The 92 Club
The Last
Champions – Leeds United and the year that football changed forever by Dave
Simpson (Bantam Press)
Twenty years ago
a rag-tag bunch of journeymen footballers, raw youngsters, non-League players
plucked from obscurity and a mercurial Frenchman achieved the seemingly
impossible. Assembled for just £8 million, the 1991-92 Leeds United team
created by Howard Wilkinson became the last side to win the old First Division
title. The following season the Premier League was born.
What this team
achieved in a short space of time was unprecedented. In just three and a half
seasons, following almost a decade in the wilderness, Wilkinson transformed a
relegation-threatened second-level side into League winners. The sheer size of
the achievement has finally been given the recognition it deserves in The Last
Champions.
Author Dave
Simpson tracked down the members of the title-winning side to find out what it
was like in the inner sanctum of the club during this momentous period.
Featuring interviews with former players including Lee Chapman, Tony Dorigo and
a touching chat with Gary Speed shortly before his untimely death, Simpson
pieces together what made this team such a cohesive, well-oiled machine.
The book starts
by revealing that Wilkinson pioneered many of the sports science techniques
common in today’s game. From the dietary advice and special vitamin drinks he
prescribed, through to the extreme, military-style fitness regime that earned
him the “Sergeant” moniker, Wilkinson was acutely aware that physical
conditioning could make up for a shortfall in technical ability.
It also charts
Wilkinson’s sometimes-suspect man-management skills and his ability to cut
players loose without seeming to giver any thought to their feelings. Among
many others, Vinnie Jones and Chris Kamara were ruthlessly released when
Wilkinson decided they had served their purpose by helping the club return to
the top flight.
The interviewees
provide plenty of eye-opening stories about former team-mates. While Simpson
failed to make contact with David Batty, who turned his back on the game after
retiring, there are plenty of colourful anecdotes about the midfielder. Such as
the time an inebriated Jones took his car for a spin – with some “birds” in tow
– around Batty’s front lawn before breaking into the house to frighten his
team-mate, only to find Batty wielding a Bowie knife that he hid in his bed.
Amid the usual
revelations that are commonplace to all contemporary football biographies,
Simpson’s story captures the pathos of the many players who narrowly missed out
on the Premier League cash cow. While some leading lights from the squad forged
lucrative post-retirement careers, such as Eric Cantona, Jones and Kamara, many
of the title-winners are still holding down ordinary jobs to pay the bills.
Former striker Carl Shutt works as a travel agent and towering centre-half John
McClelland provides regular tours of Elland Road when not working as a postman.
McClelland best sums up the sheer magnitude of the team’s achievement, which he
likens to “climbing Everest”. To put it into context, imagine Southampton
winning the Premier League title in 2013-14. That is what Wilkinson and his
players achieved and it is what makes this story so special and worthy of
Simpson’s insightful homage.
Simon Creasey
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