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Firsts, Lasts & Onlys: A Truly Wonderful Collection of
Horseracing Trivia is filled with improbable facts and
mind-boggling trivia that will test and tease every horseracing
enthusiast.Try these questions for size: How did the word
‘thoroughbred’ come into existence, and what is a dam sire?
Which Grand National-winning horse opened supermarkets after he
retired and was sent requests for autographs? Which BBC sports
commentator often had bad luck around the time of the National?
Which classic race almost came to be known as the Bunbury?The
perfect gift for every horseracing fan, this is a book you can pick
up while waiting for the stewards’ inquiry for the 3.15 at
Newmarket and learn something new, weird or fascinating. Often all
three.
From the thousands of matches ever played by Arsenal, stretching
from a muddy field on the Isle of Dogs in the 19th century to the
Premier League era and the pristine perfection of the Emirates
Stadium, here are 50 of the club's most glorious, epochal and
thrilling games of all! Expertly presented in evocative historical
context, and described incident-by-incident in atmospheric detail,
Arsenal Greatest Games offers a terrace ticket back in time, taking
in their first FA Cup win in 1930, 1930s dominance of domestic
football under the great Herbert Chapman, through to the great 1971
double-winning side; on to the exploits under George Graham in the
late 1980s and early 1990s, and Arsene Wenger's revolution and his
all-conquering invincibles of 2004. An irresistible cast list of
club legends - Frank McLintock, Charlie George, Thierry Henry, Ian
Wright, Dennis Bergkamp - comes to life in these thrilling tales of
goalscoring feats, great comebacks, Wembley glory and the odd
glorious yet crushing disappointment. In all, a journey through the
highlights of the Gunners' history which is guaranteed to make any
fan's heart swell with pride.
Firsts, Lasts & Onlys is a rugby fan's delight, chock-full of
astonishing events, time-honoured anecdotes and distinctly unlikely
facts. Beginning in 1823 with an event that probably didn't happen,
the book charts the history of the sport to the present day. Did
you know that Wasps were not included at the formation of the Rugby
Football Union because their representative went to the wrong venue
and got drunk? Or that the first international was won by Scotland
because the umpire, a Dr Almond, adjudged: 'When an umpire is in
doubt, I think he is justified in deciding against the side which
makes the most noise. They are probably in the wrong'? Do you know
which was the first novel to mention rugby? When the last 20-a-side
rugby match was played? Or why a fan cut off his testicles to
celebrate a win? All this, and so much more.
The Arsenal Companion collects together all the vital information
you never knew you needed to know about Arsenal FC. In these pages
you will find irresistible anecdotes and the most mindblowing stats
and facts. Heard the one about the glam rock single, 'A Love Song
For My Lady', recorded by Charlie George as 'Charlie Gorgeous'? How
about the linesman's injury that led to commentator Jimmy Hill
running the line at Highbury? Do you know which former full-back
managed the club for the shortest ever spell? Which 80s star
advertised fitted kitchens and a white leather suit for Top Man? Or
which 60s stopper was known as 'Sponge' due to his ability to soak
up pressure? All these stories and hundreds more appear in a
brilliantly researched collection of trivia, essential for any fan
who holds the riches of red-and-white history close to their heart.
Featuring a foreword by Frank McLintock.
Firsts, Lasts & Onlys is a tennis fan's delight, chock-full of
astonishing events, time-honoured anecdotes and extraordinary
facts. The book takes a light-hearted but authoritative look at
every major tennis tournament in the world, including the Wimbledon
Championships. Discover how the first championships - held in 1877,
the same year as the first cricket Test match - were almost an
afterthought. Did you know that no women were allowed in the first
tournament? Or that the All England Club was actually founded to
promote croquet? The book is packed with fascinating trivia that
will tantalise and enthral. When did strawberries and cream become
a Wimbledon staple? Who was the first man to win all four major
titles in the same year? Who is or was Roland Garros? Filled with
bizarre curiosities from the sport's past - from the heir to the
throne whose death was caused by tennis, to the vicar who won
Wimbledon, to the murderer who reached a final - this is a book
every tennis fan should own.
A fun and informative trip around the highways (not forgetting the
low ways) and byways of Great Britain. Within its pages you will
find love and romance, murder and mayhem, royalty, aristocrats and
commoners, politics and politicians, sex and scandal, sporting
triumphs and sporting disasters, millionaires and eccentrics, film
stars and train robbers and much more besides. Why were some
customers at Harrods offered cognac or smelling salts during their
visit to the store? What links DJ “Whispering Bob” Harris to a
split pair of velvet trousers? Which high street store issued a
patent for a drug to treat syphilis? The staff of which shop had
uniforms by Mary Quant and hairstyles by Vidal Sassoon? Who placed
a sign on her bedroom door bearing the legend ‘Chief Chick’?
Did you know that the cashpoint was invented while someone was
having a bath?
Arsenal On This Day revisits all the most magical and memorable
moments from the club's distinguished past, mixing in a maelstrom
of quirky anecdotes and legendary characters to produce an
irresistibly dippable diary of red-and-white history - with an
entry for every day of the year. From the club's Victorian roots
playing in donated shirts right up to the Emirates era, Gunners
fans have witnessed league, cup and Double triumphs, hard-fought
derbies and unforgettable European nights - all featured here.
All-time greats including Thierry Henry and George Armstrong, Liam
Brady, Charlie George and Eddie Hapgood loom larger than life -
while their team-mates bare their buttocks before the North Bank,
score solo pop hits and win Olympic gold medals. Find out which
legend debuted on the day George Graham was born; the day which
links Bertie Mee and Arsene Wenger; and which Arsenal manager was
sacked on Friday the 13th.
Paul Donnelley has chronicled the lives and deaths of more than
1,000 movie personalities. Included are not just the big stars but
also a wealth of producers, directors and supporting players. Some
achieved world fame or great power. Some were consigned to
obscurity after one scandal too many. And quite a few hit dark
secrets that would only emerge after their deaths. The big names
featured run from Bogart and Cagney to Sinatra and Valentino. But
it is often the starlets and small-time showbiz hustlers who
suffered the most tragic fates, burned out before achieving the
fame and fortune they craved. For better or worse they are all
here, the villains and heroes side by side, all made equal at last
by the final Fade to Black. This title is now updated to include
the lives and deaths of movie personalities including Paul Newman,
Charlton Heston, Charles Bronson, Farrah Fawcett and Natasha
Richardson.
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