Read all about it: 20 classic books about Australian football — and more
Football may be at a standstill, but fans can still get their fix by reading some brilliant books about the game. We’ve selected 20 of the best worth looking up.
Paul Amy
11 min read
April 2, 2020 - 12:30PM
Leader
We’ve put together a list of 20 classic football books worth looking up — and then some more.
Struggling without footy?
You’re not the only one. Fortunately there’s a treasure trove of classic footy books out there to feast on. Here’s 20 of the best:
The Coach (1978), by John Powers
The Coach by John Powers
More than 40 years after its publication, John Powers’ account of the 1977 season spent with North Melbourne under Ron Barassi remains the standard-bearer for books about the game.
It kicks off with the start of pre-season training (on January 24!) at JJ Holland Reserve in Kensington and ends with the Roos holding the premiership cup at the MCG and singing “For he’s a jolly good fellow’’ in tribute to their coach, who had poked and prodded and pushed them all season.
“I hope you’ll agree that all the hard work and … all that **** put on you by the coach … was worth it,’’ Barassi responded.
Every door opened for Powers at North Melbourne and he made the most of access that writers these days gain only in their dreams.
Time and Space (2015), by James Coventry
ABC sports reporter Coventry turns a sharp eye to the tactics of the game, how they evolved in the face of the rule book, their effectiveness and how they continue to occupy the minds of coaches and their strategists.
Deftly drawn profiles add to an immensely enjoyable read. “I don’t read much but I couldn’t put it down!’’ one VFL coach confessed after being gifted a copy.
Coventry and a crew of fellow thinkers also kicked goals in 2018 with Footballistics.
Rose Boys (2001), by Peter Rose
Rose Boys, footy book feature
In late January, 1974, against NSW at the SCG, Robert Rose took his place in a Victorian batting line-up that had Test men Keith Stackpole, Ian Redpath and Paul Sheahan in the top four.
He scored 23 in his only innings of the match.
Three weeks later, at the age of 22, he was involved in a car accident that left him a quadriplegic. Rose was not only playing Shield cricket but league football for Footscray, where he’d made nine senior appearances in 1973.
The son of Collingwood great Bob Rose had started his career with the Magpies in 1970. In the Rose Boys, Peter Rose writes powerfully and movingly about his family, his dual-sportsman brother’s life and his death in 1999 at the age of 47.
Southern Sky, Western Oval (1994), by Martin Flanagan
Southern Sky, Western Oval by Martin Flanagan
Just as Powers shadowed the Kangaroos in 1977, Flanagan followed Footscray in 1993.
Having fended off a merger with Fitzroy a couple of years earlier, the Bulldogs had risen spectacularly to 16 wins and six losses in 1992, and coach Terry Wheeler had amplified his ambitions for his team.
He saw possibilities whereas the old Bulldog way was to sense problems.
“I’m inviting you to record Footscray’s premiership year,’’ he had told Flanigan.
But, injuries conspiring against them, the Bulldogs finished ninth, and early in the 1994 season. Wheeler was unceremoniously dumped. Flanagan’s profiles of president Peter Gordon, players Steve ‘Super’ Macpherson and Simon Atkins, and veteran property steward Jack McGovern are a delight.
He returned to the Western Oval after the premiership year, 2016, writing A Wink from the Universe, from a greater distance than Southern Sky.
The Greatest Game (1988), edited by Ross Fitzgerald and Ken Spillman
The Greatest Game by Fitzgerald and Spillman
The list of contributors includes Tim Winton, Gerald Murname, Geoffrey Blainey, Bruce Dawe, Manning Clark, Laurie Clancy, Don Watson, David Williamson, Keith Dunstan, Terry Lane, Jack Hibberd, Dinny O’Hearn, Barry Oakley, Garrie Hutchinson, Frank Hardy, Alan Hopgood and Barry Dickins.
There is some literary heft in that lot. Then there is Brent Crosswell, who weighs in with an illuminating piece on his Carlton teammate Vin Catoggio.
“Vinny Catoggio had been killing them in the seconds, so Carlton took a punt and made him second rover for the big match. He was a lovely little bloke, just a kid, and on top of that it was his first game, but that didn’t matter when he failed in the 1973 grand final,’’ Crosswell writes.
Dickins’ tribute to Butch Gale, Watson’s recollection of big-kicking Ian Robertson playing at tiny Loch in South Gippsland and Dawes’ classic poem Life Cycle, which will endure as long as the game itself, are other highlights.
Local Rites (2001), by Paul Daffey
Local Rites, footy book feature
Daffey spent a year chronicling grassroots football, dropping in on clubs in the scrub and the suburbs, and emerged with stories spilling out of his back pockets.
The 26 chapters deal with a club, a competition, a controversy or a character, most memorably an ageing Shane Loveless playing out his career at Nagambie, a gun for hire running short of bullets after years of prodigious goalkicking in country football (legendary Mornington Peninsula spearhead Simon Goosey plucks a few pages too).
And the chapter on Nicky Winmar having a run at Warburton-Millgrove is exceptional.
Daffey released a similar book last year, The Totem Poles of Ouyen United, another must-read.
The Great Australian Book of Football Stories, compiled by Garrie Hutchinson
Garrie Hutchinson’s ‘Watcher’ column in The Age brought him a devoted readership, and he gained more appreciative followers with this anthology, culled mainly from newspapers and magazines.
It’s worth tracking down just for Herald man Robert Coleman’s rib-tickler on football fans, from the “wiseguy’’ (“he has a wisecrack, filed and card-indexed in his head, for every occasion’’) to the “ratbag’’ (“loudmouthed aggressive, uncouth, usually two-thirds stoned and a thorough nuisance to everybody’’) to “eagle eyes’’ (“observes from 200 yards away on a dull day, things the umpire cannot see from a distance of five feet’’). Look for Geoff Slattery’s masterly profile of Jack Dyer too.
1970 And Other Stories of the Australian Game (1999), by Martin Flanagan
1970, for footy book feature
Flanagan reflects on a grand final he says was “truly grand’’, Carlton coming from 44 points down at halftime to defeat Collingwood in 1970.
Key figures from the match are interviewed and their recollections are riveting; warm memories for Blues, regret for Magpies at having squandered such a substantial lead. Meeting the press after the grand final, Collingwood coach Bob Rose popped the first question.
“What went wrong?’’ he asked. Seven years later Carlton coach Barassi inflicted more pain on Collingwood as coach of North Melbourne.
Yellow and Black, a Season with Richmond (2018), by Konrad Marshall
Marshall was fortunate on two fronts as he tailed the Tigers through 2017. Given unfettered access, he was a fly-on-the-wall observer of all aspects of Richmond’s operation. In the hands of a writer of his talent, it was always going to make for a riveting read.
Then came a triumphant kicker, with the Tigers winning their first premiership since 1980, at last giving their army of supporters something to rejoice about. Yellow and Black will doubtless take its place alongside The Coach as a classic work of literature about the game.
The Point of It All, The Story of St Kilda Football Club (1992), by Jules Feldmann and Russell Holmesby
The Point of It All
A history of the Sainters, a club that began in 1873 and has survived all types of threats to its existence.
Despite winning only one premiership, St Kilda’s story is rich in characters, incidents and some of the greatest players in the sport’s history.
The constant thread is resilience in the face of adversity.
The book’s pictorial strength and visual appeal broke new ground for a football publication. Saints historian Holmesby’s Heroes with Haloes is superb too.