History Boys
145 pages
English

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145 pages
English

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Description

The History Boys celebrates 30 iconic goals and players in the illustrious history of Nottingham Forest. Featuring exclusive interviews and detailed career profiles, it delves deep into the club's defining moments, which echo down through history and resonate with each generation of Forest fans. Goals don't just change games of football, they change lives - not only of those who scored them, but also of those who witnessed them. Here are the stories of goalscorers who shaped the very fabric of Forest - from the 1959 FA Cup-winning team, through the miracle years of European domination to the present day. Club legends such as Ian Storey-Moore, Frank Clark, Colin Barrett, John Robertson, Ian Bowyer, John McGovern, Steve Chettle, Brian Rice, John Metgod and Wes Morgan look back on career-defining moments, offering insightful analysis and commentary in this celebratory stroll down Memory Lane.

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 06 septembre 2018
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781785314636
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0500€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

First published by Pitch Publishing, 2018
Pitch Publishing
A2 Yeoman Gate
Yeoman Way
Durrington
BN13 3QZ
www.pitchpublishing.co.uk
David Marples, 2018
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the Publisher.
A CIP catalogue record is available for this book from the British Library
Print ISBN 978-1-78531-433-9
eBook ISBN 978-1-78531-463-6
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Ebook Conversion by www.eBookPartnership.com
Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Epigraph
Introduction
1. Ian Storey-Moore vs Everton (1967)
2. Peter Shilton vs Coventry City (1978)
3. Frank Clark vs Ipswich Town (1978)
4. Colin Barrett vs Liverpool (1978)
5. John McGovern vs AEK Athens (1978)
6. Ian Bowyer vs FC K ln (1979)
7. Trevor Francis vs Malm FF (1979)
8. John Robertson vs Hamburger SV (1980)
9. Steve Hodge vs RSC Anderlecht (1984)
10. John Metgod vs Manchester United (1984)
11. Nigel Clough vs Manchester United (1986)
12. Brian Rice vs Arsenal (1988)
13. Garry Parker vs Everton (1989)
14. Neil Webb vs Luton Town (1989)
15. Gary Crosby vs Manchester City (1990)
16. Scot Gemmill vs Arsenal (1991)
17. Roy Keane vs Tottenham Hotspur (1992)
18. Stuart Pearce vs Manchester City (1992)
19. Stan Collymore vs Peterborough United (1994)
20. Paul McGregor vs Olympique Lyonnais (1995)
21. Ian Woan vs Tottenham Hotspur (1996)
22. Steve Chettle vs FC Bayern Munich (1996)
23. Chris Bart-Williams vs Reading (1998)
24. Andy Reid vs Sheffield United (2000)
25. Julian Bennett vs Yeovil Town (2008)
26. Dexter Blackstock vs Bristol City (2009)
27. Radoslaw Majewski vs West Bromwich Albion (2010)
28. Wes Morgan vs Notts County (2011)
29. Ben Osborn vs Derby County (2015)
30. Chris Cohen vs Ipswich Town (2017)
Bibliography
Thank you to Mum and Dad for giving me this football affliction.
Thank you to Jenny and Anya for tolerating this football affliction.
Acknowledgements
Nick M: you are my centrocampista difensivo ; I owe you more than a few pints. Paul M: all of this started on a rainy Sunday afternoon in The Hop Pole. You were awesome. Jonny O: you ve opened so many doors - thank you for your encouragement and support. B S crew: not sure this book would have happened without this thing we ve got going. Sean: thanks for bringing these goals to life with your excellent doodlings. Matt App: your knowledge knows no bounds. Thank you for your patience and pointers. Daniel T: deeply honoured that you took the time to write the foreword; your work is an inspiration.
To anyone who has read any of the numerous ramblings I ve churned out down the years, it means a lot. Thank you.
Foreword
W HEN I first heard that David Marples was writing a book about 30 of the most exhilarating moments from supporting this great club I must confess there was a flicker of regret that I had not come up with the idea first.
I know from experience that it is a labour of love to write about Nottingham Forest and, in particular, if it means a nostalgic trip down memory lane to pick out some of the moments when you can actually feel a little sorry for those non-football people who don t get it - on the basis they will never know how much fun they are missing out on.
Living in Manchester now, it s not easy bringing up my son James as a Forest supporter - brainwashing , I think the term is - but when I look down the author s choices it is remarkable to think of the places this club has been and how, as a great man once put it, I do hope nobody is stupid enough to write us off.
Sometimes we, as Forest fans, get accused of living too much in the past, and maybe there is a grain of truth in that. Equally, it s 2018 now and the score is still Nottingham 2 London 1 when it comes to European Cups. So why should we overlook the very thing that makes this club famous around the world?
The hardest part for David, I m sure, was narrowing it down to 30 when, heck, you could probably fill a book of that size just by going through Stan Collymore s portfolio. Stan gets in here because of that howitzer at Peterborough on a day when Forest fans invaded London Road, scaled the floodlights and swarmed over the pitch in the most joyous celebration you could ever imagine. Yet what about the one at Manchester United, the turn and slotted finish at Wolves, the slalom through Sunderland s defence and on and on?
I know how difficult it can be because when I wrote my first book, Deep Into The Forest , in 2005 I devoted a chapter each to interviewing 15 of our greatest players - and, as was quickly pointed out, couldn t find the space for Ian Bowyer, Martin O Neill, Peter Shilton, Frank Clark, Colin Barrett and a good few others.
Sadly, I never got around to writing the sequel - not yet, anyway - but I certainly wouldn t be short of candidates just from the days when we were conquering Europe, being clapped out of Camp Nou and knocking Liverpool off their perch long before Alex Ferguson tried to claim it as his honour.
From my own experience, I can gently warn David therefore to expect a few questions about the omission, for example, of that moment when Johnny Metgod almost decapitated poor old Phil Parkes in the West Ham net, a 35-yard cannonball finished majestically by our funky Dutchman patenting his own pointing-to-the-skies goal celebration, on repeat.
I may even give David a friendly prod to demand that any sequel includes the Garry Parker special against Bristol City that took us to the League Cup Final in the kind of weather conditions at Ashton Gate that Thor himself might have invoked.
Or how about Des Walker versus Luton, Tommy Gaynor at Huddersfield, Lars Bohinen at White Hart Lane and, though he was never really a favourite, Marlon King s last-minute winner against West Ham on the day the City Ground tried to take in the news that Brian Clough had decided it was time, as the banner said, for Heaven XI to get a new manager?
The options are endless but David has done a splendid job of narrowing it down to a list that spans the ages, with 50 years separating Ian Storey-Moore s four-times-and-in FA Cup winner against Everton to Chris Cohen s tension-buster against Ipswich, and I m particularly pleased Stuart Pearce s late equaliser against Manchester City at Maine Road in the 1992/93 season is also featured.
It probably wasn t our captain s most spectacular goal and it certainly wasn t the happiest season under dear old Cloughie but I was in the away end on the Kippax that day and it was one of those goal celebrations where you can end up 20 yards from where you started. And then, when I had finally come up for oxygen, there was Psycho, held aloft by Nigel Clough, and our skipper had that look on his face.
Thank you, Stuart, and all the players who have given us a lifetime of memories and, in particular, the man who walked on the River Trent all those years and got it spot on when he told Don Revie that he wanted to win the league, and do it better.
And thank you, David Marples, for recapturing it all so brilliantly.
Daniel Taylor
Epigraph
It only takes a second to score a goal.
Brian Clough
Sometimes in football, you have to score goals.
Thierry Henry
Because it s always got to be blood. Blood is life. Why do you think we eat it? It s what keeps you going, makes you warm, makes you other than dead. Of course it s her blood.
Spike (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
Some people give themselves to religion
Some people give themselves to a cause
Some people give themselves to a lover
I have to give myself to goals.
Lyrics from Straight in at 101 - Los Campesinos!
Introduction
G OALS change games . It is a mantra heard many times, most frequently by a manager after their team has con ceded - in their eyes at least - a dubious goal, precipitating a humiliating or heavy defeat. Indeed, the existence of an actual dubious goals committee invites more questions than answers.
Goals - dubious or otherwise - are the lifeblood of the football fan. They are the reason you click through the turnstile or travel hundreds of miles on a cold Tuesday evening when the rational part of your head urges you to spend your time doing something more productive or rewarding. It is the carrot of a last-minute winner scored at your end - in front of your fans - that fuels the desire to watch your team. We may occasionally take satisfaction in possession statistics or solid performances or promising debuts but such things are mere fripperies when compared to goals.
They come in all shapes and sizes; some trickle over the line in slow motion while others crash in off the crossbar in glorious explosions. Some are entirely unexpected while others are inevitable. Some are a direct result of individual brilliance while others are the culmination of a fine team move. Regardless of their form, they matter - even the goals against. While those scored by your team provide pure and unadulterated joy, those conceded cause visceral pain and anguish.
Despite the universal circus permanently pitched around the sidelines of football, goals remain the headline act. When football fans come together to share in and celebrate their club s history, it is goals and the players that scored them that are the cornerstone of any discussion. Like the assassination of John Lennon or JFK or the death of Princess Diana or David Bowie, fans recall precisely where they were when certain goals were scored. They are touchstones in the collective history of a club and to individuals,

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