Cunny Posted September 9, 2013 Posted September 9, 2013 http://www.amazon.co.uk/Anatomy-Liverpool-History-Ten-Matches/dp/1409144410/ref=sr_1_8?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1378756905&sr=1-8 This should be interesting. Much of the acres of football news coverage these days has little to do with what actually occurs on the pitch. Jonathan Wilson has established himself as one of the sport's pre-eminent writers, focussing on the tactics (with the award-winning INVERTING THE PYRAMID) and how events on the pitch have shaped football history (THE ANATOMY OF ENGLAND). His new book is a compellingly forensic analysis of ten key Liverpool matches that have shaped the club's fortunes for more than a century - from the long-lost triumphs of manager Tom Watson, who arrived in 1896, to the 1977 European Cup triumph over Borussia Mönchengladbach, to the astonishing Champions League Final comeback against AC Milan, 'The Miracle of Istanbul', in 2005. Legendary players and managers of the stature of Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley and Kenny Dalglish populate these pages, which highlight the genius and the flaws of individuals by examining them in practice. Certain games lie on the fault-lines of history. Perhaps they mark the end of one era or the beginning of another. Perhaps they encapsulate a summation of a manager's reign. Or perhaps they mark a crossroads, moments at which football looked one way, and then went the other. But this is not a virtual history of Liverpool FC. Jonathan Wilson's prime purpose is not to speculate on what might have been. Rather it will try to determine why what was, was. No game is won or lost, after all, in a single moment but by a million little things. THE ANATOMY OF LIVERPOOL tells the story of a great club through a detailed examination of ten key matches looking, as a football history must, first and foremost at the football.
The walters step over Posted September 9, 2013 Posted September 9, 2013 Looks like a good xmas present. I'd be surprised if the Ajax game (they battered us, Shankly decided there and then to change style of play) wasn't number one.
kop205 Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I might just about have finished Red or Dead by Christmas.
The Hitman Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I might just about have finished Red or Dead by Christmas.Same.Still haven't made my way through Inverting The Pyramid yet. I found it fascinating, but for some reason I got stuck just after they got rid of the W-M. It's sat in my bedside table and hasn't moved for a while.
schmuckdonald Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Aye, he mentioned it at the event in Liverpool for the Blizzard. Sounds interesting.
sutty Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 Same.Still haven't made my way through Inverting The Pyramid yet. I found it fascinating, but for some reason I got stuck just after they got rid of the W-M. It's sat in my bedside table and hasn't moved for a while. Did the same thing with Inverting the pyramid. Weird.
The Hitman Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 (edited) Did the same thing with Inverting the pyramid. Weird.It's great, but I think you have to fully invest in it, which I did for a bit, then stopped.There's only so much talk of Hungarian coffee-houses and random Eastern European fellas you can take if you're not fully concentrating. Hodgey, of course, only got as far as 4-4-2 then binned it off. Edited September 10, 2013 by The Hitman
JRC Posted September 10, 2013 Posted September 10, 2013 I was surprised that ITP didn't make more of our fusion (post-Ajax as noted) of British robustness with a Continental approach - passing, possession, ball-playing defenders, 442 - which dominated the European game and directly influenced a generation of coaches*, including Sacchi who gets a chapter. So pleasantly surprised to see this coming out. * Also Sven - and to an extent, The Hodge.
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