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Paperback The Mavericks: English Football When Flair Wore Flares Book

ISBN: 1472974859

ISBN13: 9781472974853

The Mavericks: English Football When Flair Wore Flares

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

Artfully combining sports journalism with social history and sharp pop culture references, The Mavericks explores 1970s football when a cult group of footballers delivered flair on the pitch and flamboyance off of it.

Cocky, coiffured strikers meet David Bowie and Alvin Stardust; Gola boots exchange kicks with A Clockwork Orange and The Likely Lads; Admiral sock tags, platform heels and kipper ties mingle with cod wars, Harrods bombings and three-day weeks. In this, Steen recreates the early Seventies, the era when football joined the vanguard of English youth culture. This personal account revolves around seven Englishmen who followed in the trail blazed by football's first tabloid star, George Best--Stan Bowles, Tony Currie, Charlie George, Alan Hudson, Rodney Marsh, Peter Osgood and Frank Worthington. Proud individuals amid an increasingly corporate environment, their invention and artistry were matched only by a disdain for authority and convention. Their belief in football as performance art, as showbiz, gave the game a boost, and elevated them to cult status. During their heyday, nevertheless, they were largely ignored by a succession of England managers, none of whom were able to assemble a side competent enough to qualify for the World Cup finals. Against a backdrop of increasing violence on the field and terraces alike, of battles between players and the Establishment, this book examines an anomaly at the heart of English culture, one that symbolized the death of post-Sixties optimism, the end of innocence.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

The Mavericks: Why English Football went wrong

An interesting look at the development of hard-tackling, work ethic football in England and how it marginilized the truly gifted players. The author points to Ramsey's '66 Cup team as the beginning of the problem when Jimmy Greaves was excluded from the side. The author tells the story of Charlie George at Arsenal, Peter Osborne at Chelsea, Rodney Marsh at QPR and so on and why these players were rarely selected to play for England in internationals. England's total lack of sucess in the 70's can be chalked up to Don Revie and Joe Mercer's refusal to select these unique footballers. His traces the career of each man as they were tranfered to the smaller clubs and labelled as "lazy" and "undisiplined". The author tracks down each individual he talks about in the book and tells their story up to 1994 (when the book was written). A great book for any football fan especially those who love the English game.

Sunshine in a grey era

Covers the true flashy stars of '70s English soccer--George Best, Rodney Marsh, Charlie George, Alan Hudson, Peter Osgood, Frank Worthington, Stan Bowles and Tony Currie. A fun read as it was the '70s after all.
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