Left Back in Time: The Autobiography of Len Ashurst

Left Back in Time: The Autobiography of Len Ashurst

by Len Ashurst (Author)

Synopsis

No outfield player has played more games for Sunderland than Len Ashurst. In his fascinating autobiography Len details the extraordinary ups and downs of his career, including his fall out with Brian Clough, rejection by his home town club Liverpool, drinking with Jim Baxter, taking Newport County to promotion and a European quarter-final, winning promotion with Cardiff City, the pie-selling thief of Ninian Park and surviving a murder attempt whilst manager of an Arabian football team. After 458 games at a 'Left Back' for Sunderland, his managerial career took him from Hartlepool through to Gillingham, Sheffield Wednesday, Newport and Cardiff before returning to his beloved Roker Park and taking his team to Wembley. Then it was on to coaching in the Middle East and Malaysia where he met Princes, Tariq Aziz and Yasser Arafat when he took his team to the Gaza Strip. His career wasn't all a bed of roses. The tiff with Clough led to Len refusing to play in Old Big 'ead's testimonial match. He also presided over difficult times at Sheffield Wednesday as the club almost suffered relegation to the Fourth Division and saw Sunderland slide out of the top flight under his tenure. The highs and lows of his career provide an undulating backdrop for tales of the many personalities Len has met and also worked and played with and against, including Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley, Malcolm Allison, Sir Alex Ferguson, Don Howe, Ron Atkinson, Dave Mackay, George Best, Nobby Styles, Billy Bremner, Norman Hunter and John Aldridge. Throughout the latter history of the Premier League Len has been deeply involved in its evolution, including being instrumental in the foundation of the Premier League Academies. As a Premier League Match Delegate he has witnessed many notorious incidents including the fight between Newcastle United team-mates Kieron Dyer and Lee Bowyer. In a 'Left Back In Time', which looks back at a remarkable career which has spanned six decades, Len pulls no punches as he controversially speaks his mind in revealing the many issues which he feels face the FA in righting the wrongs he feels they may have created in the modern game.

$3.25

Save:$19.31 (86%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Know the Score Books
Published: 10 Mar 2009

ISBN 10: 184818512X
ISBN 13: 9781848185128

Media Reviews
From Merseyside to Newport, [Ashurst's] world is peopled with jokers, bullies and the unscrupulous on the make. Nothing is out-of-bounds: poetry; homophobia; the minimum wage; run-ins with the Stasi; and surreal insights from time managing in the Middle East. Len Ashurst's - bubbling book, full of character studies and vignettes, is recommended - When Saturday Comes.
Author Bio
Len Ashurst has spent over 50 years working in football, first as a left-back with Sunderland for whom he holds the record number of appearances for an outfield player, then with Hartlepool, Gillingham, Sheffield Wednesday, Newport County, Cardiff and Sunderland as a manager, then coached abroad and finally worked as a match delegate for the Premier League since the scheme's inception in 2003.