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THE PRIDE OF MANCHESTER
TITLE The Pride of Manchester: A History of the Manchester
Derby Matches
AUTHORS Steve Cawley & Gary James
PUBLISHER ACL & Polar Publishing (UK) Ltd.
2 Uxbridge Rd,
Leicester LE4 7ST,
England
(UK)-533-610800
ISBN No 0 9514862 1 7
PRICE £21.95
A hefty price but entirely justifiable for a large format book containing a
staggering 352 sides, innumerable black & white photos as well as
approximately 50 in colour, many of them full page. The book is the joint
work of Steve Cawley and Gary James, the former a Red and the latter a Blue
so it neatly avoids the pitfall of bias, a criticism which could have
easily been levelled at any author whose allegiance lay with only one club.
As for total impartiality, I doubt very much whether any outsider would
have taken on this task, what has been produced is surely a labour of love
and not profit motivated.
The authors have scored the notable coup of a double foreword by none other
than (Sir) Joe Mercer and Sir Matt Busby and I think it fair to say that
they wouldn't have given their combined blessing to an inferior work. The
book is broadly divided into three parts, namely the league derbies,
followed by cup (& other) derbies and finally an extensive statistical
section. The first two are chronological and are split into somewhat
arbitrary chapters e.g 'The Sixties, 1966-71', probably more for the sake
of format and presentation than for any real historical requirement. Each
game is presented with a blue or red numbered header (game number)
according to the home team. The score and scorers are given together with a
programme-like teamsheet and the standing of the teams before the game. The
background to the game is succinctly explored which helps set the teams in
context, both historically and in terms of their form leading up to the
fixture. An impartial match verdict is then given and this is followed up
by a contemporary report to show what the reporters of the time thought of
it all. Many of the pictures are delightful cartoons of the time or photos
of newspaper headlines/cuttings which give a nice period feel to the game,
making each match an interesting read. The authors are to be congratulated
in finding such a neat way of presenting the matches without falling into
the trap of producing a dry catelogue.
The last section gives answers to just about every possible question
concerning the derby games, from 'Top Scorers', 'Most Appearances',
'Débuts', 'Played For Both Clubs' etc. The most contentious section
(recognised by the authors themselves) appears towards the end (probably
because you'd get stuck there otherwise!) and is guaranteed to get everyone
arguing till well into the next millenium, 'All-Time Best Derby Elevens'.
The teams are almost entirely post-war, which is unavoidable really as it's
just too difficult to assess the ability of a player you never saw. Would
you choose Swift, Trautmann or Corrigan as goalie, and where is one of my
personal favourites Dave Watson? Go to the pub and continue the discussion
indefinitely! One rather telling fact is that the most recent player in the
City side is none other than Tommy Booth! To finish off, there is a chapter
where the 'greats' recall their favourite derby memories, a nice personal
touch.
These type of books have one major enemy and that is time; the next match
after publication and they're out of date. Having said that, it's an
unmissable book for any Manchester fan, great history, great photos, great
memories and laid out in a very readable way. It's expensive but it's the
book about the derby! And just why are they called derbies? Well, you'll
have to buy it to find out and then it's only speculation.
All the above views are my own personal opinions.
Ashley Birch
I suppose as Santa has taken the trouble to get me this book for Christmas
then I ought to take the trouble to review it. First, the good news - 50
per cent of the book is about Manchester City. The bad news is that the
other 50 per cent is about the Rags.
The book is written by a Rag, Steve Cawley Booooooooooooo
and a Blue, Gary James Hoooooraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay
The book describes every derby match from the first encounter in 1891 to
1991. There may have been a reprint since my edition to cover the last few
years - I don't know.
There's a foreword by Sir Matt Busby and Joe Mercer.
Each derby match shows the teamsheet, division, venue, attendance,
photographs of teams and players, background article, match verdict and
league position statistics. There are also lots of newspaper cuttings,
cartoons, copies from programmes and separate sections of photographs.
There is also a statistics section showing won, drawn, lost, most player
appearances. Joe Corrigan gets the nod for the Blues here, 26 derby
appearances. The Red winner is Bobby someone, play at the Valley, 27
appearances. Derby managers are also shown with played, won, drawn, lost.
There's some derby memories by players various.
Large A4 size book. An awful lot of reading for, it has to be said, an
awful lot of money. A reduction was obtained for mine as it was for a City
fan. I jest, the reduction was because it was a little dog-eared.
Mine came from W..HSmith. Well that's where Santa got it from. He has to buy
some of the presents you know. He just hasn't the time to make everything
himself. After believing in City, Santa's a breeze.
John Shearer
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