Searching for Heroes: Fifty Years of Sporting Encounters

Searching for Heroes: Fifty Years of Sporting Encounters

by IanWooldridge (Author)

Synopsis

At the cutting edge of sport, where winners go one way and losers the other, Ian Wooldridge made his living as a journalist. His shrewd eye went straight to the heart of sports pressure situations, unerringly detecting courage in the competitors, and raising the spirits of his readers with his celebration of genuine heroism. His style was at one and the same time convulsively amusing and acidic. He saw the funny side, yet he was merciless in his search for the truth. SEARCHING FOR HEROES includes his articles on his heroes - including Mohammed Ali, Shane Warne and George Best - as well as articles on events and personalities that were on the receiving end of his more acerbic commentaries. Wooldridge brought back to modern sports journalism a polish, an intelligence and an idealism that had become somewhat tarnished. These qualities made him so much more than a press room scribbler, a routine writer who just asks his mates for the turning point in the match, phones in his copy and thinks, sod it, its only a game. To Ian Wooldridge it was more than a game. It was a life.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 432
Edition: Second Edition
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
Published: 15 Nov 2007

ISBN 10: 0340960876
ISBN 13: 9780340960875

Media Reviews
'No one has ever written about sport in the English language as sublimely as did Ian Wooldridge for more than 40 years' Jeff Powell -- Daily Mail 'It makes for a handsome Christmas present for everyone who cherished Ian's stuff and a striking eye-opener for the few who might never have known it. A splendid collection.' -- The Spectator 'A must-read for sports fans. Wooldridge is arguably the best ever sports reporter, and this classic is testimony to that' -- Active Life Magazine
Author Bio
Born in 1932, Ian Wooldridge is widely recognised as the greatest sports journalist of his generation. His career began at the New Milton Advertiser, but he quickly rose through the ranks to become a sports columnist at the Daily Mail in 1960, where he left an indelible mark with his astute, and often acerbic commentaries. Winner of many accolades throughout his life, he was presented with not one but two awards for lifetime contribution to sports journalism, and was awarded an OBE for services to journalism in 1991. He died of cancer in 2007, leaving his widow Sarah, and three sons.