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15% off

Swift Press Hardback English

Pots of Gold

A History of Snooker

By David Hendon

Regular price £20.00 £17.00 Save 15%
Unit price
per
15% off

Swift Press Hardback English

Pots of Gold

A History of Snooker

By David Hendon

Regular price £20.00 £17.00 Save 15%
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched today with Tracked Delivery, free over £15
Delivery expected between Tuesday, 7th October and Wednesday, 8th October
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  • 'THE UNDISPUTED NUMBER ONE OF SNOOKER BOOKS' BARRY HEARN ‘Terrific’ Phil Yates, snooker broadcaster ‘Must-read … Enthralling’ Neal Foulds, former world no.3 ‘Perfection!’ Alan McManus, former Masters champion ‘A truly great read’ Hazel Irvine, sports presenter Snooker is a British success story, a working-class game which became a multi-million pound professional sport, exported to the world. A sublime test of skill and nerve, it has fascinated succeeding generations of players and spectators. In this new history of the sport, David Hendon shows how the fortunes of snooker have mirrored wider changes in British society. Beginning as an upper-class pursuit invented in the British Raj, snooker was taken up in the working men’s clubs of industrial Britain. It nearly ceased to exist as an organised sport in the late 1950s, before reviving and becoming big business in the Thatcher era: 18.5m people watched the famous 1985 World Championship final. Since then, it has become a global sport, most notably in China and the Far East. Weaving the big picture with the personal stories of snooker’s big characters, from Alex Higgins and Jimmy White to Ronnie O’Sullivan, anyone who has ever wielded a cue or breathlessly watched a marathon safety exchange will love this book.
'THE UNDISPUTED NUMBER ONE OF SNOOKER BOOKS' BARRY HEARN ‘Terrific’ Phil Yates, snooker broadcaster ‘Must-read … Enthralling’ Neal Foulds, former world no.3 ‘Perfection!’ Alan McManus, former Masters champion ‘A truly great read’ Hazel Irvine, sports presenter Snooker is a British success story, a working-class game which became a multi-million pound professional sport, exported to the world. A sublime test of skill and nerve, it has fascinated succeeding generations of players and spectators. In this new history of the sport, David Hendon shows how the fortunes of snooker have mirrored wider changes in British society. Beginning as an upper-class pursuit invented in the British Raj, snooker was taken up in the working men’s clubs of industrial Britain. It nearly ceased to exist as an organised sport in the late 1950s, before reviving and becoming big business in the Thatcher era: 18.5m people watched the famous 1985 World Championship final. Since then, it has become a global sport, most notably in China and the Far East. Weaving the big picture with the personal stories of snooker’s big characters, from Alex Higgins and Jimmy White to Ronnie O’Sullivan, anyone who has ever wielded a cue or breathlessly watched a marathon safety exchange will love this book.