Jules Rimet Still Gleaming?: England at the World Cup

Jules Rimet Still Gleaming?: England at the World Cup

by KenJones (Author)

Synopsis

Before and since the triumph of 1966, the story of England's efforts in the World Cup, has been one of disappointment and unfulfilled expectations. Defeated semi-finalists in 1990, they have only twice progressed beyond the last eight, again eliminated at that stage in 2002. Alone of football's major powers they have failed three times to qualify for the finals, spending 12 years in the wilderness between 1970 and 1982. England's chief European rivals - Germany and Italy - have both won the World Cup three times: since the first post-war World Cup of 1950, the first in which England and the other British associations participated, Germany have appeared in seven finals. Calling upon memories of Englishmen who took part - men such as Eddie Baily, Tom Finney, Johnny Haynes, Walter Winterbottom, Nobby Stiles, Alan Mullery, Kenny Sansom, Terry Fenwick and Terry Butcher - as well as his own personal experiences from ten World Cup finals, Ken Jones looks deeply into the World Cup campaigns that have repeatedly questioned England's acknowledged status in the game. This book offers an analysis of England's involvement - and lack of success - in football's greatest tournament, delivering a sense of authenticity and immediacy to the history of events. Ken Jones chronicles both the frustration and blind optimism displayed by English football fans every four years, with countless stories that unfold as he traces a turbulent World Cup voyage.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 252
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Virgin Books
Published: 05 Jun 2003

ISBN 10: 185227087X
ISBN 13: 9781852270872

Author Bio
An award-winning writer, Ken Jones has been covering major sports events for forty years. Born in Merthyr Tydfit, South Wales, he played for Southend, Swansea and Hereford before suffering a serious leg injury. Ken joined the Daily Mirror as a football writer in 1958, becoming chief football writer four years later. In 1972 he was appointed chief sports writer/columnist of the Sunday Mirror, taking a similar post with the independent on its launch in 1986. He has covered ten World Cups, eight Olympic Games and numerous world boxing championships. A past chairman of the Football Writers Association, Ken's work has been acknowledged four times in the British Sports Journalism Awards.