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Banksy: The Autobiography -
by Gordon Banks
Amazon.co.uk Review
Gordon Banks would take the No 1 shirt in many people's all-time world's best
XI, but as told in Banksy: My Autobiography, the "cat" who had even Pele shaking
his head in admiration, struggled against illness and accident during his
career, and found the going tough once he'd hung up his gloves. The England
mainstay, whose 17-year career in British football was spent with just three
clubs, reflects on a very different game than today's big-money business. As
Banks tells it, goalkeeping was a different business too--no gloves, no
Kevlar-reinforced elbow pads, half the domestic season played in ankle deep mud,
and very little official protection from the marauding centre forwards who
prided themselves on serving the keeper a full mid-air body check early in a
game. Wits and courage mattered, as much as technique, and with goalkeeping
coaches unheard of, Banks recalls that he was forced to learn his craft out on
the pitch--not always with success.
He became a master, of course, whose exploits are part of the game's
folklore--the save-of-all-time against Brazil in 1970; George Best flicking the
ball out of his hands to "score" in 1971; the 1972 car crash that robbed him of
sight in one eye, and that 1966 World Cup triumph. There's humour too, notably
the episode when, furthering his playing career in the emerging US super league,
Banks is examined by a Stateside club doctor, who struggles with the idea that
an athlete who's got several metal plates in his body, can't quite touch his
toes, and has no vision in one eye, could really by an asset to the team--let
alone a goalkeeping great.
But whatever plaudits Banks received as a player, retirement was far from plain
sailing. An ill-fated career in management followed, which ended in farce when
Telford United dismissed Banks, but unwilling, or unable to pay off the remains
of his contract, tried to force the World Cup hero to resign by assigning him to
sell raffle tickets from a concession booth the club leased in a local
supermarket. Happier times were to follow, notably as a member of the Pools
Panel, but this part of the Banks' story, including his decision to sell off his
1966 winner's medal and memorabilia, is largely glossed over--an absence that is
a poignant counterpoint to his reflections on the glory years. --Alex Hankin
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Synopsis
For ten years Gordon Banks was not only England's number one, but was also
acknowledged to be the best goalkeeper in the world. This book is about more
than football. It tells the story of the man who represents all that was
admirable about the beautiful game in a golden era - the background behind a
genuine English hero. Encompassing triumph and tragedy, the book is told from
the point of view of an insider, charting from within English football's finest
years.
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