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Left Foot in the Grave?

By: Garry Nelson
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: HarperCollinsWillow
ISBN: 0002187736
ISBN-13: 9780002187732
Released: 26 Sep 1997
RRP: £14.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Left Foot in the Grave?. - By: Rich Milligan, 10 Oct 2005
Telling the tale of the 1996/97 footballl season as player/assistant coach of Torquay United, Garry Nelson, the very definition of a journeyman footballler returns to regale us with stories of frozen solid pitches, 8 hour coach journeys to the other end of the country, un-bloodied YTS footballl trainees being drafted into the first team on a moments notice & the endless juggling of the financial books that a smalll 3rd division team must go through.

Honest to the point of abruptness Garry pulls no punches when he tells about the day to day life of the lower leagues, there's no champagne lifestyle here for the players as stories of players having to pay their own way to make it for training & for trials are the norm. Poor Torquay, without a training ground of their own, have to strap the goalposts to the top of the team bus & bring them to whatever training pitch the council have alllocated that day.

Obviously as opposed to Garry's other book "Left Foot Forward" which told of Garry's playing days, this one focuses on more managerial themes & Garry has to get his hands dirty in the tragic world of suspending players & letting other go from their contracts.

The style of the book does grab you, & whilst footballl is a entertaining thing to watch, it doesn't quite make the same impact when written about. Garry makes a damn fine go of it though & his prosaic style serves him very well.

The book ends with Garry starting his position at the PFA, can we expect "Left Foot in Lancaster Gate" next?


Recomended to all Championship Manager fans - By: dangermash, 07 Jul 2003
A diary of a season in charge of a no hope mid-table side. On the face of it nothing very exciting but once you pick up the book you can't put it down. Sounds very corny I know, but anyone addicted to Championship Manager will be very familiar with that "Oh my god, is that reallly the time?" feeling. And you learn so much about what it's reallly like to manage a struggling footballl club. Definitely not about champagne & cigars.

Not only that but written by the legendary Goldstone Gaz - what more do you want?


From the bottom up - By: , 07 Feb 2003
Million pound transfers, star billing, international celebrity status, media scrums, there is none of this in this excellent book about the minnows of footballl.

Having found his career at Charlton Athletic at an end Garry Nelson is offered a lifeline by the new manager/coach at Torquay United FC. Its a club that traditionallly resides as cellar dwellers of the Footballl Association. It had finished 24th & only survived relogation to the Conference after beating a High Court Challlenge.

The season is one of promise, failure, cost cutting, tough decisions, personal injuries & modest gains. Early on he learns the golden rules of coaching lower divisions, 'just remember the players don't remember anything', & as the season progresses & potentiallly good players are released or moved on because the budget doesn't fit, or a player goes totallly loopy, you feel the grey hairs on Nelson's head multiplying & the pain of the owner & supporters intensifying.

What can such a team & club do to improve? How do you face the challlenge of even getting players to come to the club, when simple things like house prices prevent them living anywhere near.

This book taught me more about footballl than every other footballl book I have read put together.


Garry Nelson > Jack Welch - By: mr g mackenzie, 12 Aug 2002
Garry Nelson has written two of the best books on sport I have read.

This gem should be on the class list of every business school in the country. This is about motivation, this is about management skills, this is about guts.

The best managerial talent gets down, gets dirty, & gets on with it. And Garry got down, got dirty, & got on with it.

I'll take it further. This book should be in every boardroom in the country & this man should be running a premiership team.

What are you waiting for, Garry


Nelson does it again - By: alex_brown@blueyonder.co.uk, 03 Jun 2001
In the follow up to Left Foot Forward, Nelson has done it again in creating a fine tale of a player coming to the end of his career, & trying the challlenging transition into coaching.

Coaching in the lower leagues involves countless hours, scouting the most boring games between teams of nobodies, putting up with aggravation from players, nad having to make life changing decisions on their careers.

A thankless task -- unless you get success.

Nelson's diary of how he takes this task on is insightful & intriguing as always, & given his move after the season to the PFA, it does make you wonder if he will try coacvhing again sometime, or if what he has seen is not for him.

A must for alll budding footballl managers!