Late Tackle Football Magazine

Cup heroics . but fan james was away!

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SMALL TOWN DREAMS, BY JF CUMMING, PRICE £12.99,

RATING OUT OF 10: 9 HE’S a Wycombe Wanderers fanatic and had always been desperate for his team to go on a magical FA Cup run – or just reach the fourth round.

But the one time it happened, James Cumming was travelling around the world with his girlfriend Cathy on a trip of a lifetime and missed all the key matches.

And while those events happened 15 years ago, they still linger in his memory to this day – and so he decided to write a book to tell the story.

Small Town Dreams is the result, a meaty 400-plus page tome that combines the Chairboys’ FA Cup heroics – they went all the way to the semifinals before losing to eventual winners Liverpool - with his own travel adventures.

“I just felt I had a really good story – the combinatio­n of the travelling and the amazing feats that season,” he told our sister publicatio­n, The Football League Paper.“I had never seen us get past the third round and we’ve never done it since. The story didn’t diminish with time.

“The closest we’ve got to making the fourth round again was when we played Aston Villa in a third round replay last season – they couldn’t beat anyone but still beat us!”

Cumming spent 18 months writing his book and has self-published it. It is a humorous tale that will have readers chuckling. Naturally, it will be of particular appeal to Wycombe fans, though the fact it is not a ‘straight’ football books means it can have wider appeal.

The 44-year-old accountant said:“Everyone who has spoken to me has been really positive about the book. Even people who don’t like football have told me they really enjoyed it.

“Wycombe have been very good, too. They had me down and I did a book signing on the first day of the season. I was pretending to be a new signing on the pitch! “I hope the people who I’ve grown up with at Wycombe Wanderers like the book.” Late Tackle is pretty sure they will. Although the early part of the book is a little slow-going, it does set the scene well and goes a long way to explaining Cumming’s devotion to the Chairboys. And when the travelling starts, the book picks up pace.Wherever he is in the world, whether it be Thailand, China or Australia, he’s eager to find out what’s happening with his beloved Wycombe – and amazed when they keep progressin­g in the Cup. He also gives some descriptio­n of the matches and how the people back home are savouring the magic of the cup run, with a bit of poetic licence thrown in. Yet there is plenty about the places he visits and the people he meets, too, with his time in China particular­ly well covered. Cumming’s opportunit­es to see his favourite team are more limited than when he was a youngster. He’s living in Helensburg­h, near Dumbarton, in Scotland these days. But you know he’d love Wycombe to go on another cup run – and this time be around to witness it in person. SATURDAY, 3PM - 50 ETERNAL DELIGHTS OF MODERN FOOTBALL, BY DANIEL GRAY, PUBLISHED BY BLOOMSBURY, PRICE £9.99,

RATING OUT OF 10: 8 DANIEL GRAY’S latest book ‘Saturday, 3pm - 50 Eternal Delights of Modern Football’ is a celebratio­n of what makes football so special.

Those golden moments that illuminate­s a football supporter’s life. These short vignettes of prosepoetr­y capture the essence of what is still good in the game. What may seem mundane to non-football lovers such as:‘Seeing a ground from the train’;‘Getting the fixture list’; ‘Listening to the results in a car’;‘The first day of the season’ and so on are all rightly identified as a significan­t part of the football experience. It is a short read at 144 pages but it is a satisfying book. It is lovingly crafted and can easily be read in one sitting, but you may want to take your time and savour each short chapter before the next delight is revealed. Gray is a fan of J.B. Priestley’s writing and his ‘through a turnstile into... a more splendid kind of life’, from The Good Companions is his favourite piece of football writing. Saturday, 3pm, is inspired by Priestley’s ‘Delight’, a non-fiction endeavour in which a self-confessed “Grumbler’ imparts all that is good in the world. Gray’s homage goes a long way to explaining why football is so important in many people’s lives. A recurring theme throughout the book is the escapism that football provides. In ‘Carrying on regardless’ he identifies that we use the match as an escape from everyday life: “We supporters have our refuge from everything wretched, vicious reality hurls at us. Inside the Stadium, we are protected, and removed from real life. “We are a child with her hands over her ears refusing to believe in school”. The game is certainly the fixed anchor, which keeps fans going through a hard week of work or study. The match is a short holiday from real existence. Gray calls it ‘a time for blissful and infuriatin­g distractio­n’. The author is a true football fan whose authentic voice accurately describes those extra special times. For example, the fans’ shared experience in ‘Watching an away end erupt’: “What makes it so good to watch is the anarchy of movement. Berserk limbs convulse. It is drunken nightclub dancing but on tightly-tiered rows. Hands are not raised for musical

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