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You'll Win Nothing with Kids: Fathers, Sons and Football | 
enlarge | Author: Jim White Publisher: Little, Brown Category: Book
List Price: £12.99 Buy New: £6.77 You Save: £6.22 (48%)
New (21) Used (9) from £6.48
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 63513
Media: Hardcover Pages: 288 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 5.4 x 1.1
ISBN: 0316029823 Dewey Decimal Number: 796.33462092 EAN: 9780316029827 ASIN: 0316029823
Publication Date: August 30, 2007 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: UK SELLER__IN STOCK__Immediate Dispatch_Protective Packaging__Trusted Bucks Retailer__FAST DELIVERY__book cover may vary
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
It's not just about the football March 8, 2008 Dales (Versoix, Switzerland) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I loved this book, the on-going story of a man managing a junior football team is intertwined around his feelings about his son growing up and the effect this has on their relationship. I thought there was a great mix of humour, intersting insights from ex-players and just a tiny hint of melancholy.
Loved it January 25, 2008 Eric Le Bouffon (Angleterre) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I coach under 12s, including my son of course, and found it very reassuring and funny to read so many things I went through. Excellent message for some coaches and parents who may have lost the plot about why kids play football
Must read for any kids football manager! January 24, 2008 D. Wood (Oxon.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Yes, you! The one that stood still while the other dad's (mum's?) took a step backwards! Or was that a leap! Having been drawn into the game in the same way as Jim (aren't we all?), and with no previous footballing experience, I can say his observations and comments are spot on. Jim's book captures the bitter-sweet experience of managing a team, and it is a good laugh to boot!
You'll Win Nothing with Kids: Fathers, Sons and Football November 9, 2007 R. ELDRIDGE 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
A wonderful book. So funny you will laugh out loud, accurate to the point of seeing yourself in many of the pages, so moving in places that you will consider what you say next time your lad takes puts on his boots. Brilliant.
You may well recognise yourself here November 1, 2007 russell clarke (halifax, west yorks) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I admit I've done it. I ,ve stood on a touchline and shouted as my progeny has run up and down a lumpy field . "Track back", "Concentrate" "Man On", "For gods sake stop calling the ref a W***er and let me do it". All the time I was doing this I was fully cognisant that I was being every bit as idiotic as the other parents screaming their sagacious advice though I don't think I ever descended to the level of the misanthropic sack of s**t who kept advising his lad to "nobble him son". Jim White would undoubtedly think I was a fool and of course he would be right. This book is an account of a season spent in charge of Northmeadow Youth under 14,s .White has coached the team for six years and his son is in the team .This immediately puts him offside with me as my afore mentioned progeny fell foul of a manager who played his son ( A gangling clueless lad who clearly didn't want to be there)while better players , including my son languished on the touchline much of the time . It's quickly clear though that White , who is also a football reporter for the "Telegraph", is a far more self aware self decrepitating individual than the boss of that team .He calls himself "The part on the sidelines". So while he obsesses over the performance of the team and their on-going battle against relegation he can still take time to spot the idiosyncrasies of others around him and the minutiae involved in playing football at this level while pertinently realising his own failings .This makes You'll Win Nothing With Kids( Taken from Alan Hansen's infamous remark about a youthful Manchester United side......they won the league that year) a very amusing book and at times an oddly touching one. There is plenty of conflict , especially when the club want to buy a new kettle, plenty of strife -dog turds on the pitch seem to be a constant bane of the low level football fraternity- yet the most salient edge to this book is the bond between father and son as they endeavour to improve the team. Talking of improving the team White uses his connections within the game to raid the professional arena for advice , chatting to amongst others Brain McClair ,Jose Mourinho( Working with kids is "The purest kind of football work") ,Ron Atkinson, and Bobby Robson .Their advice is surprisingly helpful too as the team go on an extended cup run .He also questions the motives of anyone taking up a coaching role in kids football .Is it an ego thing or a genuine altruistic desire to improve the lives of others? Anyone who has watched boys football or even more pertinently had their offspring play at that level will recognise the scenarios and characters that imbibe this book with so much colour . Hopefully it may also help one or two recognise how unacceptable and self defeating their touchline ranting is......but I wouldn't bet on it.
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