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Wide-Eyed and Legless
Wide-Eyed and Legless
Nov 17, 2024 12:51 AM

Author:Jeff Connor

Wide-Eyed and Legless

A fast-paced, fly-on-the-wall story of courage, endurance, bungling, rows and cheating in sport's greatest marathon

In 1987, the Tour de France was won by Irishman Stephen Roche. It was the first time the champion had hailed from outside the Continent or the States and the first time in 20 years a British team - ANC Halfords - had competed in the world's toughest and craziest race. Jeff Connor not only stayed with the British team but also found himself an unofficial team member.

In this long-awaited new edition of Wide-Eyed and Legless, now widely regarded as a classic, Connor describes what it takes to compete, survive and win during those 26 days of gruelling effort. Alongside the heroism and athleticism, he reveals the extraordinary amounts of chicanery, from pulling riders along to illicit drug use.

Time has not dimmed the impact of this eye-opening and entertaining close-up look at the supreme endurance event, and Wide-Eyed and Legless is destined to be acclaimed by a new generation of cycling enthusiasts.

Jeff Connor's other books include the definitive story of the Busby Babes, The Lost Babes, and Up and Down Under, an account of the 2001 British Lions tour.

Reviews

One of the most vivid and entertaining books ever written about the Tour de France

—— Richard Moore, from the Foreword

A true classic of cycling literature

—— Cycling Weekly

The British squad were out of their depth but Connor's documentary does not poke fun or seek to humiliate. Instead, it makes you feel like you're there with them, suffering and biting your lip

—— Cycle Sport

A fabulously observed diary of July 1987, when the dream of British cycling joining the European mainstream crashed catastrophically . . . side-splittingly funny

—— Cycling Books.com

An intoxicating, captivating tale of great boxers in a fatally flawed environment

—— The Herald

A flawless and singular account of fights that remain potent and important decades after the final bell . . . Four Kings will, unquestionably, be ranked as a classic boxing book that will take future generations back to those smoky, raucous ringside nights in Vegas

—— Irish Times

Fight fans wanting a good read on their summer holidays should grab a copy

—— Colin Hart , The Sun

Certainly the best value of any book out there at the minute as well as being comfortably among the best . . . probably the best boxing book since Kevin Mitchell's War, Baby

—— Sunday Tribune

A born storyteller, [Kimball] throws in enough yarns and anecdotes to fill three or four books

—— Sunday Business Post
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