Pitched Battle: in the frontline of the 1971 Springbok tour of Australia
By (Author) Larry Writer
Scribe Publications
Scribe Publications
3rd October 2016
Australia
General
Non Fiction
322.430994
Paperback
336
Width 155mm, Height 234mm, Spine 30mm
466g
A vivid story of the men and women who took a stand when sport mixed with politics. In 1971, when the racially selected all-white Springbok rugby team toured Australia, we became a nation at war with ourselves. There was bloodshed as tens of thousands of anti-Apartheid campaigners clashed with governments, police, and rugby fans - who were given free reign to assault protestors. Queensland premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen declared a State of Emergency. Prime minister William McMahon called the Wallabies who refused to play 'national disgraces'. Barbed wire ringed the great rugby grounds to stop protestors invading the field. Pitched Battle recreates what became one of the most rancorous periods in modern Australian history - a time of courage, pain, faith, fanaticism, and political opportunism - which made heroes of the Wallabies who refused to play, played a key role in the later political careers of Peter Beattie, Meredith Burgmann, and Peter Hain, and ultimately contributed to the abandonment of Apartheid.
Larry Writer is an experienced journalist, author, and publisher. His books include Razor (adapted into the hit TV series Underbelly- Razor), Pleasure and Pain (the biography of Chrissy Amphlett), and Dangerous Games- Australia at the 1936 Nazi Olympics. Larry has also ghost-written several autobiographies.