1966 Uncovered: The Unseen Story of the World Cup in England - Hardcover

Robinson, Peter; Cheeseman, Doug

 
9781845332358: 1966 Uncovered: The Unseen Story of the World Cup in England

Synopsis

This is a collection of unique and often unseen archive photographs from the 1966 World Cup, commemorating English football's finest hour and capturing the curious charm of the tournament both on and off the pitch. It is the story of an event, a sport, a nation, a people and an era told and illustrated with warmth, wit and originality. "1966 Uncovered" is an off-beat, insightful and thought-provoking portrait of the 1966 World Cup and Britain in the 1960s - far more than just a collection of match reports and standard agency photographs. The book opens with an interview with Sir Bobby Charlton and Franz Beckenbauer, in which they relive their memories of the 1966 tournament, cast their eyes over images even they haven't seen before and exchange views on the world of football. Four main chapters follow the tournament around the country from the regional group stages in the North-East, Midlands, North-West and London, to the knock-out stages and of course the Final. The text and images capture the unique flavour of the times and of the tournament off the field as well as on it - with Alan Bennett's characteristically personal afterword providing the perfect counterpoint.An additional appendix section gives the reader a revealing insight into how the event was covered by the photographers of the day.

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About the Author

Peter Robinson trained at Leicester College of Art and The Royal College of Art, and began his professional career in 1965. After working on The Football League magazine he was invited by Sir Stanley Rous on behalf of FIFA to photograph the Mexico '70 World Cup. Over a period of 35 years, Robinson has covered 9 World Cups, the English and Scottish leagues, the FA Cup, the League Cup, and the European Cup/Champions League (he was at Heysel in 1985 and in Barcelona 1999 for Manchester United's victory over Bayern Munich). He has run his own photographic agency, and has mounted major exhibitions of his work. Football Days, the best-selling book commemorating his life's work won the Illustrated Sports Book of the Year award in 2004. He is based in London SE1. Doug Cheeseman is a freelance designer and art director. Since 1988 he has worked as designer and director of the football magazine When Saturday Comes during which period the title developed from groundbreaking fanzine to the definitive voice on football culture. He also art directs WSC books, an independent book publisher in its own right. His other design work includes: Shot! - Images of football in the seventies, This is Soccer - Images of the 1994 World Cup, Football Days - Classic Football Photography, Golfing Days - Classic Golf Photography and Cricket - Celebrating The Modern Game Around The World. He is based in London SE23. Harry Pearson is a sports columnist for The Guardian and author of The Far Corner: A Mazy Dribble Through North East Football, shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award. He has also written a number of other travel-related titles that have seen him hailed as the new Bill Bryson. He lives in Hexham, Northumberland

From the Back Cover

With over 250 photographs - some classic, some rare, some never published before - a series of insightful essay, and the memories of Bobby Charlton, Franz Beckenbauer, and Alan Bennett, '1966 Uncovered' is the story of an event, a nation, and an era told and illustrated with warmth, wit, and originality.

From the Inside Flap

An outstanding collection of unique and unseen archive photography from the 1966 World Cup, '1966 Uncovered' captures the distinctive flavour of the tournament both on and off the pitch.
The book opens with interviews with Sir Bobby Charlton and Franz Beckenbauer, in which they relive their memories of the 1966 tournament, exchange views on the world of football and give their last word on England's controversial third goal in the final.
Five main chapter follow the tournament around the country from the regional group stages in the North-East, Midlands, North-West and London, to knock-out stages and of course the final. Along the way, Harry Pearson's revealing text captures the particular charm of the times and of the tournament, and the outstanding collection of images brings the event to life in a new, insightful and thought-provoking way.
A specially written afterword by Alan Bennett completes the book - a characteristically telling piece by one of the defining figures of the English cultural landscape over the last 40 years.
From the giant-killing North Koreans to the tears of Eusebio, from the theft of the Jules Rimet trophy to Bobby Charlton's semi-final strikes - all the drama of 1966 is captured and uncovered in a book that will captivate those who remember the event itself and the generations of football fans who have grown up enthralled by the legacy it created.

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