Product Details
Anfield Iron

Anfield Iron
By Tommy Smith

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #50300 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-03-24
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Footballing legend Tommy Smith played with Liverpool for eighteen years from 1960 to 1978. During this time he won almost every honour club football has to offer, 4 First Division Championship medals, 2 FA Cup winners medals, 2 European Cups, 2 UEFA Cups, 1 European Super Cup and 5 Charity Shields. He captained Liverpool for a number of seasons and played under both Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley, widely regarded as two of the greatest managers British football has ever produced. In that time he was forged into one of football's original hard men, Shankly once said, 'Tommy Smith wasn't born, he was quarried.'A uniquely tough but thoroughly fair player (in spite of his fame for the most punishing of tackles), he was sent off only once and booked only twice, on all three occasions for dissent. In this fascinating autobiography, Tommy gives us the inside story of a whole host of footballing legends - Bill Shankly, Bob Paisley, Ron Yeats, Kevin Keegan, Matt Busby, Brian Clough, George Best, Jimmy Greaves, Bobby Moore, Denis Law and Pele, as told by one of their own. A nostalgic view of a golden age of English football, this is a window on the glory days of Liverpool.

It is also the story of the time before the game was all about the money and Tommy has a lot to say about football today, so he's not changed. As Bob Paisley once said, 'Tommy doesn't tackle opponents so much as break them down for resale as scrap.'


Customer Reviews

Anfield Iron 5
This is the first time I have ever reviewed a book, but having read this book I feel I have to write to say how much I enjoyed it. Having been born on the Wirral and a Liverpool supporter all my life I loved Tommy Smiths book. The humour and honesty throughout, especially the stories about Bill Shankly are brilliant, I could not put the book down.

Rock On Tommy...5
Picture the scene... Steven Gerrard leads Liverpool to their first ever League and European double and is rewarded by having his captaincy stripped from him because Fernando Torres says he's going to leave unless he gets the job. Guess you'd be pretty peeved too.

There was never any secret about Tommy and Emlyn's dislike of each other and it was a big part of the 'behind-the-scenes' stuff at Anfield in the mid '70's. Unlike the modern game when every whisper is snatched upon by the press and is followed worldwide via the internet, very little escaped from the dressing room and for many fans these books are a rare insight into what actually went on back in the heyday. It would have been wrong for Tommy to write his story without highlighting the bad, as well as the good times.

And this is Tommy's story, not Emlyn's. It is a no-holds barred story of his life, his career, his likes and his dislikes. To omit reference to Emlyn Hughes simply because it would upset some readers would be wrong. It's Tommy's life, his influences, his thoughts and his opinions. Agree with them or disagree with them, this is who he is. Maybe he'll lose a few fans as a result, but ignoring his relationship with Emlyn simply to pacify those who want to retain a rosy image of him isn't the Smith way.

Other than that, this is the first real book Tommy has done and I would strongly urge any football fan to buy a copy and relive the golden era, not just of Liverpool Football Club, but probably football as a whole.

bitter undertones2
what i took most from this book is smith's constant slagging off of Emlyn Hughes.We are meant to believe that the great Bill Shankly took the captaincy of Liverpool from Smith and gave it to Hughes because Hughes had threatened to leave the club.Why Smith had to besmirk the character of Liverpool's greatest ever captain is non-sensical,and belongs in another book.If the book stuck to the subject matter it would of been much better.