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A Load of Old Balls: The QI History of Sport

Anna Ptaszynski

The most improbable, fascinating and endlessly entertaining sporting facts and stories, from prehistory to the present day.

58 in stock

£9.99£8.99
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780571372546
Date Published
04.07.2024
Delivery
All orders are sent via Royal Mail and are tracked: choose from standard or premium delivery.
Summary

SHORTLISTED FOR THE CHARLES TYRWHITT SPORTS BOOK AWARDS

Top Bins! A personal best, a lap record and a hole in one for when rain has stopped play.’ ALAN DAVIES
‘The trivia book of the season . . . magnificent.’ SPECTATOR

Did you know that Henry VIII owned the first pair of football boots? Or that David Attenborough is responsible for yellow tennis balls?

A Load of Old Balls is the curious story of us and sport. It’s about our mind-blowingly determined attempts to be the fastest, the strongest, the most skilful. In this endlessly entertaining tale of play and belonging, astonishing violence and jaw-dropping cheating, we learn what led ancient Egyptian athletes to have their spleens removed and discover why Michael Palin was disqualified from a conker tournament. Crossing millennia, continents and cultures, Harkin and Ptaszynski – the brainy researchers for BBC’s QI and co-hosts of No Such Thing As A Fish –show us sport as we’ve never seen it before.

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Published in hardback as Everything to Play For.

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For more from the team behind QI’s hit TV show, check out the QI FACTS series of books, @qikipedia, their weekly podcast at nosuchthingasafish.com or visit qi.com.

Critic Reviews

Top Bins! A personal best, a lap record and a hole in one for when rain has stopped play.

Alan Davies
Critic Reviews

A splendid book, and the perfect gift for any sports-mad person you know, which might even be you.

Marcus Berkmann
Critic Reviews

In Everything to Play For, James Harkin and Anna Ptaszynski apply their QI chops to the subject of sport. It had never occurred to me that TV coverage often needs to add its own sound effects...

Mark Mason, Spectator, Books of the Year
Critic Reviews

Gloriously strange . . . The most fervent sports-denier could hardly fail to be charmed.

Jane Shilling, Daily Mail