Book description
Football matters, as poetry does to some people and alcohol does to
others Football is inherent in the people There is more
eccentricity in deliberately disregarding it than in devoting a life
to it. The way we play the game, organise it and reward it reflects
the kind of community we are' Written just two years after England's
66 triumph when the national game was at its zenith, Arthur Hopcraft's
The Football Man is repeatedly quoted as the best book every written
about the sport. This definitive, magisterial study of football and
society is a snapshot of a defining era in sporting history; changes
and decisions were made in the sixties that would create the game we
know today. For many who are disenchanted with the modern game the
grip of businesses and corporations, the dominance of advertising, the
extortionate ticket prices and inaccessible matches, the fickleness of
teenage millionaires The Football Man takes the reader back to the
heart and soul of the national game when pitches were muddy and the
players were footballers not brands'. This is a long awaited reissue
of the classic football bible'.
One of the most celebrated names of football writing, Arthur Hopcraft
was witness to many of the highlights of the English game which he wrote
about with unreserved passion and intelligence. A successful and highly
revered writer and journalist, he was also the Guardian's feature writer
and a prolific scriptwriter. Among his best-known works is his
adaptation of John Le Carré's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.