Somebody Stole My Game
By (Author) Chris Laidlaw
Hachette Aotearoa New Zealand
Hodder Moa
15th November 2010
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
796.333
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 26mm
750g
This book has a central proposition: that rugby is not sustainable if it continues down the commercial path it is currently following. Control of the game is being steadily transferred from those who thought they owned it to commercial and media interests who see it purely as a commodity. Of all the great team sports rugby has been the most dependent on tradition, inclusiveness and the notion of the game being more important than the individual. After a century and a half of comfortable conservatism rugby suddenly found itself confronted by a professional revolution not of its own making and it has struggled ever since to come to terms with it. This book is controversial, thought provoking and has wide appeal - it addresses a series of issues which threaten New Zealand rugby.
Chris Laidlaw is a former All Blacks great, Rhodes Scholar, diplomat, MP, author and host of the high-rating "Sunday" show on National Radio each Sunday morning. His first book, Mud In Your Eye remains one of New Zealand's biggest selling sports books.