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The Love of the Game
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Overall
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- Length: 2 hrs and 27 mins
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Award-winning writer Daniel Storey brilliantly shines a light on an unexamined moment in Gazza’s career that encapsulates everything that we have come to associate with this most mercurial of talents: childish joy, public gaffes, wondrous skill and saddening self-destruction. Funny and harrowing in equal measure, this book allows us a better, more rounded understanding of one of our greatest sporting idols and of a tragically misunderstood human being.
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The Billionaires Club
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- Narrated by: Damian Lynch
- Length: 11 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Once upon a time football was run by modest local businessmen. Today it is the plaything of billionaire oligarchs, staggeringly wealthy from oil and gas, from royalty, or from murkier sources. But who are these new masters of the universe? Where did all their money come from? And what do they want with our beautiful game? In The Billionaires Club James Montague delves deeper than anyone else has dared, to tell this story for the first time.
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-
Eye opener
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The Brilliant World of Tom Gates
- Tom Gates, Book 1
- By: Liz Pichon
- Narrated by: Rupert Grint
- Length: 1 hr and 46 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
-
Performance
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Story
Honest, silly, and laugh-out-loud funny...the first book in Liz Pichon's hugely popular, award-winning Tom Gates series. Tom Gates is the master of excuses for late homework: dog attacks, spilt water, lightning... Tom's exercise book is full of his doodles, cartoons and thoughts as well as comments from his long-suffering teacher, Mr Fullerton.
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Amazing
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Summary
A brilliant exploration of the relationship between parents and children in sport, written and narrated by Match of the Day 2 presenter Mark Chapman.
BBC sports presenter Mark Chapman is no longer in his physical prime. There is an argument to suggest he has never been in his physical prime. Now in his 40s - his early 40s, as he is often at pains to point out - he is facing a world of knee replacements and ever-expanding waistlines whilst his children are thriving.
There is huge pride that they are doing so well, but it is mixed with a bittersweet sadness that he will never get his own sporting heyday back. It is also mixed with a fair amount of jealousy that actually they are better than he ever was - and a large amount of sulking that they are now able to beat him at a wide range of sports. He is passionate about sport, and it has played a huge part in his life. His parents encouraged him from a very early age, and he wants to pass the baton on to his son and daughters. Although there is every chance he might drop it and have a massive strop instead.
The Love of the Game is about the constant battle not to become the sporting pariah, the biggest baddie in the world of kids' sport, the nightmare sporting dad. But beyond that it paints sport as a touchstone for everything important: growing up, becoming a parent, getting old, learning how to win (and how to lose gracefully) and the legacy we all hope to leave our children - in short, life and all that goes into it.
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- S. Baker
- 05-08-18
Brought back memories
I don't have children, but nevertheless Chappers book brought back memories of my and my late father's games of football and cricket and my memories of watching my nephew's play sport as their competitive dad shouted on from the sidelines. On many occasions I found myself laughing out loud to some of Mark's stories. Well worth the "listen" and easily relatable if, like a lot of young boys and girls, you have grown up with a competitive dad.