The Game is a multifaceted reflection on sport. It is part memoir, outlining Tadhg Coakley's time as a player and fan, and how sport has shaped his life. But it also tackles sport on a universal scale--the good and the bad--and its immeasurable influence on our world. For fans, sport can be all-consuming. Indeed, we are consuming sport in ever greater gulpfuls, often blindly. It has a dark side; it is rife with corruption, sexism, homophobia, nationalism, and a raft of toxic masculine behaviour, and Coakley interrogates his own attitudes on each of these fronts. On the other hand, sport builds all manner of valuable connections and communities, and in sport--as in art--people can forge their own identities with grace, imagination, and the possibility of what may be. This duality is one of the most fascinating aspects of sport. Written with warmth, openness, and keen insight, The Game is an entertaining and thought-provoking meditation on the uniquely intense highs and lows of loving sport in today's world.
The Game : A Journey Into the Heart of Sport
Description
Table of Contents
Preface
Part 1
The Game
Ekstasis
Part 2
Miracles
Kisses
Part 3
Initiations, Longing to Belong
Memories – Peculiar Veracities
The Collective
Giving Voice to my Own Astonishment
Part 4
Dark Passions
My Sports Hero Riku Riski and Some Questions
Am I Sexist?
Losing – The Anonymous Subsoil
Part 5
Possession
A Place Beyond Words
Emotion – Abrogation
Part 6
Hurt 1: Masculinity
Hurt 2: Fallibility
My Coronavirus Comeback
Part 7
Returning Home to Innocence
Author Description
Tadhg Coakley is from Cork. His debut novel, The First Sunday in September (2018), was shortlisted for the Mercier Press Fiction prize. His second, Whatever It Takes, was chosen as the 2020 Cork, One City One Book. Tadhg's short stories, articles, and essays have been published in The Stinging Fly, Winter Papers, and The Irish Times, and he writes about sport for the Irish Examiner.