Premiership: The Uncut History of the FA Premier League

Premiership: The Uncut History of the FA Premier League

by Chris Horrie (Author), Chris Horrie (Author), Steve Clarke (Author)

Synopsis

Chris Horrie gets right to the heart of the football business, with the same insight and perception that he employed in his bestselling exposes of the media, Stick it up your Punter! and Live TV. 'If one day I should return to soccer, it would mean it has changed. I left it because it was no longer similar to my vision of the game. Because of all the financial interests at stake, the sport is turning into a mafia.' Eric Cantona, February 2001 One weekend in mid-August 1992 the world of football changed for ever. On the Saturday the first Premiership games took place; on the Sunday Nottingham Forest beat Liverpool in the first match to be broadcast live by Sky TV. Together, these developments signalled the most significant shift in the game since professionalism was introduced. Although the shift is primarily about money - rich clubs getting richer, players' wages rising astronomically, the battle for TV rights becoming ever more bitter and hard-fought - the changes introduced by the transformation of the old First Division ten years ago have had other effects and influences as much to do with society and business as the world of sport. Premiership is acclaimed journalist Chris Horrie's brilliantly perceptive and entertaining survey of the first ten years of British football's top flight, examining the motives and money, bungs and brilliance of the key players both on and off the field.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 394
Publisher: Pocket Books
Published: 18 Mar 2002

ISBN 10: 074344065X
ISBN 13: 9780743440653

Author Bio
Chris Horrie is the author of six successful books, including the bestselling Stick it up your Punter! and Live TV. He is a former national newspaper and magazine journalist and editor, TV producer, lecturer and academic. Steve Clarke is executive editor of Broadcast magazine and a former Sunday Times and Daily Telegraph media writer. In 1994 they produced Fuzzy Monsters - the bestselling and definitive account of John Birt's BBC.