Jack Charlton

Author : Jack Charlton


18 AED

I know who you are: youre The Boss. - the words of His Holiness John Paul II on meeting Jack Charlton and his Republic of Ireland team before the 1990 World Cup finals. Indeed Jack Charlton is The Boss - a man whose strength of character has driven him to achievements beyond the scope of his own natural talents or those of the teams who have played under him. As a player he touched the pinnacle in Englands legendary 1966 World Cup winning team. As a manager he dragged the Republic of Ireland team from the backwaters of international football to compete with the worlds best. As a man he is noted for his forthright personality - one whose views are as honest as they are respected. This is Jack Charltons full story. It tells of his childhood in the Northumberland mining village of Ashington the eldest of four brothers one of whom was the phenomenally gifted Bobby now Sir Bobby Charlton. His mother was from the famous Milburn footballing family and it was therefore in Jacks blood that he should escape a life down the mine by joining Leeds in 1952. By the time he hung up his boots more than twenty years later he had made 629 League appearances for Leeds still a club record - truly Jack Charlton was one of the last of the great one-club players. Under Don Revie Leeds were to become one of the greatest of modern sides. Jack tells of his sometimes stormy relationship with Revie and with Alf Ramsey the most successful of all England managers. When Jack himself turned to management first with Middlesbrough then with Sheffield Wednesday Middlesbrough again and Newcastle United and finally of course with Ireland he could draw on experience of playing for some of the greatest managers of modern times. Jack writes about his time as a player about his feelings for his brother Bobby and of his own bemusement in 1977 when after being encouraged to apply for the England job he didnt even receive the courtesy of a reply. Finally he writes about his ten years in charge of Ireland the little miracle he wrought from a miscellaneous collection of players and defends the tactics he adopted from ignorant and ill-informed criticism.


I know who you are: youre The Boss. - the words of His Holiness John Paul II on meeting Jack Charlton and his Republic of Ireland team before the 1990 World Cup finals. Indeed Jack Charlton is The Boss - a man whose strength of character has driven him to achievements beyond the scope of his own natural talents or those of the teams who have played under him. As a player he touched the pinnacle in Englands legendary 1966 World Cup winning team. As a manager he dragged the Republic of Ireland team from the backwaters of international football to compete with the worlds best. As a man he is noted for his forthright personality - one whose views are as honest as they are respected. This is Jack Charltons full story. It tells of his childhood in the Northumberland mining village of Ashington the eldest of four brothers one of whom was the phenomenally gifted Bobby now Sir Bobby Charlton. His mother was from the famous Milburn footballing family and it was therefore in Jacks blood that he should escape a life down the mine by joining Leeds in 1952. By the time he hung up his boots more than twenty years later he had made 629 League appearances for Leeds still a club record - truly Jack Charlton was one of the last of the great one-club players. Under Don Revie Leeds were to become one of the greatest of modern sides. Jack tells of his sometimes stormy relationship with Revie and with Alf Ramsey the most successful of all England managers. When Jack himself turned to management first with Middlesbrough then with Sheffield Wednesday Middlesbrough again and Newcastle United and finally of course with Ireland he could draw on experience of playing for some of the greatest managers of modern times. Jack writes about his time as a player about his feelings for his brother Bobby and of his own bemusement in 1977 when after being encouraged to apply for the England job he didnt even receive the courtesy of a reply. Finally he writes about his ten years in charge of Ireland the little miracle he wrought from a miscellaneous collection of players and defends the tactics he adopted from ignorant and ill-informed criticism.
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