Here's a quick cycling trivia question concerning two people who have been very much in the news of late - what have Paul Kimmage's Rough Ride and Lance Armstrong's It's Not About The Bike; My Journey Back To Life got in common?
The answer is, they're both past winners of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year award, in 1990 and 2000 respectively; in fact they're the only cycling titles to have won the coveted award, but there are two more on the long list for this year's prize, announced today.
Those are Victoria Pendleton's Between the Lines – The Autobiography, written together with Donald McRae, plus the work by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle, The Secret Race – Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France: Doping, Cover-ups, and Winning at All Costs, which gives a rather different account of Lance Armstrong's time at US Postal than his own book, co-written with Sally Jenkins, ever did.
You could argue there are actually two and two thirds bike-related books on this year's longlist given there are two triathlon-related titles as well - Matt Fitzgerald's Iron War – Dave Scott, Mark Allen & the Greatest Race Ever Run, and A Life Without Limits – A World Champion’s Journey, by Chrissie Wellington, with Michael Aylwin.
The shortlist for the prize, worth £24,000 to the author plus a free £2,000 bet with William Hill, will be announced on 26 October, with the winner revealed at Waterstone's Piccadilly on 26 November.
William Hill spokesman Graeme Sharpe said: “2012 was a memorable sporting year thanks to the Olympics and the Paralympics, the Ryder Cup and the US Open to name but a few of the highlights, and it is a year which has also produced a strong crop of memorable sporting books. It has been difficult enough to narrow the contenders down to a manageable longlist of fourteen titles, and with sports like squash, swimming and Ironman racing represented for the first time, this is the most diverse longlist we have yet seen.”
The judging panel comprises broadcaster John Inverdale and Danny Kelly, PFA chairman Clarke Carlisle, journalists Hugh McIlvanney and Alyson Rudd, and is chaired by John Gaustad, who founded the Sportspages bookshop.
The full longlist is:
That Near-Death Thing – Inside the TT : The World’s Most Dangerous Race
by Rick Broadbent (Orion)
Running with the Kenyans – Discovering The Secrets of the Fastest People on Earth
by Adharanand Finn (Faber)
Iron War – Dave Scott, Mark Allen & the Greatest Race Ever Run
by Matt Fitzgerald (Quercus Press)
The Footballer Who Could Fly
by Duncan Hamilton (Century)
The Secret Race – Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France: Doping, Cover-ups, and Winning at All Costs
by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle (Bantam Press)
A Weight Off My Mind – My Autobiography
by Richard Hughes, with Lee Mottershead (Racing Post)
Be Careful What You Wish For
by Simon Jordan (Yellow Jersey)
Fibber in the Heat
by Miles Jupp (Ebury Press)
The Dirtiest Race in History – Ben Johnson, Carl Lewis and the 1988 Olympic 100m Final
by Richard Moore (Wisden Sports Writing)
Between the Lines – The Autobiography
by Victoria Pendleton, with Donald McRae (HarperSport)
Swimming Studies
by Leanne Shapton (Particular Books)
A Life Without Limits – A World Champion’s Journey
by Chrissie Wellington, with Michael Aylwin (Constable & Robinson)
Jonny: My Autobiography
by Jonny Wilkinson, with Owen Slot (Headline)
Shot and a Ghost: A Year in the Brutal World of Professional Squash
by James Willstrop (Rod Gilmour)
notice how there is no statement on what they will do differently with reports of bad driving.
So ... drifting off topic a bit, but the flip side of that is that where there *are* average speed cameras (which it seems now almost all drivers...
I ride to and from Manchester from where I am (just out of Bolton) and the standard of driving you see is shocking, from both a cycling and driving...
What does your local MP think about this situation? Have you raised it with them? ...
Nothing to do with any of the articles, but ...... https://www.majorgeeks.com/news/story/random_photo_electric_bike.html
I'd be cautious with the £10 per month TNT offering and your expectation of what you'll get. I suspect it will simply be access to the channels....
If they also have the abilty to switch from dipped to 'full beam' they'd be interesting to know about....
and for flying mosquitoes in ww2 films
Thanks for your thoughts David. Argos is looking a good bet.
I'm pretty sure this is at least the third time the BBC have had a story on this - not sure why they keep forgetting that they've covered it.