This book, the first biography of Nicholson, commemorates the 50th anniversary of Tottenham's pioneering 1961 Double - the first of the 20th century - when Nicholson followed up in 1963 by becoming the first manager to win a European trophy. By moulding great players like Dave Mackay, Danny Blanchflower, John White, Cliff Jones and Jimmy Greaves into an almost perfectly balanced team backed by Spurs' inspirational anthem, 'Glory, glory, Hallelujah', he set new standards of attacking play, unsurpassed even by Real Madrid and today's Barcelona team. The eight of nine children, Nicholson was born in Scarborough in 1919. At the age of 17 he took the night train alone to London, signed for Spurs as a ground-staff boy on GBP2 a week and spent the rest of his life with the club as player, coach, manager, scout and President. He never had a contract, spurned bonuses and lived ten minutes' walk from the ground with his remarkable wife, who was know as Darkie, until his death in 2004. In his 1984 autobiography, Nicholson forecast all the problems that have engulfed today's game, and his is still revered by Tottenham fans as one of the most important figures in the club's history. His daughters have co-operated fully with author Brian Scovell on this book, which offers a new, kinder impression of this much-loved man.
About The Author
Brian Scovell worked for Associated Newspapers (Daily Sketch/Daily Mail) between 1960 and 2000 and regularly covered Tottenham's matches. He was at White Hart Lane when Bill Nicholson resigned as manager in 1974. This is his 24th book, several of which have been nominated for the British Sports Book Awards. He is currently giving advice on behalf of the Football Writers' Association to Tottenham Hotspur and a number of other clubs about press facilities at football grounds.