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Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
A season of triumph for United or one of frustrated ambition? The
jury is still out on season 2000-01, if only because another
championship was followed by a hasty Champions League exit and
trouble between Alex Ferguson and the board. When Sir Alex Ferguson
became the first manager to win three championships in a row, it
set the seal on another successful season at Old Trafford. From
August to the start of the New Year, United were as irresistible as
usual. But by Spring, despite an imminent championship, there were
rumours that United's most successful manager of all time had
fallen out with the board. Following United's exit from the
Champions League, the grumbling at boardroom and terrace level grew
to fever pitch. So much so that by the final fixture of the season
rumour and theory had replaced sanity on the terraces, with most
fans convinced 'the Wizard' was on his way out. As ever there's
rarely a dull moment at Old Trafford. From the debate over standing
to the creeping (and not so creeping) commercialism within the
club, to the threats made by Trafford Borough Council and the
arrival of a new chairman, United supporters had more to worry
about than mere football. Linda Harvey and Paul Windridge write
passionately about the events that mattered to United fans last
season. From the ecstasy of a 6-1 romp against championship rivals
Arsenal to the agony of defeat in Munich via a brief return for
hated rivals Manchester City. Experience the highs and lows of Sir
Alex Ferguson's penultimate season in charge.
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Up Close (Paperback)
Geoff Francis; Photographs by Paul Windridge; Designed by Paul Windridge
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R292
Discovery Miles 2 920
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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unNatural Heart (Paperback)
Geoff Francis; Edited by Jacky Francis Walker; Designed by Paul Windridge
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R405
Discovery Miles 4 050
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Written with his daughter, Jean Gough, just a decade after Sir
Stanley Matthews' death, this volume celebrates the influence Stan
Matthews had in Africa. In the year that South Africa hosted the
World Cup Finals, it highlights his work for over a quarter ofa
century in Soweto, the legacy of which is recognised here by one of
the worlds foremost statesmen, Archbishop Desmond Tutu.From Jean's
unique viewpoint, we gain insights into 'Stan the Man'. We also
learn what he meant to those who watched him from afar and those
who played with him, and against him. From his family, to the H.M.
The Queen and Prince Philip, he was loved and admired not only for
his extraordinary skill, but also for his natural humility and
openheartedness.
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The Passenger
Cormac McCarthy
Paperback
R385
R349
Discovery Miles 3 490
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