|
Only a Game?: The Diary of a Professional Footballer | 
enlarge | Author: Eamon Dunphy Publisher: Penguin Category: Book
List Price: £7.99 Buy New: £2.97 You Save: £5.02 (63%)
New (19) Used (14) from £0.97
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 79407
Media: Paperback Edition: 2Rev Ed Pages: 208 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0 Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.7
ISBN: 0140102906 Dewey Decimal Number: 790 EAN: 9780140102901 ASIN: 0140102906
Publication Date: July 2, 1998 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
| |
| Also Available In:
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
An endurance test! July 16, 2008 J. Buckle (Liverpool, UK) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
First up, I have a great deal of respect for Dunphy. I have enjoyed plenty of his other writing. In this book though, I really tried to like it but found myself just wanting it to end. His account of his playing days is just ... well ... miserable. I found myself reading this and thinking again and again, why on earth would anyone bother to go through this? I guess he writes from his own realistic perspective, but the book itself is essentially one long moan about the trials of being a professional footballer. He talks at length (and repetitively) about his personal stresses and fears, his lack of connection with fans and board, the insecure bubble he felt he lived and worked in, the striving and slog with little reward. One minute the fans don't appreciate the players, the next vice versa. Don't get me wrong, this book is not badly written and I am sure it is accurate, but I did breathe a sigh of relief when I realised that I was nearing the end as I really couldn't take any more of Eamonn's gritty writing. It is filled too much with his own anger and angst. Football is a sport, not a war! As for his so called "insights" into the inner workings of the psychology of football, I hate to disappoint but they honestly could have been written by any experienced Sunday League player. To sum up, any worried parent just needs to let their budding young footballer offspring read this book just once, confident in the knowledge that they will get straight back to the school books! Just not enjoyable for me.
sublime February 28, 2008 Shaun O'neill (Poland) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of, if not the best book ever written about Football. Like the cantankerous one or not (Mr Dunphy), you have to admire his writing panache and passion for the sport, even if his skills on the pitch were never amazing. He takes the mundane and elevates it to something approaching religious fervour. An absolute ripping read for anyone who has ever wondered what it was like to play the beautiful game back before it became glam and corporation infested.
A classic of the genre January 7, 2003 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Until recent years there was a scarcity of good writing on football. Anodyne biographies and glossy club histories were pretty much all one could find. However, there was one book that broke the mould of football writing and which has been extremely influential on many of the best books on football today: Eamonn Dunphy's Only A Game.Dunphy was a much-travelled, hardworking and relatively skilful midfielder. Only A Game is his account, in diary form, of the 1973/4 season at Millwall, then in the old second division. The season began with great optimism as Dunphy, realizing that he had not too many years left in football, saw this as perhaps his final opportunity to achieve something significant in his career. His account of how the season quickly turned sour is compelling, and if the end to the ‘story’ is in some ways unsatisfying it is because this is not a fairytale but a slice of reality. Throughout it is clear that Dunphy has literary aspirations, and he is indeed a good writer. Above all, however, the book has all the best qualities of a personal diary: honesty, frankness, occasional contradictions, and immediacy. Only A Game provides a particularly fascinating insight into a time when professional footballers earned similar salaries to the rest of us, when the game was not awash with money, glamour and foreign stars, and when the ‘hard men’ ruled and matches frequently descended into muddy pitched battles – in this respect the book has genuine historical value. Dunphy is very good when discussing the nature of his profession, and he brilliantly conveys the unglamorous side to the game. As an antidote to the numerous showbiz biographies of footballers, Only A Game is perfect. Only A Game can be recommended both to football fans and to those who have only a passing interest in the game. By turns it is funny, sad, angry and bitter; but it is unfailingly human. As a work of football writing it is extremely important: Only A Game was one of the earliest books to demonstrate that football could have its own rich literary genre.
Takes footballers as its subject, and then transcends it October 24, 2002 R. S. Stanier (London) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
With Only a Game?, Dunphy made his name and his account has had many imitators, the latest being Tony Cascarino. Nick Hornby also picked up the format for Fever Pitch - installments game by game - from this. He takes the abortive season he spent with Millwall in 1973 and infuses his account with a career's worth of understanding. How a coach can lose the respect of the team, how the manager is weakened by having to accommodate a captain who is fundamentally uncommitted, how the need to impose oneself undercuts the ability to play to one's potential. Yes, it's lots about football: the mundane details of training, the changing room, the team bus etc, but the acuity of his observation breathes life into it. Moreover, though his subject is footballers, the book has to say has much about any group you may be part of, any office, any team, any group of people. Why respect comes and goes; how a new entrant changes the dynamics of the group; what it's like to go from being near the end of a career to over the hill, and what it's like never to make it at all. Dunphy is compelling in his insight, deeply sympathetic in his analysis, and - while flawed as a person - somewhat like Alan Clarke, this attracts you more deeply into what he is saying. Miles above the standard sports book, this is revered as a classic, and deservedly so. Its wisdom stretches far beyond the football field. Whatever you think about the Keane book, this is well worth reading.
Quick, You Have to Read This December 5, 2000 2 out of 7 found this review helpful
It tells you everything you need to know about pain and the struggle for survival and is full of Dunphy's pearls of wisdom on football and life in the game. The story is compelling, Dunphy's style masterful
|
|
| www.pcprotech.co.uk | |