Box to Box e-bog
114,14 DKK
(inkl. moms 142,67 DKK)
Even by boxings standards, Curtis Woodhouses story istruly remarkable Ricky Hatton Asbrutally honestas it is gripping, amusing and illuminating Donald McRae Apulsating page-turnerof a bookMail on Sunday The football world is filled with stories of talented young footballers who have thrown it all away before drifting into obscurity. Similarly, the tale of an ageing boxer who won the title again...
E-bog
114,14 DKK
Forlag
Simon & Schuster UK
Udgivet
6 oktober 2016
Længde
288 sider
Genrer
BGS
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781471147746
Even by boxings standards, Curtis Woodhouses story istruly remarkable Ricky Hatton Asbrutally honestas it is gripping, amusing and illuminating Donald McRae Apulsating page-turnerof a bookMail on Sunday The football world is filled with stories of talented young footballers who have thrown it all away before drifting into obscurity. Similarly, the tale of an ageing boxer who won the title against the odds is so familiar it has become a cliche. But put the two stories together and youve got something special: wasted footballers simply dont become boxing champions - at least they didnt before Curtis Woodhouse. Woodhouse had been destined for greatness. At the age of 17 he made his debut forhis local club, Sheffield United, and quickly went from earning GBP42 a week to GBP4000 a week. Suddenly he felt like a rock star, and began living like one - which didnt help his football. Initially, there wasnt a problem, and he earnedfour England Under-21 caps, playing alongside the likes of Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard. As his drinking increased and he began getting involved in fights, he was sold to Birmingham City at 20 and saw his wages double - but so did his problems. After a brawl, he was sentenced to 250 hours community service, and when he finally reached the Premier League he ended up playing against Liverpool while still drunk. Hed fallen out of love with the game. After another transfer, manager Barry Fry suggested he take up boxing to provide an outlet for his anger, and a new passion was born. While still playing football, he became determined to make it as a boxer, and endured a long, hard battle to develop the skills to give him a chance, and in September 2006 he made his professional debut. With his father on his deathbed, Woodhouse made a promise: he would win a British title. On 22 February 2014, he got his chance against Darren Hamilton - I knew I wouldnt lose. Packed with brilliant stories and searingly honest insight, Box to Box shows how anyone can achieve their dreams - if they work hard enough.This tale...will have you teary one moment and in fits of laughter the next. Amust read Daily Star