by Graham Poll
Harper Sport, £18.99
Reviewed by Tom Green
From WSC 248 October 2007
Early on in Graham Poll’s autobiography, the now retired referee shows a surprising degree of self-awareness. Admitting that, as a child, he had a tendency to play the clown, he explains that it was his way of dealing with insecurity. “If I was told, as a schoolboy, to go to such-and-such a room, I would loiter outside, dithering about whether it was the right room and what people would think about me when I went in. So, to deal with that feeling, I would confront it. I would burst into the room and be completely over-the-top. I used to overcompensate.”
The Biography
The Eleven Elements of Footballing Greatness
A Clueless American Sportswriter Bumbles Through English Football
The Remarkable Life and Death of Leigh Richmond Roose, Football's First Play Boy