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The Football Battalions
The Elite Footballers Who Fought in the Great War
The Football Battalions
The Elite Footballers Who Fought in the Great War
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Description
The poignant story of how a group of elite professional footballers went to war.
In 1914, the year the war breaks out, football is on the rise. Attendances are steadily increasing, and the players are beginning to become household names. Underlining how football has surpassed cricket as the national sport, George V becomes the first monarch to attend the FA Cup Final in May.
In this masterful work of history, Christopher Evans explores how footballers were put under immense pressure to sign up once the war began, resulting in the formation of the Football Battalion in England. He tells the story of World War I through the eyes of seven leading footballers of the day. Some would never make it back; some would fade into obscurity; some would leave an inedible mark on the game.
Among them are Vivian Woodward, an Olympic Gold medallist who becomes football's first superstar; Major Frank Buckley, who would come out of the war a hero and redefine the role of a football manager; and Walter Tull, Tottenham and Northampton hero, who faced racism both on the football and battlefield before becoming the first Black man to win a commission and command a unit in the British Army.
Deeply researched and drawing on new archival material, this is the first major exploration of this remarkable army battalion.
Product details
| Published | Oct 23 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (PDF) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 256 |
| ISBN | 9781399413497 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Sport |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Chris Evans, a commitment politician if ever there was one, brings the same devotion to his love affair with football as he did to his Welsh constituents and his work in Parliament. Those two passions are brilliantly interwoven in his latest book about the game which unifies our kingdom and its special importance in the dark years of world war. Cherish the rare insights.
Jeff Powell MBE, Senior Sportswriter at the Daily Mail
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Chris Evans has found a fascinating angle on the First World War that both highlight the tragic waste of talent taken in battle and the triumph of the human spirit to rise above the trenches and maintain an ambition for a life of sporting success not slaughter.
Guto Harri, broadcaster
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Chris Evans puts the spotlight on the extraordinary story of how well-loved footballers from across Britain left their clubs behind and together fought for their country. His passion for football and his deep knowledge of the internal politics of the sport is matched with true respect for those who swapped the pitch for the frontline. He paints vivid portraits of these sportsmen turned soldiers who answered duty's call at a time when both the game and the world were about to change beyond recognition. The reader is left humbled by the courage and sacrifice of these most patriotic of sportsmen.
David Williamson, Chief Political Commentator of The Express
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A brilliant book … a heart-breaking, inspiring and often funny story of remarkable footballers ... Nowadays a footballer is hailed as a hero if he dives for a header. These footballers were actual heroes and real people, brilliantly brought to life in these pages
Kevin Day, host of The Price of Football podcast
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Superbly written, expertly weaving together football and military history
Derek Twigg MP, former Veterans Minister
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A powerful and poignant reminder of how The Great War touched every inch of society
Chris Evans, FourFourTwo journalist and author of How to Win the World Cup and Gary Lineker






















