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In the winter of 2016 Simon Hughes began a journey through English
football's most successful region, meeting the players, the
managers, the chairmen and owners that shape the mood of a changing
time. From the Premier League to grassroots, in On the Brink,
Hughes examines how the landscape of the game across the north west
is shifting: how geography explains the way things are; how
industry defines identity; how money threatens existence - and what
Brexit might mean for the future. CLUBS FEATURED IN ON THE BRINK:
1. Carlisle 2. Barrow 3. Morecambe 4. Blackpool 5. AFC Fylde 6.
Fleetwood Town 7. Preston North End 8. Burnley 9. Blackburn Rovers
10. Accrington Stanley 11. Southport 12. Liverpool 13. Everton 14.
Tranmere Rovers 15. Home Bargain FC 16. 1874 Northwich 17.
Stockport County 18. Oldham Athletic 19. Bolton Wanderers 20.
Salford City 21. Droylsden 23. Fletcher Moss Rangers 24. Manchester
City
By James Pearce, Oliver Kay, Simon Hughes and Other Award-Winning
Writers of The Athletic As Liverpool ended their 30-year wait to be
crowned champions of England, they were followed by their
equivalent from the world of sports writing: a team of elite
talents, assembled to leave all competition trailing in their wake.
This is the story of Liverpool's title win in the longest season,
as told by the writers of The Athletic, with their blend of inside
access and expert analysis; great ideas and beautiful writing.
Articles include profiles of each of Liverpool's title winners by
their former youth team coaches; Oliver Kay watches Sadio Mane
score against Manchester City in the company of the striker's
family, in his hometown in Senegal; James Pearce spends 90 minutes
analysing Virgil van Dijk; plus there are exclusive interviews with
Jurgen Klopp, and the club's US owners. Read the stories behind a
unique and historical season from a team of writers every bit as
good as the footballers they were following.
During the 1980s, Liverpool Football Club dominated English
soccer, winning six league titles, two European Cups, two FA Cups,
and four League Cups. In "Red Machine," Simon Hughes interviews
some of the most colorful characters to have played for the club
during that period. The resulting interviews, set against the
historical backdrop of both the club and the city, provide a vivid
portrait of life at Liverpool during an era when the club's
unparalleled on-pitch success often went hand in hand with a boozy
social scene fraught with rows, fights, and wind-ups. The players
featured here include John Barnes, Bruce Grobbelaar, Howard Gayle,
Michael Robinson, John Wark, Kevin Sheedy, Nigel Spackman, Steve
Staunton, David Hodgson, and Craig Johnston, as well as first-team
coach Ronnie Moran. Their candid, ribald, and sometimes scathing
recollections provide an antidote to the media-coached, on-message
interviews given by today's players, and combine to offer a unique
insight to this exciting time in the club's history.
Completely revised and updated featuring two brand new chapters, in
preparation for the 2019 Ashes series From the William Hill
Award-Winning Author of A Lot of Hard Yakka comes Cricket's
Greatest Rivalry: A History of the Ashes in 12 Matches by Simon
Hughes. A fast-paced, distinctive history of the iconic,
137-year-old cricketing rivalry between England and Australia
published in the year of back-to-back Ashes contests. No other
sport has a fixture like the Ashes. From the early 1880s the
rivalry between these two great sporting nations has captured the
public imagination and made sporting legends of its stars.
Commentator, analyst and award-winning cricket historian Simon
Hughes tells the story of the 12 seminal series that have become
the stuff of sporting folklore. Cricket's Greatest Rivalry places
you right at the heart of the action of each pivotal match,
explaining the social context of the time, the atmosphere of the
crowd and the background and temperaments of the players that
battled in both baggy green and blue caps. The book also includes
complete statistics and records of all the Ashes fixtures and
results and much more!
Between 1980 and 1993, Simon Hughes was a regular on the county
circuit, playing for Middlesex until 1991 before moving on to
Durham at the end of his career. In that time, he played alongside
some of the great characters in cricket: Mike Brearley, Mike
Gatting, Phil Edmonds and Ian Botham. This is not an autobiography
of a good county pro, but a look at the ups and downs, the
lifestyle, the practical jokes and sheer hard yakka that make such
a poorly paid, insecure job appeal to so many. Now a respected
journalist and broadcaster, Simon Hughes has written a brilliant,
amusing and wrily self-depracating book, packed with hilarious and
embarrassing anecdotes about some of the greatest cricketers of the
last 20 years.
In Men in White Suits, Simon Hughes meets some of the most
colourful characters to have played for Liverpool Football Club
during the 1990s. The resulting interviews, set against the
historical backdrop of both the club and the city, deliver a rich
portrait of life at Anfield during a decade when on-field
frustrations were symptomatic of off-the-field mismanagement and
ill-discipline. After the shock resignation of Dalglish and Graeme
Souness's ill-fated reign, the Reds - under the stewardship of Roy
Evans - displayed a breathtaking style led by a supremely talented
young group of British players whose names featured as regularly on
the front pages of the tabloids as they did on the back. The Daily
Mail was the first newspaper to tag Evans's team as the Spice Boys.
Yet despite their flaws, this was a rare group of individuals:
mavericks, playboys, goal-scorers and luckless defenders. Wearing
off-white Armani suits, their confident personalities were
exemplified in their pre-match walk around Wembley before the 1996
FA Cup final (a 1-0 defeat to Manchester United). In stark contrast
to the media-coached, on-message interviews given by today's top
stars, the blunt, ribald and sometimes cutting recollections of the
footballers featured in Men in White Suits provide a rare insight
into this fascinating era in Liverpool's long and illustrious
history.
Cricket defines Englishness like no other national pastime. From
its earliest origins in the sixteenth century (or an early version
played by shepherds called creag in the 1300s), through the
formation of the MCC and the opening of Lord's cricket ground in
1787, to the spread of county cricket in the next century, when the
Wisden Cricketers' Almanack was first published and the Ashes
series was born, this simple sport of bat and ball has captured the
imagination of the masses. Throughout its 500-year history, cricket
has been a mirror for society as a whole, reflecting the changes
that have brought us from the quintessential village green to
Freddie Flintoff's pedalo, from W G Grace to Monty Panesar, via a
fair number of eccentrics, heroes and downright villains. William
Hill Award-winning writer Simon Hughes, no mean player himself, has
lived and breathed cricket his whole life and now takes his
analytical skills and typically irreverent eye to charting the
history of English cricket. But this is no dry, dusty tome. It is
the story of the mad characters who inhabit the game, the
extraordinary lengths people will go to to watch and play it, the
tale of a national obsession. It debunks the myth of cricket
sportsmanship, showing the origins of sledging and match-fixing in
centuries of subterfuge, corruption and violence. And it takes us
beyond sport, to the heart of what it really means to be English.
_________ 'WE ARE LIVERPOOL - THIS MEANS MORE.' JUERGEN KLOPP Allez
Allez Allez is the inside account of Liverpool FC during the Klopp
era, including the 2018/19 campaign which saw the club compete in
the most gripping Premier League title race in history and become
Champions of Europe for the sixth time. Featuring access to
management, players and staff, Allez Allez Allez explains how
Liverpool have emerged from what Jurgen Klopp described as the
"depression" of 2015 to achieve feats that have eluded an entire
generation of supporters. Through original research and exclusive
interviews, Simon Hughes takes readers into Melwood, the club's
training ground, and behind the dressing room door. He takes them
to Chapel Street, where the club's business is determined, and to
America, where it is owned. He takes them into Anfield, where many
of the most important moments are defined, and he takes them on to
the pitches of the Premier League and the Champions League, as we
revisit how Liverpool stormed their way to the top of the Premier
League this season.
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