When society locked down, football played on without fans. A powerful and poignant look at life behind closed doors.

Henry Winter

Joy is at the heart of Gray's writing; his delight in the little things, humble settings and small human dramas involved in the game. From the dark of Covid, this breezy and bright love letter to football was produced. Smile. Enjoy.

- Jonathan Northcroft, Sunday Times

A vivid, funny reminder of what was the weirdest time ever to be a football fan. Empathetic and poignant, it's the game's answer to <i>A Journal of the Plague Year</i>.

- Harry Pearson,

Se alle

Gray is a master of observing and amplifying the things we love about football but wonder if anyone else even notices

The Times

Gray writes like Lowry paints. Superb

BBC Radio

Gray is an endearing and authentic football observer, and this book reaffirms the meaning and importance of football in so many ways.

- Ian Aspinall, Late Tackle magazine

A joyous travelogue documenting a rocky season…offering a poignant peak at a surreal age and a slab of social history…moving, heartfelt and surprising uplifting.

Four Four Two

His peerless eye for the game’s endless little oddities and charms is used to chronicle his own return to the terraces after the forced exile of lockdown. No-one else writes with such obvious appreciation and warmth for the game.

The Scottish Times

We’re spoiled that the writer engaged with this task is Daniel Gray, who navigated complicated lockdown rules to produce this poetic account of football while the fans were locked out.

Scotland on Sunday

Covid could not stop football but it could stop fans from attending a game. It is a time that deserves to be recorded. It has found its peerless chronicler in Daniel Gray.

The Daily Mail

A joyous travelogue documenting a precarious season…moving, heartfelt and surprisingly uplifting

When Saturday Comes

LONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2023
SHORTLISTED FOR THE SUNDAY TIMES SPORTS BOOK AWARDS 2023 - FOOTBALL BOOK OF THE YEAR


‘Powerful and poignant’ Henry Winter

‘Empathetic and poignant … the game’s answer to A Journal of the Plague Year’ Harry Pearson


‘The Durham City midfielder wore the resigned look of a man trying to find a jar of harissa in Farmfoods. Up front for Jarrow, a centre-forward darted around frenetically, as if chasing a kite during a hurricane...’

When football disappeared in March 2020, writer and broadcaster Daniel Gray used its absence to reflect on everything the game meant to him. That bred a pledge: whenever and wherever fans were allowed to return, he would be there.

The Silence of the Stands is the result of that pledge: a joyous travelogue documenting a precarious season, in which behind-closed-doors matches and travel restrictions combined to make trips to Kendal and Workington seem impossibly exotic.

Offering a poignant peek at a surreal age and a slab of social history from the two-metre-distanced tea bar queue, this is the moving, heartfelt and surprisingly uplifting story of a unique season that no one wishes to repeat.

Les mer

Introduction – Jarrow 3 v 1 Durham City
1 Middlesbrough 1 v 1 Bournemouth
2 Lancaster City 1 v 2 Basford United
3 Workington 2 v 0 Mossley
4 Kendal Town 0 v 3 Tadcaster Albion
5 Southport 1 v 1 Alfreton Town
6 Cowdenbeath 2 v 0 Brechin City
7 Raith Rovers 3 v 1 Dundee
8 Rothbury 5 v 1 Forest Hall
9 Billingham Synthonia 0 v 2 West Auckland Town

Epilogue
Selected bibliography
Acknowledgements

Les mer
When football disappeared in March 2020 Daniel Gray pledged that whenever and wherever fans were allowed to return, he would be there. A moving, heartfelt and amusing account of a unique season that no one wishes to repeat.
Les mer
a paean to the beautiful game, through the prism of the pandemic and lockdown

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781399404068
Publisert
2022-11-10
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Sport
Vekt
152 gr
Høyde
214 mm
Bredde
134 mm
Dybde
14 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Daniel Gray is the author of Extra Time, Black Boots and Football Pinks, Saturday, 3pm and Scribbles in the Margins. He has written eight other books on football, politics, history and travel. His recent work has included screenwriting, presenting social history on television, editing a football magazine and writing across a number of national titles. He also presents the When Saturday Comes podcast.