Friday, October 02, 2009

39 Days of Gazza

39 Days of Gazza




Paul Gascoigne was the English football icon of the 1990s. The outstanding player of his generation, his magnificent midfield play provided some of England's most memorable moments, and he enjoyed a headline-grabbing career with Newcastle United, Tottenham, Lazio, Glasgow Rangers, Middlesbrough and Everton. Then it all went terribly wrong. He still made the headlines but for all the wrong reasons - alcoholism, drugs, wife-beating, personality disorder, run-ins with the law, nervous breakdown, revival from cardiac arrest. Like his great hero, George Best, Gazza seemed to have passed a personal point of no return. Then, in the autumn of 2005, he was given a chance to rebuild his career with his first job as a football manager. As part of a consortium which bought Kettering Town, Gazza reinvented himself. Appearing to have his personal problems under control, he took charge full of big ideas about steering the club into the Football League and towards the big time. The people of Kettering were star-struck by the celebrity among them, and yet in just a few short weeks it would all fall apart spectacularly. 39 days after Gascoigne was appointed manager he was sacked amidst an increasingly bizarre series of allegations, leaving a once hopeful club on its knees. 39 Days of Gazza tells the story of Paul Gascoigne's tragicomic reign as manager of Kettering Town, and how its disintegration impacted on so many people's lives - not least his own.

About the Author
Steve Pitts was group sports editor of Northamptonshire Newspapers during Gascoigne's time at Kettering Town. He was uniquely placed to record the rapid turnaround of events, and builds the story with revealing contributions from many contacts involved in the club.

BUY NOW ==>> 39 Days of Gazza

1 comment:

Unknown said...

I just read this book and the most pleasing and interesting thing about it is,that it zones in so specifically on this detailed, teeming piece of Gazza's life, where he raised these local footballers' hopes - and all the heights and depths that followed on from that challenge. Players and management are brought vividly to life, with all their cracks and reactions to this strange episode. So, as well as going deep into a vey smallpeice of Gazza's life, it reveals something very big and universal about him as a character. A fascinating microcosm of misery, mayhem and football.