Kenny Sansom: To Cap It All
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #98208 in Books
- Published on: 2008-05-05
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 304 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
Kenny Sansom considers himself a lucky man. But he also knows he's pushed that luck, and is fortunate to have survived. As a footballer he soared to great heights - but as an individual he also sank to life-threatening lows. The fans in the Highbury terraces may have sung 'There's only one Kenny Sansom' but no-one ever really knew the whole truth about one of English football's best-loved icons.Few players have ever epitomised the spirit of First Division football more than 'Handsome Sansom'. The nimble left-footed schoolboy from the streets of South London holds a special place in the history of the great English game, winning the hearts of Crystal Palace and Arsenal fans during a playing career which saw him captain successful teams at both clubs. Under the management of Terry Venables, Ron Greenwood, Terry Neill and George Graham, the 1970s and '80s saw the youthful Kenny revelling in top flight football, with millions of fans cheering his refreshing, direct and athletic style.Strong, calm, reliable and known for his ability to work in pinpoint crosses from the left, Kenny was a firm fixture in the cup-winning Arsenal and England defences for most of the 1980s.
Customer Reviews
To Cap It All / My Story / Ken Sansom
I recall Ken Sansom being a fixture in the England team during the 1980s but am neither a fan nor an Arsenal fan (Leicester, actually, so you could argue that I'm the opposite :0)
I bought this book (some weeks after publication, so had to hunt for it in Waterstones) on the basis of a weekend interview on BBC Radio 5 in which Kenny covered his struggle against alcohol and gambling addictions; and (particularly, for me) his father's association with the seamier, shadier side of London's East End. Regrettably, the book doesn't seem to cover much more about this last aspect than was said on the radio.
Sansom comes across as a nice bloke, pre- and post- alcohol addiction, who would probably have been an ordinary chap, had he not found the fame and social advantages gleaned by a top footballer.
The writing is well structured in some parts (with the aid of a named ghost writer) but the middle part seems to "dob about", with some ideas repeated, as it would if you or I were reeling it off. It's as though these parts are pure transcription of recorded conversation (and I suspect they are).
This book is OK for fans who can remember Sansom's contribution to football. Buy it from the charity shop, market stall or website where I shall doubtless place it. Apart from this, I wish Sansom and all his family the best of luck with his rebuilt life and career.



