Unforgettable : rugby, dementia and the fight of my life /
by Thompson, Steve.
Material type: BookSeries: Reading Well.Publisher: London : Blink, 2023Description: 312 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (colour) ; 20 cm.ISBN: 9781788705943 (pbk.) :; 1788705947 (pbk.) :.Classification number: 920 THOSubject(s): Thompson, Steve | Rugby Union football players -- England -- Biography | Dementia -- Patients -- England | Chronic traumatic encephalopathy -- Popular works | Biography | Biography | Biography & non-fiction prose | Autobiography: sport | Memoirs | Football variants & related gamesSummary: In 2003, England won the Rugby World Cup. Steve Thompson was there, in England's front row, at the heart of the match, and at the heart of the scrum - one of sport's most destructive, repetitive impacts. But the triumphs came at a cost. When rugby union turned professional, Steve was plunged into a game where raw power meant everything. Today, he remembers nothing about playing in that final. In his words, watching the tape back is like watching a ghost. The years of hurt in an era of professional meat shields, and the culture of sucking up punishment and coming back for more, have taken a terrible toll. Steve has been diagnosed with early onset dementia, and probable chronic traumatic encephalopathy. He is in his early forties. There are days when he doesn't remember the names of his wife and four kids. But Steve doesn't hate the game of rugby. He wants to change it.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book - Adult Paperback | Crosby Library Reading Well | Adult Non-Fiction | 920 THO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 003121079X | |||
Book - Adult Paperback | Formby Library Reading Well | Adult Non-Fiction | 920 THO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | 12/10/2024 | 003121080X |
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Originally published: 2022.
Includes index.
In 2003, England won the Rugby World Cup. Steve Thompson was there, in England's front row, at the heart of the match, and at the heart of the scrum - one of sport's most destructive, repetitive impacts. But the triumphs came at a cost. When rugby union turned professional, Steve was plunged into a game where raw power meant everything. Today, he remembers nothing about playing in that final. In his words, watching the tape back is like watching a ghost. The years of hurt in an era of professional meat shields, and the culture of sucking up punishment and coming back for more, have taken a terrible toll. Steve has been diagnosed with early onset dementia, and probable chronic traumatic encephalopathy. He is in his early forties. There are days when he doesn't remember the names of his wife and four kids. But Steve doesn't hate the game of rugby. He wants to change it.
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