
BALLS: Tales From Football’s Nether Regions
by Paul Brown
BALLS
Tales From Football’s Nether Regions
Revised Edition
by Paul Brown, Mainstream Publishing, 2005
Paperback, 240pp, ISBN 1845960637
Also available from Amazon.ca, Amazon.de, Amazon.fr, Amazon.co.jp, Play.com, B&N, Books-a-million, WHSmith, Tesco, all other bookstores, and also available in hardback.
A collection of amazing, bizarre and hilarious stories from the mad, bad and stupid world of football.
From the cover:
“Balls is an eclectic collection of amazing true stories from the world of football, revealing the bizarre and hilarious reality behind the beautiful game. Favouring left-field over legend, the book celebrates colour-blind referees, colourful commentators, dodgy kits, dodgier haircuts, footballers called ‘Primrose’, players with prosthetic body parts, dangerous goal celebrations, suicidal own goals, pathetic penalty misses, God-fearing goalkeepers, gun-toting fans, shocking scandals, horrendous tragedies, bung-taking managers, UFO-spotting chairmen, and loopy matches involving animals, robots and Nazis.
Recalling the antics of wayward geniuses like Paul Gascoigne, Diego Maradona and George Best, the book profiles football’s most colourful and craziest characters. Who is the former top-flight footballer now living as a fully post-op transsexual? What possessed a World Cup superstar to kidnap 120 Cameroonian pygmies? Which ex-goalkeeper genuinely believes he is the Son of God? Why was a former Southampton fullback offered the throne of Albania? And whatever happened to Maradona’s fake rubber penis?
Humorous and irreverent, the book collects hundreds of stories together into chapters on sex, drugs, violence, rock’n'roll and more. Balls is an unashamed celebration of the mad, bad and stupid aspects of football – the greatest game in the world.”
Small boys, jumpers for goalposts. Enduring image isn’t it? But the so-called beautiful game is rarely so innocent, so clean-cut, or so damned romantic. Behind the dreamy facade of the world’s favourite sport lies a superfluity of madness, badness and plain stupidity.
Balls trawls through soccer history and traverses the football world to uncover brilliant tales of footballing insanity. Who was the 19th century David Beckham? Was a former Everton striker really hung for stealing a sheep in Australia? Why did a professional football team deliberately score 149 own goals in one match? What propelled El Salvador and Honduras into a full-scale Soccer War? And does FBI Most Wanted terrorist leader Osama bin Laden really support Arsenal?
Paul Brown is a freelance journalist who writes for magazines such as FourFourTwo. He lives by the banks of the River Tyne and is a long-suffering supporter of Newcastle United. His previous book, Black & White Army, was described as a “Geordie Fever Pitch”.




