Rarely does a book capture that fine balance of a personal account without the author being the story, but this was one of those. This was a study of footballers in the fifties and sixties, with Imlach using his father's career to illustrate the realities of the time, and he interviews men who knew Stewart Imlach the footballer as well as using old newspaper reports to ensure it is not just a regurgitation of myths.
I must say I am more familiar with Gary as a presenter than as an author, so this came as a pleasant surprise. It appears to be motivated by a desire to understand what his parents' life was like, as well as his father's career, but the cheering on of his father through past seasons never feels tiresome, but was quite illuminating: Derby having 'no slums' was a myth to get his father to move clubs, but puts the modern worries about housing in perspective, and Imlach's first photo as a professional footballer is taken as he is working as an apprentice joiner. His father has four caps for Scotland, two of which were in a World Cup, then disappears from national view, and is not even awarded a physical cap despite many later requests.
One of Gary's main strengths is to recount interviews accurately, but checking the facts and rarely endorsing the viewpoint. The Scotland defeat to France in '58 did not feature a counter-attack after a penalty hit the bar, but the story is dutifully described in poetic terms, and ensures the interviewees are allowed personalities, but not to invent their own stories. Looking back, Gary also steers clear of painting the 50s as a time when 'men were men' despite his own (briefly described) misgivings towards modern football. Players and managers tried underhand tactics just as they do now.
This was not a comprehensive history in the mould of a Jonathan Wilson, but there was still room for education, such as the events that led to the abolition of the maximum wage and the collective action, as well as the more emotional discussion which avoided mawkishness. I'd perhaps avoid it if I had no interest in football, but that's a given really.