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When the Year Ends in One
When the Year Ends in One
When the Year Ends in One
When the Year Ends in One
PUBLISHED MAY 2025

When the Year Ends in One

Regular price £18.99 £0.00
How Tottenham Hotspur's 1991 FA Cup
Win Saved the Club and Transformed English Football
Some books transcend their apparent subject matter, using a specific moment to tell a much larger story. Ewan Flynn's "When the Year Ends in One" is exactly that kind of book. While ostensibly about Tottenham Hotspur's 1991 FA Cup triumph, it's really a tale about the transformation of English football itself, a pivot point where the old world gave way to the new. 
Flynn expertly intertwines the diverse elements that made 1991 a crucial year for Spurs and English football. At its heart is the story of a club in crisis, teetering on the brink of financial ruin while simultaneously achieving one of its greatest triumphs. The narrative tension is palpable as Flynn details how Tottenham faced potential bankruptcy even as they marched toward Wembley.
The book's greatest strength lies in its extensive original research and interviews, offering unprecedented access to the key figures of that turbulent season. Flynn's treatment of the Paul Gascoigne saga is particularly compelling. Rather than simply rehashing the infamous tackle in the final that would change Gazza's career, Flynn provides crucial context about the mounting pressure and expectations that led to that moment of madness.
Flynn's ability to step beyond the immediate drama and illustrate how Tottenham's predicament served as a microcosm of football's broader transformation is what distinguishes this book. The author makes a convincing case that the club's financial struggles and eventual salvation helped pave the way for the Premier League's formation and Sky TV's revolution of football broadcasting.
The writing style is refreshingly irreverent while maintaining historical rigour. Flynn, a lifelong Spurs fan, brings both passion and perspective to the narrative. He's not afraid to puncture myths or challenge conventional wisdom, but he does so with a journalist's eye for detail and a fan's deep understanding of what makes football matter. 
Particularly fascinating is the book's exploration of Terry Venables' dual role as manager and aspiring executive. Flynn shows how Venables' ambitious vision for the club, while ultimately contributing to its financial instability, also helped set the template for modern football's business model.
The book's only slight weakness is that it occasionally gets bogged down in the minutiae of boardroom politics. However, even these details serve the larger narrative about how English football's power structures were fundamentally changing.
"When the Year Ends in One" is essential reading not just for Spurs fans but for anyone interested in understanding how English football transformed from a working-class sport into a global entertainment industry. Flynn has crafted a piece that employs the narrative of a single club to shed light on a significant period of transformation, demonstrating how the beloved game evolved into the modern-day industry.
This is sports writing at its finest—deeply researched, elegantly written, and genuinely insightful about both the game itself and its wider cultural significance. In telling the story of one tumultuous season, Flynn has captured the moment when modern football was born.
ROYAL MAIL TRACKED 48 [Delivered to You Last Week May 2025]
Published: May 12, 2025
Price: £18.99
Hardback: 256 pages
ISBN-10: 1836801386
ISBN-13:  978-1836801382
Dimensions: 222 x 144 (mm)
Order Now
How Tottenham Hotspur's 1991 FA Cup
Win Saved the Club and Transformed English Football
Some books transcend their apparent subject matter, using a specific moment to tell a much larger story. Ewan Flynn's "When the Year Ends in One" is exactly that kind of book. While ostensibly about Tottenham Hotspur's 1991 FA Cup triumph, it's really a tale about the transformation of English football itself, a pivot point where the old world gave way to the new. 
Flynn expertly intertwines the diverse elements that made 1991 a crucial year for Spurs and English football. At its heart is the story of a club in crisis, teetering on the brink of financial ruin while simultaneously achieving one of its greatest triumphs. The narrative tension is palpable as Flynn details how Tottenham faced potential bankruptcy even as they marched toward Wembley.
The book's greatest strength lies in its extensive original research and interviews, offering unprecedented access to the key figures of that turbulent season. Flynn's treatment of the Paul Gascoigne saga is particularly compelling. Rather than simply rehashing the infamous tackle in the final that would change Gazza's career, Flynn provides crucial context about the mounting pressure and expectations that led to that moment of madness.
Flynn's ability to step beyond the immediate drama and illustrate how Tottenham's predicament served as a microcosm of football's broader transformation is what distinguishes this book. The author makes a convincing case that the club's financial struggles and eventual salvation helped pave the way for the Premier League's formation and Sky TV's revolution of football broadcasting.
The writing style is refreshingly irreverent while maintaining historical rigour. Flynn, a lifelong Spurs fan, brings both passion and perspective to the narrative. He's not afraid to puncture myths or challenge conventional wisdom, but he does so with a journalist's eye for detail and a fan's deep understanding of what makes football matter. 
Particularly fascinating is the book's exploration of Terry Venables' dual role as manager and aspiring executive. Flynn shows how Venables' ambitious vision for the club, while ultimately contributing to its financial instability, also helped set the template for modern football's business model.
The book's only slight weakness is that it occasionally gets bogged down in the minutiae of boardroom politics. However, even these details serve the larger narrative about how English football's power structures were fundamentally changing.
"When the Year Ends in One" is essential reading not just for Spurs fans but for anyone interested in understanding how English football transformed from a working-class sport into a global entertainment industry. Flynn has crafted a piece that employs the narrative of a single club to shed light on a significant period of transformation, demonstrating how the beloved game evolved into the modern-day industry.
This is sports writing at its finest—deeply researched, elegantly written, and genuinely insightful about both the game itself and its wider cultural significance. In telling the story of one tumultuous season, Flynn has captured the moment when modern football was born.
ROYAL MAIL TRACKED 48 [Delivered to You Last Week May 2025]
Published: May 12, 2025
Price: £18.99
Hardback: 256 pages
ISBN-10: 1836801386
ISBN-13:  978-1836801382
Dimensions: 222 x 144 (mm)
Order Now

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