The King Takes Over
Liverpool and the Dalglish Years 1985-1991
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Pitch Publishing Ltd
Published:28th Aug '23
Should be back in stock very soon
The King Takes Over: Liverpool and the Dalglish Years 1985–1991 is a fast-paced and nostalgic account of a time when Liverpool were the best team in the land, and played a brilliant style of football still talked about more than 30 years on. It is the story of how Liverpool’s greatest player became one of its greatest managers.
Taking a wistful look back at the glory years of 1985–1991, the book revisits the great games and goals of the Kenny Dalglish era. It examines the circumstances of the Heysel tragedy and how Dalglish became Liverpool’s first player-manager in the darkest period in both the club and the city’s history, amid the chaos wrought by Thatcher’s government.
How did the Hillsborough disaster impact Dalglish, the club, players and fans? How did John Barnes, the first black player signed by Liverpool, overcome racism from the terraces to become a legend in red? Why did the Reds not win the championship for 30 years after 1990? What were the real circumstances behind Dalglish’s shock resignation in 1991?
"Shareef Abdallah... takes us back to the third phase of the Reds' 'glory days', that’s after managers Shankly and Paisley (Bob, with the greatest cup haul, of all) to this, an attractive era played under Kenny Dalglish and so winning yet more silverware for the Anfield trophy cabinet... Heysel (1985), Hillsborough (1989), a 'photo finish' title-decider with Arsenal (1989), John Barnes suffering racism dribbling down the wing and 'King' Kenny’s resignation (and on to a first Premier League title with Blackburn Rovers) are all covered - and much more... A fine read."
-- Mark Watkins * Dare RadISBN: 9781801504676
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
224 pages