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All on Red: Ten Years at Anfield – A Liverpool fan's dream job - Softcover

 
9781907524080: All on Red: Ten Years at Anfield – A Liverpool fan's dream job
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Críticas:
this was a most interesting book to read because even if it did not tell me much historically that I did not already know, it was enthralling to hear the account of someone who was actually employed by the club; and that is the main reason why I would recommend this book to all Liverpool supporters ... because it hasn’t to my knowledge been done this way before. (Chris Wood)

Frank is the latest in a growing number of Liverpool supporters (some more well known than others) who have published their stories. The difference between Frank and all the others is that he was an employee of the club and was therefore on the inside looking out instead of being on the outside looking in like the rest of us. Despite that advantage, I still sensed a certain reluctance by Frank to put pen to paper. He believes that those “who attend the matches” or who work behind the scenes at a football club have “a more rounded view than armchair supporters”. He also recognises that the days of ghost-written autobiographies, what he quaintly but accurately describes as pre-1980s B.C. (before computers), are gone to be replaced by a plethora of publications written by supporters who claim to be “the voice of the man of the terraces”. If growing up our dream job was ‘to play for Liverpool Football Club’, closely following behind it might have been ‘working for Liverpool Football Club’. Accepting that he would never be good enough to be a professional footballer, Frank can certainly speak with authority as someone who was employed by the club through a quite momentous decade in that club’s history. The important thing about stories like Frank’s (just as it was with authors like Brian Reade, Neil Dunkin and Peter Etherington before him) is to get the balance right between life as a Liverpool supporter and life per se. Yes, of course it is useful to get an idea of the man behind the name but not at the expense of getting too involved in that man’s private/domestic life. That is an important part of the whole story but it does not make the whole story. People will buy this book because they know Liverpool Football Club not because they know Frank Gamble. Frank gets the balance right as he talks about his upbringing under an Evertonian father whilst being astute enough to realise that “in places like Liverpool where football is as important as air and water, your choice of allegiance is the first major decision you will probably take in life”. He decided that Red not Blue would be his choice and was captivated by the skill of Peter Thompson who became his first big favourite. As the Sixties became the Seventies his love-affair with the club continued to blossom and he recalls fondly the pilgrimage to Rome in 1977 remembering that the train they had to board at Lime Street “didn’t look as if it could reach Edge Hill never mind Folkestone”. Many older readers will certainly endorse that observation! Towards the end of the 1970s Frank answered an advertisement placed in the Liverpool Echo newspaper looking for a Lottery Sales Manager to work for LFC’s Development Association. A phone call from club Secretary Peter Robinson led to an initial interview and he was called back for a second interview with Chairman John Smith, after which he was offered the job. His immediate boss would be a man, Ken Addison, whose name is familiar to thousands of Liverpool supporters. Ken, the Commercial Manager in charge of the Development Association, told Frank “This is your extended family” as he introduced him to his new colleagues. Frank’s remit was to ensure that “sales remained at an acceptable point”. He was so fired up to pay back the faith that Ken and the Board had put in him that he “relished every day” even though as time went by he became aware that going to work at Anfield “was becoming more and more like a soap-opera” ! Life in Britain was changing. “The economy was dire, jobs were falling at catastrophic rates” but they were still expected to maintain their revenue streams. But “the most frustrating thing was seeing the enormous commercial potential the club had during its halcyon days unfulfilled, when they had people there who were not given the chance to use theirs”. Chairman John Smith became obsessed with cost-cutting at Anfield. Opportunities were missed to promote the club to the wider world, as Frank recalls when he poignantly says “These were the days and times when the club should have pushed the pedal to the floor in terms of pulling away from our rivals commercially. We have been playing catch-up with our rivals to this day. We were so slow out of the blocks and it cost us dear”. Through his daily work Frank gradually became acquainted with the legends of the club himself and immediately noticed how down-to-earth they all were but how focused and committed they were as well. “Their attention to detail was truly amazing and their knowledge of the game unsurpassed”. In particular he remembers Chief Scout Geoff Twentyman : “LFC owes this man an enormous debt of gratitude for all the diamonds he unearthed and his dedication to the cause”. Frank worked for the club at the time of Heysel but not Hillsborough. The longest chapter in this fascinating book is devoted to the first tragedy. Hearing the before, during and after testimony of a club employee is very revealing. Britain was “an angry society” in 1985, a year in which there was so much unrest and disorder at football grounds throughout the country. The violence that surrounded the 1985 F.A. cup semi-final at Goodison Park was “a bloodbath waiting to happen”. The following month in Brussels blood flowed for real in the most appalling way. Frank was deeply traumatised by what he saw that day, sadly knowing that the inevitable aftermath was that “we were out in the wilderness, despised by everyone”. Working for the club no longer gave such pride and enjoyment. “There was a stigma attached to being part of the organisation involved in such a terrible event. But because the organisation had been held in such high esteem beforehand, the fall from grace was incalculable”. Maybe Heysel was the catalyst that was the beginning of the end of Mister Gamble’s time as an LFC employee, an employ for which he surprisingly never had any sort of written contract. Life changes for us all and we have to make decisions that change the way our lives run. If you work for the football club you have supported through thick and thin all your life, that allegiance does not change because your own life changes when it comes to employment. “Just because the boy becomes a man doesn’t mean you leave all that stuff behind. You never do; in fact the intensity grows as time goes on”. Frank Gamble’s idea for this book was to try and express what it was like crossing the threshold of just being a fan to depending on that commitment for your livelihood. His idea bore fruit and it is a quite remarkable account of what it was like to work for Liverpool Football Club during one of the most successful periods of the club’s long and illustrious history. Only two things disappointed me. One : that there are no photographs included in the book. Two : that there are factual errors I believe should have been spotted and corrected before publication. Despite Frank’s closing words “It’s how I remembered things. If my recollections are incorrect, then I apologise” I was disappointed to read about certain matches I remember very clearly when the order of events was not as described in this book. Putting that aside, though, this was a most interesting book to read because even if it did not tell me much historically that I did not already know, it was enthralling to hear the account of someone who was actually employed by the club; and that is the main reason why I would recommend this book to all Liverpool supporters ... because it hasn’t to my knowledge been done this way before. (Chris Wood)

The next book I got to read was by Frank Gamble titled All On Red. This was totally different to what I expected and believe me it is a different type of read. Frank Gamble worked for Liverpool throughout most of the 80s hut unless you involved yourself with the Development Association, his name probably won’t be familiar. Working for the Development Association might not seem a very special job. not until you start getting a feel of what the job description should have read. As Liverpool slowly cemented their position as possibly Europe’s top club you’d imagine working for the club and organising trips to Wembley and places such as Rome and Paris would have been the cherry on top of a delicious cake. Not quite though. Especially when one of the trips was to Heysel in 1985 and believe me that is a very harrowing account from an eye-witness. I’ve read other people’s interpretations but Frank Gamble was there, in the crowd, watching it all unfold and he doesn’t look to find excuses either. He also talks of the aftermath of Rome in 1984 and how that night differed from the joyous one in 1977 when he went along simply as a fan. Like me. have you ever wondered if anything ever held Liverpool back during the ultra successful times in the 70s and 80s. I’ve always thought that the club might have rested on their laurels when perhaps they should have been doing just a little bit more to sort a few things out, like the ground and things. It’s hard to say really because the 80s was a period of austerity and football was not the hip game it is today. However, hindsight has always told me that maybe, just maybe we could have been a little more for¬ward thinking and in his book Frank tells of disagreements between the Development Association who wanted to take a few risks and the club under Peter Robinson who weren’t quite so brave. The book does tell of the downside and the fall outs associated with the job of working within an organisation such as Liverpool FC. However you can also understand how hard it became to persuade people to part with hard earned money especially on Merseyside where people’s very existence had been ravaged by government policies. When very few people had a safe job, if they had a job at all that is, then trying to improve the club’s fundraising activities must have been every bit as hard as the author says. The book itself is well worth a read but don’t expect another of those glory days’ stories. As this book tells you, even the good times were bloody hard and as somebody who has been on the edge of football for many years I can fully understand how it might have been. (Red All Over The Land)

He ... pours light on the characters that made the club tick, including the players, managers and the legendary boot-room. He chronicles the wild nights celebrating the many triumphs and, in contrast, grimly remembers the terrors of taking charge of an official trip to the Heysel Stadium. (David Powter)
Reseña del editor:
Frank Gamble came from a family of Evertonians but as is often the way in Liverpool he found his way to Anfield as a boy and fell in love with the Reds. Like most fans he followed the team when he could until in 1979 he saw an advertisement in the local paper which said: 'Liverpool Football Club invite invitations for the position of Lottery Sales Manager to work for the Development Association'.. Frank applied and, despite wearing a pale green double breasted suit and lime green tie for the interview, got the job. He stayed for ten years as Liverpool dominated English football. With Frank in the development office they won the First Division six times, the FA Cup twice, the League Cup four times and the European Cup twice. It wasn’t all success, though. In 1985 Frank led an official supporters party to Brussels to watch the European Cup final with Juventus. The result was horror in the Heysel Stadium as 39 fans, mostly Italians, lost their lives. As Frank writes: 'I was heavily involved in the build up to Heysel and witnessed firsthand the aftermath and results of those morons that led the charge into the neutral zone Z and it has haunted me ever since so Christ knows what the families of the dead have gone through.' Frank also remembers the build up to another tragedy – the Hillsborough disaster – looking out in 1988 at the Liverpool fans in the Leppings Lane end and thinking how crushed they were. By January 1989 Frank had left after a row. He was cleaning his car when he heard about the tragedy in which 96 Liverpool fans lost their lives. The book is about triumph and tragedy. Frank shows the human side of the men who became legends.

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  • VerlagSportsbooks
  • Erscheinungsdatum2011
  • ISBN 10 1907524088
  • ISBN 13 9781907524080
  • EinbandTapa blanda
  • Anzahl der Seiten224

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Buchbeschreibung Paperback. Zustand: Very Good. All on Red: Ten Years at Anfield - A Liverpool fan's dream job This book is in very good condition and will be shipped within 24 hours of ordering. The cover may have some limited signs of wear but the pages are clean, intact and the spine remains undamaged. This book has clearly been well maintained and looked after thus far. Money back guarantee if you are not satisfied. See all our books here, order more than 1 book and get discounted shipping. Artikel-Nr. 7719-9781907524080

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