
Title: The Glory Game
Author: Hunter Davies
Published: 1972
Publisher: Mainstream
Reading The Glory Game in 2012 is a revelation. Initially you can’t quite believe Davies has acquired the access he has: from the boardroom down to the fanatical supporters and the casuals. What is more remarkable is the access he has to the players: he travels on trains and planes, attends the functions and parties and most surprising, has full access to the changing room, before, during and after matches. Forty years on, in the rarefied elite of the Premiership, Davies achieved access with Tottenham Hotspur that writers of today could only dream of. This is a point that Davies acknowledges in his introduction and explains why it may not ever happen again. Although it’s hard to see why, as no one in The Glory Game is treated particularly badly and everyone comes out of the book looking good. However, it is clear that The Glory Game caused problems at Tottenham as Alan Gilzean, in his first interview in decades wanted to declare that he wasn’t the harden drinker as depicted in The Glory Game.
The Glory Game is very much of its era, football is changing (there is debate in the boardroom about whether to allow advertising boardings within White Hart Lane) and Tottenham Hotspur are run like a small family business with manager Bill Nicholson looming large in every neuk and cranny of White Hart Lane. In fact, Nicholson’s wife comes across well as a massive supporter who lives within metres of White Hart Lane but is banned from attending matches by her husband in case she brings bad luck.
Davies manages to create a sympathetic portrayal of footballers of the era and recognises that while they may be cash rich and doing something millions of others would love to do, they are socially limited and find it difficult to have anything meaningful outside the game.
The Glory Game is a magnificently enjoyable story of an entire club during a relatively successful season. Davies created what is called by Four Four Two magazine as “the definitive football text”, it’s very hard to argue against that proclamation.
Buy The Glory Game from Mainstream Publishing
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