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Review: The Age of Football

This book mixes searing detail with laconic wit, says David Winner

October 2, 2019 11:48
Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck celebrate the winning goal in Germany’s 1-0 triumph over Argentina in the 2014 World Cup
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The Age of Football by David Goldblatt (Pan Macmillan, £25)

Football dominates the world but, as David Goldblatt shows in his latest epic study, there is a dark side to its ubiquity. His theme is power. In searing detail and with laconic wit, he reveals the ways ruthless deployment of economic and political power blight the game and wider society. The bigger football gets, it seems, the darker many of the forces swirling through it have become.

In England, the death of Bury FC and the grimly one-sided Cup Final between Watford and the reputation-laundering operation known as Manchester City highlighted the inequality between the rich and the rest.

Elsewhere, things are worse. Moving from continent to continent, the phenomenally well-travelled Goldblatt brings us stories of exploited fans and players, horrendously run clubs, violence, bigotry of all sorts, and an unending cast of corrupt or inept officials and politicians.