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Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football Anton Rippon

Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football By Anton Rippon

Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football by Anton Rippon


$13.69
Condition - Very Good
Only 4 left

Summary

Explores some of the most bizarre football events throughout history, from its birth during the Industrial Revolution, to the major tournaments of the Beautiful Game in the 21st century. From the player sold for GBP 10 and a box of kippers, to unusual injuries on the pitch, this book gathers some of the most curious moments of footballing history.

Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football Summary

Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football by Anton Rippon

Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football explores some of the most bizarre football events throughout history, from its birth during the Industrial Revolution, to the major tournaments of the Beautiful Game in the 21st century. From the player sold for GBP10 and a box of kippers, to unusual injuries on the pitch, this book gathers some of the most curious moments of footballing history, a game that continues to be both an amazing entertainment spectacle and extraordinarily accessible to people everywhere. Brief, accessible and entertaining pieces on a wide variety of subjects makes it the perfect book to dip in to. The amazing and extraordinary facts series presents interesting, surprising and little-known facts and stories about a wide range of topics which are guaranteed to inform, absorb and entertain in equal measure.

About Anton Rippon

Anton Rippon is a journalist, author and
publisher. He has spent almost all his
working life in the newspaper and publishing
industry. He is the author of 30 books
including an autobiographical memoir A
Derby Boy. His work has appeared in a wide
range of national newspapers and magazines
and he has written radio documentaries
for the BBC. In 1982, he founded Breedon
Books, the sports and history publisher. He
is also a member of the Sports Journalists'
Association, the International Society of
Olympic Historians and the Football Writers'
Association. Anton lives in Derby.

Table of Contents

  • Contents to include:
  • Ashbourne vs Ashbourne: late result Who invented football?
  • `I'm going to play soccer' The man who championed the amateur game
  • First FA Cup goal
  • A fixity of fixtures' The formation of the leagues
  • Invincible Preston
  • Paid to play football? You must be joking...
  • Amateurism vs professionalism
  • England's first professional
  • Penalty, ref!
  • Gentleman prefer to miss
  • Penalty extremes
  • Fifth time lucky
  • The cricket club that turned up by mistake
  • 36-0 - and they think it's all an over
  • A game of three halves
  • Four months to complete a
  • match: Roll on floodlights...
  • No goals please: Burnley and Stoke cheat the system
  • Poxy Boro stage a secret semi-final: Plenty of sea air the solution
  • The only Romany to play for England?: Rabbi Howell's career overshadowed
  • by controversy
  • The enigmatic Nettie Honeyball: Just don't call her `ornamental and useless'
  • Women's football's long march: From factory to football field
  • First Ibrox Park disaster: `This football maddened crowd'
  • Chelsea and the Aberdeen Terrier: Canine ankle-biter creates a new club
  • Heatwave at Hyde Road: Manchester City's players find it all too much
  • The election campaign scandal: Chairman wants seat in Parliament as well as director's box
  • Il Padre di Calcio Italiano: Unsung in his own country but a legend abroad
  • `Unpatriotic and unproductive'?: Football stands accused of hindering the war effort
  • Bombs away!
  • Footballers come under the hammer: The great Leeds City auction
  • Facing the music
  • All at sea: The Scottish club that found themselves foundering
  • Smoke me a kipper...
  • A different kind of shot on target: Murdered by an angry neighbour
  • One ground, one day, two matches - twice: Cuckoos in the nest
  • Bill's busy week
  • It's raining goals: One-word change to the laws brings defensive chaos
  • The day the goalies would like to forget
  • Dixie Dean - Goal Machine: The origins of the prolific scorer's nickname
  • Keeping it in the family
  • Ten-goal Joe Payne: It's always the quiet ones
  • Derek Dooley: from ecstasy to agony
  • Stoley and the Argonauts' fruitless quest: Club that never played a game
  • What's in a name?
  • `Back to square one': Arsenal - in the vanguard of new media
  • BBC Match of the Day
  • The Football League's sabotage plan: But censoring fixture lists failed to drain the pools
  • Pea-souper Sam
  • Thinking outside the box entirely: Football's unconventional managers
  • Missionary adopts a principled position: Betting on yourself is not always a good idea
  • Brotherly love - but no cap
  • Passions run high at Hitler's Olympics: Peruvians pack their bags and head home
  • in a huff
  • `Heil Hitler!': England told to salute the Nazi bigwig but Aston Villa refuse to obey
  • The penalties of war: When football waited for the all-clear
  • Doubling up
  • Blades still blitzed years later
  • Vic's Italian job: Living at the stadium with enemy POWs
  • What do you get if you cross a
  • palm with silver?: The end of a barren run of 62 years, that's what
  • Those mysterious Russkis: Incorruptible workers against corrupt capitalists?
  • Thirteen goals - unlucky for some: Record score achieved three times
  • Flying Doctor, Irish style: The double international who made sporting history
  • The Burnden Park disaster: Safety lessons go unheeded for decades
  • The oldest player in the Football League: Emergency goalie sets record at the age of 51
  • Forced out of existence by sectarian violence: The tragedy of Belfast Celtic
  • For the want of a boot: Remembering Indian football's barefoot generation
  • The goal that echoed around the world: The biggest shock in World Cup history - thanks to a Haitian immigrant
  • Posh attendance
  • Injured goalkeeper locked out: Heroics in a 6-5 thriller
  • Gone in 20 seconds
  • In off the ref: Baily's goal should not have stood
  • Footballer - and civil rights activist
  • Deadly strikes of the lightning variety: Footballers killed playing the game they loved
  • Drowned while searching for ball
  • The cruellest way to be KO'd in the Cup?: Blindfolded Roman boy controls football fates
  • A LINESMAN BY ANY
  • OTHER NAME
  • Six old boys hit six: Rejects return to shock former club
  • The lights are on but is anyone at home?
  • Cycling in the dark: How England stars used to fall foul of the law
  • The child star whose career was on hold for seven years: Manchester United wanted him - before he broke his leg
  • `Cashley' Cole - needs time to pay
  • The greatest comeback?: 5-1 down and yet they still win
  • Undersoil heating worked too well
  • `Is he the type to captain
  • England?': The corridors of moral power
  • Wage-capping
  • Lincoln City's mighty reprieve: The Imps win six in a row to avoid relegation
  • Nothing to smile about
  • Double hat-tricks - not good enough: The highest scoring losers in FA Cup history
  • Christmas goal-fest
  • No train, but one plane and several automobiles: One long journey for one very short career
  • Pulled muscle or playing badly? Bring on the sub!: But injury-faking footballers prompt a rule change
  • The football war: When El Salvador and Honduras went into battle for real
  • Don't mention the World Cup ball: Tracked down after 30 years
  • Not yet over the Jimmy Hill
  • True double sportsman: First-class football and cricket on the same day
  • Grounds of appeal: Football and cricket generally good neighbours
  • Fastest own-goal in League history
  • Whistle down the win: Fulham's missing 78 seconds
  • From zero but not to heroes
  • Hang on while we look for a bomb: The IRA not keen on football
  • From salad cream to stray dogs: Football's freak injuries
  • Fred wasn't dead after all
  • `Bambi on ice': How the wool was pulled over Graeme Souness's eyes
  • Not his finest hour
  • People in football grounds shouldn't throw celery
  • The Gold Chain Derby: It's a good thing Mr T doesn't play football
  • Teams that wanted to score against themselves: Crazy rule that saw football become farce
  • When team-mates came to blows: Charlton's pair of strikers took it literally
  • Flying chicken wings: Italian love affair ruined by a plate of food
  • No petrol money, no players: The team that went on strike over travelling expenses
  • Three goals, three different goalkeepers
  • Only one team in Tallinn - and they're Scottish: Long way to go for three seconds
  • The green parrot given a red card: Me-Tu's touchline ban
  • Referees who red card themselves: When match officials lose it
  • Like father, like son
  • A few of football's marked men: Naughty boys who played with electronic tags
  • Going to the Match - it's expensive these days: Lowry's painting finds a home
  • Ooops! The transfer scoop that wasn't
  • When Socrates played for Garforth: The Brazilian superstar who lit up (in) a small Yorkshire town
  • Long hair and earrings - banned!: They like their football strictly manly in Argentina and Nigeria
  • The great hijab debate: Olympic dreams shattered by head-covering ban
  • Banned from watching football - even on TV
  • Why you should never leave before the end: Parents miss their son's moment of history
  • Club Chairman sees a UFO: But fails to spot the false messiah trying to take over his club
  • The Battle of Bramall Lane: Injuries, red cards and accusations fly
  • The FA Cup tie that wouldn't die: Chesterfield and Droylsden just couldn't bear to say bye
  • One long Scilly season...
  • Manager just for ten minutes: Manages to see the funny side
  • `One of the craziest goals in history': Liverpool beaten by a beach ball
  • A woman running the line?: Whatever next?
  • Not to be sniffed at
  • Cold comfort for Oldham supporters: Sub-zero wait for tickets rewarded only by heavy defeat
  • What a difference 25 years make
  • Handcuffed to a goalpost: The Liverpool fan with an axe to grind

    Additional information

    GOR004959372
    9781446302484
    1446302482
    Amazing & Extraordinary Facts: Football by Anton Rippon
    Used - Very Good
    Hardback
    David & Charles
    20120618
    144
    N/A
    Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
    This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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