logo
Brian Glanville was fearless, witty and hovered in the press box like Banquo's ghost

Brian Glanville was fearless, witty and hovered in the press box like Banquo's ghost

Yahoo17-05-2025
Brian Glanville, who has died aged 93, was what Groucho Marx might have been had the old master of the one-liner shown any interest in football. I doubt if the greatest soccer scribbler of them all – the London-born son of a Dublin dentist and an Old Carthusian expensively educated in literature and song – met Groucho (Brian knew a host of famous people), but their exchanges would surely have blistered the paint off the walls.
Nobody swore so elegantly as Glanville, who hovered in the press box like Banquo's ghost, the gathering's invisible conscience, ready to deliver a scathing observation, relayed, sotto voce, to a nearby colleague like a chorus baritone in one of his favourite operas.
Sitting behind me in the Tottenham press box during one match, he leaned forward to remark – apropos bugger all – on the future of the then struggling young Sunday Correspondent: 'It has the smell of death about it.' Garth Crooks, who was sitting next to him, was as bemused as he was amused.
Related: Brian Glanville, journalist lauded as 'the greatest football writer', dies aged 93
The joy of Glanville was, perversely, best experienced when he was at his most vitriolic. He loved football as few others could ever do, but he detested many things about the modern game, most vehemently commercialism and corruption, and let the world know it at every available opportunity.
For most of his working life, those opportunities came around every Saturday afternoon for the Sunday Times in a golden age of football commentary as he went joke for pithy joke with the Observer's Hugh McIlvanney, Jim Lawton of the Express, and any other of the frontline heavyweights. Glanville, like many of his contemporaries, did not often bother with quotes from the principals, but he littered his work with references that showed the depth of his cultural interests.
When he derided the efforts of a lazy full-back caught napping on the goalline as, 'alone and palely loitering' he was briefly impressed that I recognised it as a line from Keats's La Belle Dame sans Merci – followed by the inevitable put-down: 'Did poetry in your school, did they?' No pity there, then.
It was part of what made up the Glanville we knew and loved. He was fearless – and feared. If that implies arrogance, so be it. But it was a price worth paying to hear and read the string of witticisms that lit up his work.
He would pursue a story or an opinion to the end of its useful life, such as in the Lobo-Solti match-fixing scandal of 1972-73, when he wrote a series of stories under the banner of The Year Of The Golden Fix. When colleague and longtime friend Michael Collett said to him: 'Brian, I reckon you've made more from the scandal than they did from the fix itself,' he replied: 'You're too facking right I have.'
He did not let many earning opportunities pass him by and hoovered up all sorts of stories for Gazzetta dello Sport (he lived in Italy for many years) while simultaneously reporting on a match, major or minor. I recall one international at Wembley when he interrupted the chatter to inquire: 'Anyone hear the results of the rowing from Nottingham?' There was an Italian competing.
He wrote and spoke across several mediums – books, plays, occasional commentary, film and radio scripts – upsetting listeners in a 1950s BBC play about Hendon's Jewish community in north London, where he had grown up. It did not seem to bother him. Brian was at his happiest when looking in from the outside.
As a scriptwriter, Glanville left us with many pearls in the incomparable film of the 1966 World Cup, Goal! When his beloved Italy went out to North Korea – a shock on a par with Vesuvius, in his opinion – he put in the narrator's mouth the memorable aside: 'So Italy go home to their tomatoes.' He also wrote, acidly, of the North Koreans: 'So little known, they might be flying in from outer space.'
The film, matchless for its sense of drama and sun-drenched nostalgia, gripped an audience that would celebrate England's lone success at the highest level in the final. The campaign reached an ugly crescendo, however, in the foul-filled quarter-final win over Argentina. Glanville's contribution was that 'it is famous not just for Geoff Hurst's controversial offside goal but the Argentines' dirty tactics, which included spitting and kicking'. That unvarnished assessment came from Glanville's rock-solid confidence in his own judgment. He would listen to an argument, but not often back down.
His then sports editor, the late Chris Nawrat, once insisted he finally go and talk to the England manager Bobby Robson (after years of roasting him in print without a single quote). Brian reluctantly trudged off with the paper's peerless photographer, Chris Smith, who would also operate the reel-to-reel tape recorder for the historic showdown.
When they returned to the office, Glanville – technically illiterate – said it had gone so well they nearly ran out of tape, adding: 'What the bloody hell am I supposed to do with it now?' 'Transcribe it, Brian,' Nawrat said, surreptitiously tying some twine from the nearby art desk around Glanville's ankle until he pressed all the right knobs and the job was done several hours later.
If Glanville listened to anyone, it was his enduring muse. Groucho Marx's wit was never far from his lips or his pen and Brian delighted in borrowing from the great man's litany of smartarsedness in conversation. One of my favourites, and his, was Groucho's quip after suffering some fools not-so-gladly: 'I've had a particularly wonderful evening, but this wasn't it.'
But any evening with Brian was unfailingly entertaining, a gift even. Another one gone, then, 'home to his tomatoes'.
Kevin Mitchell was the Guardian's award-winning former tennis and boxing correspondent
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'How quickly the tide can change' - fans on Gibbs-White
'How quickly the tide can change' - fans on Gibbs-White

Yahoo

time9 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'How quickly the tide can change' - fans on Gibbs-White

Following the news that Morgan Gibbs-White had signed a "record deal" with Nottingham Forest, we asked for your views on the 25-year-old committing to three more years at the City Ground. Here are some of your comments: Samuel: How quickly the tide can change in football. Really didn't expect this, and it's brilliant for the club. Could have really done with it not being played out in public but he's a young guy and you cannot blame him for what has happened. However, Mr. Marinakis has done wonders to keep him - especially when all those Tottenham fans thought they'd got him on the cheap! Ambition from Forest. Definitely finishing above them (again)! Andy: Could prove to be Forest's biggest 'signing' of the summer. Will calm a few nerves and show any potential targets we mean business and are a club continuing on an upward trajectory. Ben: Expect the unexpected: this should be Forest's new mantra. Absolutely over the moon he's staying. Everything good that Forest do goes through him. Find an adequate replacement for Anthony Elanga and Forest are back on track for another exciting season! John: Great news but we all know the worth of football contracts! Ask Wolves when Matheus Cunha signed a new contract in January and now is a Manchester United player! Kerry: Always plays with his heart on his sleeve. No doubt more money for new contract - player and agent got want they wanted. Richard: The whole thing with Morgan Gibbs-White was a farce but, as a devoted Forest fan, I'm glad he's staying. Sean: It's great to get the uncertainty out of the way. We would be in trouble if we lost both Elanga and Gibbs-White in the same window, so this is a great result. We do still need to bring some players in to give ourselves a chance of competing throughout the season, but it's great news MGW is staying. Gary: Relief mostly. A big cog in the Forest machinery. Folks will say he has held the club to ransom. I don't care - Morgan is staying.

Hurt at Europa League defeat lingered
Hurt at Europa League defeat lingered

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hurt at Europa League defeat lingered

Manchester United midfielder Mason Mount says the pain of last season's Europa League final defeat by Tottenham lingered well into the summer. Mount started the final in Bilbao but, like many of his team-mates, failed to have a significant impact on the game as Spurs won thanks to a deflected Brennan Johnson effort. The result condemned United to only their second season without European football in 35 years following their 15th-placed Premier League finish, their worst performance since the 1973-74 relegation campaign. "It took some time, that's for sure," said Mount, speaking at the club's pre-season training camp in Chicago. "You're just thinking about little things in the game. I started, so it was like: 'What could I have done in that situation?' Or: 'Could I have made that pass better?' "You would drive yourself crazy, looking into loads of detail, but it hurts. The whole season hurt."

Morgan Gibbs-White STAYS! Nottingham Forest announce that midfielder has signed a 'record' new contract despite Spurs triggering £60m release clause
Morgan Gibbs-White STAYS! Nottingham Forest announce that midfielder has signed a 'record' new contract despite Spurs triggering £60m release clause

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Morgan Gibbs-White STAYS! Nottingham Forest announce that midfielder has signed a 'record' new contract despite Spurs triggering £60m release clause

Gibbs-White extends with Forest Tottenham had him in their sights Long-term future secured at City Ground Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱 WHAT HAPPENED? Earlier this month, speculation intensified as reports surfaced suggesting Gibbs-White was poised to complete a medical at Tottenham Hotspur. That move, however, hit multiple roadblocks and the player has signed a one-year extension with the club, which will now keep him for three more years with the Tricky Trees. THE BIGGER PICTURE Gibbs-White recently rejoined his teammates at Forest's pre-season training camp in Portugal after being granted additional time at home due to a private family issue. Upon linking up with the squad, he featured in a goalless friendly against French side AS Monaco on July 19, which signalled that an extension could be on the cards. WHAT FOREST SAID Forest put out an update on X, which read: "A statement of intent from our owner Evangelos Marinakis, as Morgan Gibbs-White signs a record deal at the Club until the summer of 2028. 🤝" DID YOU KNOW? Since his switch from Wolverhampton Wanderers in the summer of 2022, Gibbs-White has steadily grown into one of Forest's most valuable assets. His creativity and leadership were on full display during the 2024–25 season, in which he tallied seven goals and 10 assists to help propel the club to a remarkable seventh-place finish in the Premier League. With 118 appearances in a Forest shirt, he has notched 18 goals and delivered 28 assists, numbers that reflect his consistent impact in the final third. WHAT NEXT FOR FOREST? Forest are set to play a string of friendlies ahead of their Premier League opener against Brentford on August 17. They lost 3-1 to Fulham on Saturday and will be back in action against Estoril Praia on July 30.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store