Crossing the Park

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A01=Peter Kenny Jones
Abe Hartley
Andrew Hannah
Anfield
Arthur Berry
Author_Peter Kenny Jones
Bill Lacey
Billy Hartill
Category=SFBC
Dave Hickson
David Burrows
David Johnson
David Murray
Dick Forshaw
Don Sloan
Duncan McLean
Edgar Chadwick
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_sports-fitness
Everton
Frank Mitchell
Fred Geary
Gary Ablett
Goodison Park
Harold Uren
Jimmy Payne
John Whitehead
Johnny Morrissey
Kevin Sheedy
Liverpool
Merseyside
Neil McBain
Patrick Gordon
Peter Beardsley
Stanley Park
Steve McMahon
Tom Gracie
Tom Wyllie
Tommy Johnson
Tony McNamara

Product details

  • ISBN 9781801503846
  • Dimensions: 144 x 222mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Apr 2023
  • Publisher: Pitch Publishing Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Crossing the Park: The Men Who Dared to Play for Both Liverpool and Everton casts a spotlight on the players who have turned out for both clubs. Despite less than a mile separating the two teams, only 34 men have worn the colours of both and it's been more than 20 years since a direct transfer between the sides. Why have so few players crossed the park? What is the legacy of those who did? From Liverpool's 'Team of Macs' adorned in blue and white, three men had already played at Anfield but for its previous tenants - Everton. Since then, there has been more than 130 years of transfers and each player has a unique story to tell. The ever-changing face of the clubs' rivalry and friendship can be assessed by looking at the Anfield and Goodison careers of each man. In Conor Coady, we've seen perhaps the final player to cross the park as Everton look for a new home away from L4. The story of this unique rivalry is told through exclusive interviews with the men who dared to cross the divide.

Peter Kenny Jones is a football historian, writer and author who was born in Liverpool and has written several works on the history of both Liverpool and Everton. Studying at Liverpool Hope University, his dissertations focused on inter-war Merseyside football and then the comparison of Harry Catterick and Bill Shankly. His first book, Liddell at One Hundred, told the story of Billy Liddell and this second tome continues his extensive research.

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