Catch a Falling Star

Summary
One of the most perceptive descriptions of Manchester City's play during their glory years was made by Manchester Evening News reporter Peter Gardner who remarked, "When Youngy plays, City play". For all the talk of greats such as Summerbee, Bell and Lee, it was the local lad made good who made the most impact when it mattered. Tall and leggy with a venomous left-foot shot, Young scored in every significant game for City in the late 60s. Scorer of two goals in the 1968 Championship win up at Newcastle, the scorer of the 1969 FA Cup Final winner and the first goal in the 1970 Cup Winners' Cup final, Young played a pivotal role in the success and style of the Mercer-Allison era. In 1972, just two years after playing a starring rôle in Manchester City's most successful team, Neil Young left his boyhood favourites for the final time. And, as the club began their now familiar relationship with underachievement and mismanagement, Neil drifted into relative obscurity, finally hanging up his boots just four years later. In Catch a Falling Star, Neil Young explains what he has been up to in the years since his sizzling shots stung the hands of the country's finest goalkeepers. Following his premature retirement from football, Neil's life has taken in tragedy in almost equal proportion to the glory he experienced as a player. Here, for the first time, he candidly discusses the depths to which he sank in the intervening years. Told with Neil's famed wit and laconic humour, Catch a Falling Star reveals how a star on the wane managed to mount a personal comeback as impressive as any achieved on the pitch by City's star-studded squad of the late 60s.
Similar Books
-
-
Finding My Feet : My Autobiography
by Jason Robinson
-
Roberto Clemente: The Great One
by Bruce Markusen
-
Walking Tall
by Peter Crouch
-
Walking Tall: My Story
by Peter Crouch
-
Sir Bobby Robson : Living the Game
by Bob Harris
-
Lions and Falcons: My Diary of a Remarkable Year
by Jonny Wilkinson
-
Lions and Falcons : My Diary of a Remarkable Year
by Jonny Wilkinson
-
Thierry Henry: The Biography: The Amazing Life of the Greatest Footballer on Earth
by Oliver Derbyshire
-
Ben Hogan's Secret: A Literary Portrait
by Bob Thomas
-
Life at the limit
by Graham Hill
-
Made for Rugby: The Autobiography
by Barrie McDermott
-
To Cap It All . . .: My Story
by Kenny Sansom
-
Legends of United: The Heroes of the Busby Era
by David Meek
-
Cole Play: The Biography of Joe Cole
by Ian Macleay
-
Heading for Victory: An Autobiography
by Steve R. Bruce
-
The Game of Their Lives
by Dave Klein
-
In Search of a Hero: The Life and Times of Tony Canadeo
by D. Zimmerman
-
In Strength and Shadow: The Mervyn Davies Story
by Mervyn Davies
-
George Brett : A Royal Hero
by Kansas City Star
-
George Brett: A Royal Hero
by The Kansas City Star
-
Chris Morton: Until the Can Ran Out
by Chris Morton
-
Dave Bassett: Settling the Score
by Dave Bassett
-
Coach 'Catfish' Smith and His Boys
by Glen Onley
-
Tommy Briggs: A Footballer and a Gentleman
by Jim Bibby