Bill Foulkes: United in Triumph and Tragedy

Bill Foulkes: United in Triumph and Tragedy

by IvanPonting (Author), Bill Foulkes (Author)

Synopsis

Only Sir Bobby Charlton and Ryan Giggs have played more games for Manchester United than Bill Foulkes, the granite bulwark of the Red Devils' rearguard for 15 years and a key figure in the history of the club. He played at right-back for the original Busby Babes, helped to pioneer the path of British clubs in Europe and survived the Munich air disaster. Then he switched to centre-half, becoming the defensive cornerstone of Matt Busby's third and last great team, a sumptuous collection of talent which peaked with triumph in the 1968 European Cup. Along the way Bill garnered four League championships medals, was a central figure as the FA Cup was lifted in 1963 and terrorised the life out of the First Division's finest attackers.But this is no mere paean to sporting success, inspirational and long-lasting though that was. Bill Foulkes was a hard man of the old school, about as far removed from the pampered, overpaid footballers of the 21st century as it is possible to imagine. He recounts how he made his full England debut while still working as a part-time coalminer, finishing his shift underground only the day before taking the field against Northern Ireland. His memory is packed with other tales, by turns uplifting, harrowing and funny. For instance, he conned Matt Busby into picking him for his first senior game, and once went AWOL from the Army and travelled to matches in disguise to avoid the military police.Between these covers Bill gives candid assessments of the Old Trafford legends who shaped an era - the great man himself, the future Sir Matt; his faithful but fiery lieutenant, Jimmy Murphy; the incomparable Duncan Edwards and the other boys who perished on that slushy German runway in 1958, the likes of Tommy Taylor, Roger Byrne and, Bill's favourite, little Eddie Colman; then there was that glorious trinity of Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and George Best; and Bill's rearguard cohort Nobby Stiles; the list goes on and on.At the heart of the story is the Munich catastrophe, which claimed 23 lives and left an indelible mark on the survivors - some physically, all mentally. Bill's account of the accident, which he is honest enough admit did not make him a hero, is haunting and achingly poignant. Thirteen days after emerging from the twisted wreckage of United's airliner, Bill led United into emotional FA Cup battle with Sheffield Wednesday, then captained the patchwork side all the way to Wembley. That same indefatigable spirit rendered him indispensable as Busby rebuilt his shattered team and finally attained his own version of the holy grail - the European Cup - a decade later. It was the only fitting tribute to his fallen Babes, and Bill Foulkes was there every inch of the way. As befits Bill's colossal stature in the game, contributors to this moving book include Old Trafford icons Sir Alex Ferguson and Sir Bobby Charlton, and England World Cup winners Nobby Stiles and Roger Hunt.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Know the Score Books
Published: 31 Jan 2008

ISBN 10: 190544978X
ISBN 13: 9781905449781

Media Reviews
Book of the Week - Nick Harris, The Independent.
Author Bio
Ivan Ponting is an experienced journalist with some three dozen books on football to his credit. These include Manchester United Player By Player, The Essential History of Manchester United, The Insider's Guide To Manchester United (with John Doherty) and Red And Raw, a post-war history of United's rivalry with Liverpool. He has written hundreds of features for United Review, the matchday programme; his articles have appeared in United magazine and he worked extensively for Legends, the magazine of United's Former Players Association. In addition he has collaborated with Gary Pallister and Wilf McGuinness on their autobiographies, and is the chief football obituary writer for The Independent newspaper. He loves the summer game, too, and Sixty Summers: Somerset Cricket Since The War (co-written with David Foot) won the National Sporting Club's inaugural Cricket Book of the Year award in 2007