offering guidance for applied practitioners, this is
the first book to comprehensively map the psychology of learning,
playing, and coaching the world's favourite sport. The book
provides a complete analysis of key topics that capture the broad
range of football psychology such as personality, motivation,
cognition, and emotion; coaching and team essentials; psychological
skills for performance enhancement; and developing players in youth
football. Including contributions from a range of international
researchers, each chapter provides a review of the relevant
literature, key theories, real-world examples, and reflections on
how knowledge can be applied in practice. Split into four sections,
the book covers a diverse range of topics relevant not only to
coaching and performance but also to personality development and
health promotion. Essential reading for any student, researcher, or
professional in the area, the book is the most cutting-edge
overview of how psychology can explain and improve the way football
is both played and understood.
What is talent? How do you get the best out of yourself? What are
the secrets of leadership? In Edge, Ben Lyttleton gets
unprecedented access to some of the world's top football clubs to
discover their innovative methods for developing talent - and
reveals how we can use them in our everyday lives. Elite teams now
look for an edge by improving the intangible skills of their
players 'above the shoulder'. Liverpool's approach to talent will
make you more creative. Chelsea's culture will improve your
resilience. Didier Deschamps will improve your leadership skills.
Xavi Hernandez will help you make better decisions. But how?
Football is the most hot-housed, intense, financially profitable
talent factory on the planet. It's time we woke up to the lessons
it can provide. We all want to have an edge. This is your chance to
find one...
'What makes a great player? He's the one who brings out the best in
others. When I am saying that I'm talking about Billy McNeill.'
JOCK STEIN A unique tribute to Celtic's greatest ever player to
mark the 60th anniversary of his first appearance for the club.
Billy McNeill is the greatest Celt of all time. He spent his entire
playing career at the Glasgow giants and made 790 appearances
between 1958 and 1975, winning the European Cup, nine Scottish
League Championships, seven Scottish Cups and six League Cups in a
glittering career. And it all started on 23rd August 1958 when
Billy McNeill made his Celtic debut. Billy McNeill's breathtaking
journey through the beautiful game is charted here from his debut
against Clyde through the momentous years as player and manager,
the highs, the lows, the triumphs, the tears. Sixty years on from
his debut, this unique book celebrates the astonishing life and
times of one of world football's best-loved personalities with
tributes from many greats of the game. Celtic chief executive Peter
Lawwell pays his own special tribute to the Parkhead hero along
with a Who's Who of the game's royalty. They share their
unforgettable experiences and wonderful memories of playing with
and against Billy McNeill, one of football's most respected and
well-loved men, and talk about him both as a world-renowned
footballer and as a genuinely much-admired figure. Packed full of
anecdotes and tributes, In Praise of Caesar is a must-read for all
Billy McNeill and Celtic fans, and football supporters everywhere.
Contributions from: Brendan Rodgers, Sir Alex Ferguson, Sir Kenny
Dalglish, Denis Law, Mike Jackson, Steve Archibald, Gordon
Strachan, Danny McGrain, Roy Aitken, Paul McStay, Davie Hay,
Charlie Nicholas, Frank McAvennie, Pat Bonner, Alex McLeish, Davie
Provan, and not forgetting Lisbon Lions Bertie Auld, John Clark,
Jim Craig, Bobby Lennox and Willie Wallace.
This volume investigates the way in which football supporters
around the world express themselves as followers of teams, whether
they be professional, amateur or national. The diverse geographical
and cultural array of contributions to this volume highlights not
only the variety of how fans express themselves, but their
commonalities as well. The collection brings together scholars of
North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa to present a
global picture of fan culture. The collection shows that while
every group of fans around the world has its own characteristics,
the role of a football fan is laced with commonalities,
irrespective of geography or culture. This book was previously
published as a special issue of Soccer and Society.
Chelsea FC have enjoyed unprecedented success in England and Europe
since Roman Abramovich arrived in 2003. The men's team has set a
phenomenally high benchmark, which the Chelsea women's team now
aims to follow. Club director Marina Granovskaia has one
overarching mission: to replicate the men's team model and
transform Chelsea Women into a European powerhouse - a side to
rival the acknowledged queens of Europe, Olympique Lyonnais
Feminin. So how has coach Emma Hayes set up her side to achieve
superpower status? This book dissects the tactical concepts of the
team, breaking down each phase of play, and explores the factors
that make them a super-club with a viable chance of winning the
elusive UEFA Women's Champions League. From team tactics to
in-depth player analysis, Europe's Next Powerhouse? reveals the
factors that have put them on a path to be a force in England and
Europe for years to come.
'This terrific biography...well-researched, well written' David
Winner 'Deeply researched...nicely written, and manages to get
inside Cruyff's very bizarre head' Simon Kuper Argumentative,
brilliant, arrogant, visionary. Johan Cruyff was one of the
greatest footballers of all time, a worldwide phenomenon and
arguably the most famous Dutchman of the twentieth century. Both on
the pitch and from the sidelines as a coach, with his brand of
Total Football he changed how the game was played and left a
lasting legacy. Although Cruyff led a large part of his illustrious
career and life in the spotlight, in many ways Cruyff the man and
sportsman is still a complete mystery. Based on years of extensive
research, this biography the first to cover all aspects of Cruyff's
life and work, from his key influence in the great Ajax and
Netherlands sides of the 1970s to his role in creating the modern
footballing phenomenon that is Barcelona. Drawing on hundreds of
interviews with friends from his childhood and school, coaches,
teammates, on-pitch opponents, business associates and family
members, Auke Kok has written the definitive biography of the
skinny impish street footballer that became the genius player,
inspirational manager, football philosopher and commercial pioneer
that was Johan Cruyff.
This book is a fascinating journey through a series of scholarly
articles. The journey begins by tracing one of the most significant
stories in the popularization of Association Football. In the next
leg of the journey it charts the diverse and changing face of the
modern British game. It then moves on to the global spread of the
game from England and its domestication and appropriation in its
new homes across the planet. It also investigates the exchanges
which are increasingly taking place between these new homes of
football. In the concluding pieces footballa (TM)s global
experience is compared with the attempts at globalizing baseball
and drawing out the larger patterns that inform footballa (TM)s
global experience.
This book was published as a special issue in Soccer and
Society.
Goal! covers the history of the beautiful game from its origins in
English public schools in the early 19th century to its current
role as a crucial element of a globalized entertainment industry.
The authors explain how football transformed from a sport at elite
boarding schools in England to become a pastime popular with the
working classes, enabling factories such as the Thames Iron Works
and the Woolwich Arsenal to give birth to the teams that would
become the Premier League mainstays known as West Ham United and
Arsenal. They also explore how the age of amateur soccer ended and,
with the advent of professionalism, how football became a sport
dominated by big clubs with big money and with an international
audience. There are intense rivalries in soccer, such as that in
Glasgow, Scotland, between (Catholic) Celtic and (Protestant)
Rangers, and the authors examine closely the social causes that
make for such passionate fans. The book also discusses the use of
soccer for political purposes, such as in Hitler's Germany and
Franco's Spain. And - given the long-standing association of soccer
as a man's sport and the rise of women's soccer, especially in the
United States - the authors look at the gendered history of the
world's most popular sport. This book, which will appeal to all
connoisseurs of soccer, provides a lens through which to view the
social and cultural history of modern Europe. The book is published
by The Catholic University of America Press.
When studying the social phenomena in and around football, five
major aspects of globalisation processes become evident:
international migration, the global flow of capital, the
syncretistic nature of tradition and modernity in contemporary
culture, new experiences of time and space and the revolution in
information technologies. In an exploration of these themes the
collection provides insight into academic studies of football in
Portugal, Germany, England, Spain, Brazil, Angola, Mozambique,
China, Japan, South Korea, Russia and the USA. At examining
football-related phenomena under the headings of nations and
migration, myths and business, the city and the dream, it shows how
modernised football itself is object and subject in processes of
both neo-liberal globalisation and counter hegemonic globalisation.
While the contributions highlight characteristics of particular
local and national contexts, the volume focuses on global
centre-periphery-relations and migration trajectories of football
professionals by analysing recent developments in post-colonial
Portuguese speaking areas: The high ranking of "Portuguese
football" not only serves in national(ist) discourses or in order
to emancipate the country from a marginal position, it also turns
Portugal into a football-talent exporter, confronting it partly
with the same ambiguous consequences as Brazil and the African
countries, who "lose" their football talents to the European
centre. The receiving countries, again, include Portugal. This book
was previously published as a special issue of Soccer in Society
The funniest and most entertaining sports book you'll read this
year. 'fascinating, frank, funny' Jim White, Daily Telegraph
'insightful' Henry Winter, The Times 'engaging ... revealing ... a
warm and often funny read' FourFourTwo 'very entertaining ... great
stories' Hawksbee & Jacobs, talkSPORT radio 'an incredible
book' The Football Show, Sky Sports News 'a kaleidoscope of
anecdotes and detours packed with wisdom acquired on the hoof' The
i newspaper 'Yeah, I'm all that plus a bag of chips' 'Come round my
house and we'll have a fight on the front lawn' 'I'm as chuffed as
a badger at the start of the mating season' 'I thought his bum
cheeks looked very pert' Football management is like being a potato
- you're never too far from the sack and everyone is constantly
chipping away at you. It's not for the faint-hearted and unless
you've got skin as thick as rhino and, more importantly, a wicked
sense of humour, you've no chance of surviving. Ian Holloway - aka
'Ollie' - has all the above and more besides. His press conferences
are the stuff of legend. He's been there, seen it and done it in
his 40 years as player and manager, and has been entertaining
football fans on and off the pitch for most of his life. He's been
head honcho at clubs in all four divisions in English football,
experiencing everything from the giddy heights of taking Blackpool
to the Premier League to fighting relegation from the Football
League with Grimsby Town. There's never been a dull moment. In the
joyful How to Be a Football Manager, Holloway weaves a
fantastically rich tapestry of hilarious anecdotes to reveal what
being the boss is really like. This is not a handbook to tell you
when to play a Christmas tree formation or throw on a false nine -
it's about dealing with the ridiculous, fighting your corner and
always having a comeback.
UPDATED TO INCLUDE THE 2021/22 SEASON THE INSTANT SUNDAY TIMES TOP
TEN BESTSELLER The behind-the-scenes story of the Marcelo Bielsa
revolution at Leeds United and their first season back in the
Premier League after sixteen years of hurt. FEATURING FRESH
PERSONAL INSIGHT FROM MARCELO BIELSA On 27th February 2022, after
170 matches in charge, promotion to the Premier League and some of
the most exhilarating football the English game has ever seen,
Leeds United parted company with their most beloved and successful
manager in a generation: Marcelo Bielsa. His parting gift was to
embrace the crowds of adoring fans who turned up to say thank you
as he left the club's training ground for the final time. In And it
was Beautiful, The Athletic's Phil Hay chronicles Leeds United's
glorious first season back in the top flight - which saw them
finish ninth - after a chaotic sixteen-year absence. Phil pulls
back the curtain on the hallmarks that now define the Marcelo
Bielsa era, from his gruelling training schedule - including his
infamous 'murderball' sessions - to innovative tactical methods
that elevated Championship regulars into Premier League stars.
Bielsa performed miracles, turning football into high art and
making an extraordinary cultural impact on the city of Leeds. The
result is a unique and fitting tribute to a Leeds United icon.
Football (soccer in the United States) has a long history in the
Americas, but it currently displays many signs of crisis. In South
America the combination of spectator violence, poor business
management, and the emigration of players is undermining
professional football. In the United States, in contrast, a
professional league (Major League Soccer) has taken root in the
last decade, and the U.S. women's team has gained international
success. Football has always provided its players and fans with
identity and belonging, whether to a nation or to a particular
social group. It has been both a vehicle for the politically
ambitious and an arena in which citizens can make sense of national
failings and contest existing power structures. This volume
explores many of these themes. The fifteen essays range widely,
with theoretical and empirical contributions on the region as
whole, as well as chapters specifically on Argentina, Brazil, Peru,
Mexico, and the United States.
'It's been the basis of my work since 1971. It's the internet
between covers' John Motson 'The definitive chronicle of changing
times for so many who love the sport' Ian Herbert, Daily Mail 'The
Yearbook stands for authority and integrity' Martin Tyler 'The
first reference book you should turn to' Daily Telegraph The
Utilita Football Yearbook 2021-2022 is the market-leading book of
football statistics, featuring everything you need to know about
domestic and international football. Since its first appearance in
1970, The Football Yearbook has heralded the start of each new
season and served as the sport's book of record, faithfully
chronicling decades of both tradition and evolution. Now in its
52nd year of publication, the Yearbook celebrates that legacy and
undertakes to do what it always does - to meticulously record the
season just gone and look forward to the season about to start, all
within more than a thousand pages of pure footballing facts and
figures.
The Untouchables: Anfield's Band of Brothers chronicles the rise
and fall of one of the greatest Liverpool teams ever. In 1918 an
enlisted man, Tom Bromilow, stepped off the streets of Liverpool
and straight into the team. Still in uniform, he was one of tens of
thousands of Liverpudlians who fought in World War One. His signing
completed a jigsaw that eventually revealed an image of footballing
perfection, a team so great they were called 'The Untouchables'.
The book brings to life a host of incredible characters, uncovers
friendships and rivalries and reveals amazing backstories. Meet men
like Bootle-born Walter Wadsworth, tough-talking Irishman Elisha
Scott, champion boxer Jock McNab and many other fascinating
figures. The Untouchables reveals previously unknown detail and
sheds new light on old controversies, including the real reason
behind the departure of the club's manager, Dave Ashworth.
Meticulously researched and lovingly told, the book breathes new
life into a fascinating and long-forgotten story.
Hearts Heart of Midlothian Football Club 2018 Annual Yearbook - official licensed product
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