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Answered prayers : England and the 1966 World Cup /

by Hamilton, Duncan.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: London : riverrun, 2024Description: xxix, 444 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 20 cm.ISBN: 9781529420012 (pbk.) :; 1529420016 (pbk.) :.Classification number: 796.334 HAMSubject(s): England (Soccer team) -- History | World Cup (Soccer) (1966 : England) | Soccer matches -- England -- History -- 20th century | Sport | Sport | Autobiography: sport | Sports & active outdoor recreation | History of sport | Football (Soccer, Association football)Summary: England. 1966. The World Cup. Duncan Hamilton watched England beat West Germany as an eight-year-old boy in the company of his father and grandfather. He recalls 'Wembley, spread out in the sun; the waving flags; the delirious, joy-of-all-joys moment of the final whistle; the trophy sparkling in the late afternoon light'. But, seeing the whole game again during the misery of the first Covid lockdown, made him realise what Alf Ramsey and his players had no inkling of, which was what came next for them. How, for many of those boys of summer, almost everything after that shimmering moment amounted to an anti-climax or a setback. How '66 was not a beginning, a guaranteed path towards more success, but a slow decline and fall, and also a disproportionate number of disappointments. Hamilton decided to revisit '66, tracing the roots of a story that really began during the era of post-War austerity.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book - Adult Paperback Bootle Library Adult Non-Fiction 796.334 HAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 11/10/2024 003122285X
Total holds: 0

Originally published: 2023.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

England. 1966. The World Cup. Duncan Hamilton watched England beat West Germany as an eight-year-old boy in the company of his father and grandfather. He recalls 'Wembley, spread out in the sun; the waving flags; the delirious, joy-of-all-joys moment of the final whistle; the trophy sparkling in the late afternoon light'. But, seeing the whole game again during the misery of the first Covid lockdown, made him realise what Alf Ramsey and his players had no inkling of, which was what came next for them. How, for many of those boys of summer, almost everything after that shimmering moment amounted to an anti-climax or a setback. How '66 was not a beginning, a guaranteed path towards more success, but a slow decline and fall, and also a disproportionate number of disappointments. Hamilton decided to revisit '66, tracing the roots of a story that really began during the era of post-War austerity.

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