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Book Reviews
Aug 04, 2008 | 7:57AM | report this
The relative lull since the European Championship and the start up of the big domestic leagues in Europe offered an opportunity to catch up on some reading.


“Bloody Confused! – A Clueless American Sportswriter Seeks Solace in English Soccer” – Chuck Culpepper

The books recounts Chuck Culpepper’s rapid journey from burnt out American sportswriter to avid fan of Portsmouth.

Love took Culpepper across the Atlantic Ocean in 2006 and little did he know that love would strike twice. He landed in a country dominated by the Premiership and all things related and what’s more he found himself “purged of free media credentials, free media shuttle busses, and free media buffet lines.”

In his new world he has to buy tickets (more difficult than you might expect if you don’t have a “history” of ticket buying - a Catch-22 indeed) and has to plan and arrange transportation to far off cities. All this, while undergoing a culture shock of gigantic proportions.

“It was like starting over. It was like childhood, with beer”.


Culpepper was without a team to follow and after narrowing the field he fell for the very unfashionable Portsmouth. Remember his arrival took place before top-ten-two-straight seasons-and-FA Cup Winners Portsmouth. The author’s allegiance was cemented only a couple of months after the return of Harry Rednapp to Fratton Park and at that time Pompey was odds-on to be relegated.

Culpepper draws us into his growing love affair with Portsmouth as the team battles to escape relegation while he simultaneously struggles with his on-the-job soccer education. Because the events are still very recent the story resonates to an even greater degree because many of the key moments that led to Portsmouth’s escape are so fresh in the readers mind.

Matthew Taylor’s nerve-wracking penalties that beat Wigan and Sunderland and secured safety; Pedro Mendes’ double against Manchester City including the cracking last second winner that nearly took the net with it; the Lua-Lua equalizer that gained an unlikely point off Arsenal.

The book concludes with Portsmouth finishing in ninth place in 2007. As I read, I constantly thought of Portsmouth and their “new” fan experiencing last season and in particular the trip to Wembley and the lifting of the FA Cup. (If nothing else you have to admire the author’s sense of timing – success for the first time in over half a century for Portsmouth)

The only problem I had with the book was in the early chapters. I thought he tried a little too hard to make the idiosyncrasies of the game in England appear funny when in many cases they really are not – some are just different. 

The best part is his descriptions of mental trauma as Portsmouth first battle to stay in the Premiership and then the following season as qualification for Europe becomes a possibility. As Portsmouth get off to a great start the following season counting to forty points is quickly made a thing of the past and a loftier goal seems possible.

The irony of it is that while Portsmouth finish eight places and sixteen points better than the previous season they fail in their new mission – a place in the UEFA Cup – while the season before when their top flight future hung by a thread they achieved what they set out to do.

Culpepper is a top class writer and his description of some of the more poignant moments of his journey - Fratton Park after the death of Alan Ball for example – are truly memorable. A book well worth picking up whether you are a long time Premiership fan or a relatively new convert.

The book is published by Broadway Books and is out August 5. However, if you buy books from the UK you might want to note that the book appears to have been published in the UK last year under the title “Up Pompey”.



“The Games of their Lives” – Geoffrey Douglas

This book was originally published in 1996 and went on to be made into a movie. The author tells the story of the USA team that travelled to the 1950 World Cup in Brazil and beat England 1-0. It was England’s first World Cup appearance and you can imagine the chance that the largely semi-professional American team was given – particularly by the English media.

Geoffrey Douglas is not a football fan but he is a fine writer. If you don’t get too upset at some inapt soccer descriptions you will enjoy a first-rate read. Douglas weaves together a social history of the communities that bred some of the players and the road they travelled that ultimately led to one of the great sporting upsets of all-time.

The recollections of the players as they describe the men who encouraged and influenced them along the way and memories of the local leagues and past battles are uplifting without being over sentimental. Perhaps most striking is how the players who beat England bore no acrimony in arriving back to a country that cared little or was largely unaware of the magnitude of the USA team’s achievement.

I am guessing that even today few American soccer fans would be able to name more than a couple of the starting eleven that stunned England in Belo Horizonte 58 years ago. If you are one of them (or not) do yourself a favour and pick up the book.


After reading “The Games of their Lives” I went hunting for more and found that David Wangerin’s history of the game in the USA has just been released in North America. The book, “Soccer in a Football World: The Story of America’s Forgotten Game” was published two years ago in the UK. I’m only a third of the way through the book but it is a great read and it will be an eye opener to anyone who thinks that the game is a relatively recent import to the USA. 


In a similar vein I have the website “Pitch Invasion” to thank for bringing a series of articles by Richard Whittall to my attention. Richard Whittall has put together a condensed history of soccer in Toronto and North America with an emphasis on Canada. It is wonderful stuff.



52 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Chuck Culpepper, Portsmouth, Matthew Taylor, Pedro Mendes, Lua-Lua, Manchester City, Arsenal, Wigan, Sunderland, USA, Geoffrey Douglas, England, Belo Horizonte, World Cup 1950, David Wangerin, Bloody Confused!, The Games of their Lives, Richard Whittall
 
Holiday Reading
Dec 20, 2006 | 6:03PM | report this

Given that I have never read a book by Ashley Cole, David Beckham or Frank Lampard, I can safely say that I have never read a soccer book that I didn't like. With the holidays approaching and the possibility of some free time being available here is a list of the books that I've acquired over last twelve months.

Any of you have other books that you might want to recommend?

“Foul”, By Andrew Jennings, published by HarperCollins.

“The Italian Job”, by Gianluca Vialli and Gabriele Marcotti, published by Random House.

“Behind the Curtain:Football in Eastern Europe”, by Jonathan Wilson, published by McArthur & Co.

“The Bonnie Prince-My Football Life”, by Charlie Cooke and Mark Knight, published by Mainstream Publishing Company.

"Best and Edwards,” by Gordon Burns, published by Faber and Faber Ltd.

"The Best of Charlie Buchan's Football Monthly,” edited by Simon Inglis, published by English Heritage.

"Forza Italia", by Paddy Agnew, published by Random House.

"’78 How a nation lost the World Cup," by Graham McColl, published by Headline Book Publishing.

"Morbo-the story of Spanish football," by Phil Ball, published by W.S.C. Books Ltd.

"The Leaguers -the making of professional football in England, 1900 – 1939," by Matthew Taylor, published by Liverpool University Press.

"Once in a Lifetime-the extraordinary story of the New York Cosmos," by Gavin Newsham, published by Atlantic books.

"tor!-the story of German football," by Ulrich Hesse-Lichtenberger, published by W. S.C. Books Ltd.

"The Thinking Fan's Guide to the World Cup," edited by Matt Weiland and Sean Wilsey, published by HarperCollins books.

"The Lost Babes-Manchester United and the forgotten victims of Munich," by Jeff Connor, published by HarperSport.

"Sir Alf," by Leo McKinstry, published by HarperSport.

"Football and Fascism-the national game under Mussolini," by Simon Martin, published by Berg Publishers.

"Jackie Milburn-a man of two halves," by Jack Milburn, published by Mainstream Sport.

"Colin Bell-reluctant hero," by Colin Bell with Ian Cheeseman, published by Mainstream Publishing.

"My Father and other Working-Class Football Heroes," by Gary Imlach, published by Yellow Jersey Press.

"Garrincha,” by Ruy Castro, published by Yellow Jersey Press.

"Highbury - The Story of Arsenal in N. 5", by Jon Spurling, published by Orion Books.


24 Comments | Add a comment   categories: Andrew Jennings, Gianluca Vialli, Gabriele Marcotti, Jonathan Wilson, Charlie Cooke, George Best, Duncan Edwards, Charlie Buchan, Paddy Agnew, Graham McColl, Phil Ball, Matthew Taylor, New York Cosmos, Gavin Newsham, Ulrich Hesse-Lichtenberger, Matt Weiland and Sean Wilsey, Jeff Connor, Leo McKinstry, Simon Martin, Jackie Milburn
 
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ABOUT ME


BobbyMcMahon
I am the soccer analyst for the Fox Soccer Report and appear twice a week - every Monday and Friday at 10:00 EST. I have also been a regular contributor to the Fox Soccer Channel website since the summer of 2004. Over the last twenty years I have contributed to various radio and television programs throughout North America as well writing about the game for newspapers, magazines and websites. Thank you to all who take time to visit this blog and especially to those of you who post your comments and thoughts. PS - If you have questions please post them on the regular Monday blog. I am unable to answer e mails posted to the inbox on this site. And one more thing. If you have questions or complaints or compliments about programming please contact Fox Soccer Channel or Fox Sports World Canada directly. I have no control over what the stations televise.
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