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World in their Hands: The Story of the First Women's Rugby World Cup

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

World in their Hands: The Story of the First Women's Rugby World Cup

Contributors:

By (Author) Martyn Thomas
Foreword by Sarah Hunter

ISBN:

9781913538934

Publisher:

Polaris Publishing Limited

Imprint:

Polaris Publishing Limited

Publication Date:

1st January 2023

UK Publication Date:

15th September 2022

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Sporting events and management
History of sport
Rugby Union
Rugby League
Sports governing bodies

Dewey:

796.333082

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

352

Dimensions:

Width 160mm, Height 240mm, Spine 30mm

Weight:

552g

Description

World in their Hands recounts the remarkable events that led to a group of friends from south-west London staging the inaugural Womens Rugby World Cup in 1991. The tournament was held just 13 years after teams from University College London and Kings contested a match that catalysed the growth of the womens game in the UK, and the organisers overcame myriad obstacles before, during and after the World Cup. Those challenges, which included ingrained misogyny, motherhood, a recession, the Gulf War and the collapse of the Soviet Union, provide a fitting framing device for a book that celebrates female achievement in the face of adversity.

Although ostensibly a story about womens rugby, this is a tale that has rare crossover appeal. It is not only the account of a group of inspirational women who took on the institutional misogyny that existed in rugby clubs across the globe to put on a first ever Womens Rugby World Cup. It is also the compelling and relatable tale of how those women, their peers and others in the generations before them, reshaped the idea of what it means to be a woman, finding acceptance and friendship on boggy rugby pitches. At the time, with the mens game tying itself up in knots about professionalism and apartheid, these women were a breath of fresh air. Three decades on, their achievements deserve to be highlighted to a wider audience.

Reviews

'A remarkable and inspirational story'

-- Sarah Mockford * Rugby World *

'A hilarious, thoroughly interesting and endearing read about those who paved the way for women's rugby today. One of the best rugby stories in history - men's or women's - told perfectly'

-- Jessica Hayden * The Times *

'An uplifting and outstanding effort to tell the story of the amazing pioneers behind the 1991 World Cup. This is a story that deserved its own spotlight and Martyn has done a terrific job in bringing it all together'

-- Ali Donnelly * Scrumqueens *

'Thomas has done brilliantly to unearth a treasure trove of important stories from those who have made womens rugby what it is today. An extraordinary, empowering and truly engaging read'

-- Fiona Tomas * The Telegraph *

Author Bio

Martyn Thomas is a freelance sports journalist who works with World Rugby as an editorial consultant. He has written extensively about the history of the womens Rugby World Cup for World Rugby and for Rugby World. Having begun his career at The Guardian and worked as rugby editor for ESPN, he has also written for RugbyPass, Mirror Online, Eurosport, Sport360 and the official Rugby World Cup 2019 match programmes.

Sarah Hunteris an English rugby union player. She has represented England since the 2010 Women's Rugby World Cup and currently captains the team.

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