000 01513nam a2200373 4500
001 9781909245501
003 UkPrAHLS
005 20210615020132.0
008 170523s2017 enk g| 000 | eng d
020 _a9781909245501 (hbk.) :
_c20.00
020 _a190924550X (hbk.) :
_c20.00
040 _aStDuBDS
_beng
_erda
050 4 _aGV944
072 7 _aSPO
_2eflch
072 7 _aSPO
_2ukslc
082 0 4 _a796.334 WAL
_223
100 1 _aWalker, Michael.
245 1 0 _aGreen shoots :
_bIrish football histories /
_cby Michael Walker.
260 _aLiverpool :
_bdeCoubertin Books,
_c2017.
299 0 0 _aLA
300 _a250 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c24 cm.
366 _b20170907
_cNP
520 8 _aMore than a century after the Easter Rising, football in Ireland - like the country itself - remains divided. At the Euro 2016 finals in France, the country sent two teams the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Both teams did well - each managed by a man called O'Neill, each resplendent in emerald green and backed by noisy, good natured supporters - but still they were as much divided as they were united. 'Green Shoots' examines why, almost a century after one Irish Association became two, this is still the case.
650 0 _aSoccer
_zIreland
_xHistory.
655 7 _aSport.
_2eflch
655 7 _aSport.
_2ukslc
906 0 0 _aI
910 0 0 _aBDS level 5
916 _a100=NOTNACO
951 0 0 _aAN
_d26-OCT-2017
971 0 0 _aAH
980 0 0 _a2952942
_b1
_c6
_d5655130
999 _c213444
_d213444
942 0 0 _04