Clough: buccaneering, maverick football genius. Revie: unbuccaneering, unmaverick football genius. Can they be friends? Of course not. Everyone knows that. They both got the job done though, so take your pick.
If you're contemplating reading this book you'll already know about them being born within inches of each other in a teeming Middlesborough alleyway and their conjoined careers thereafter. Revie wins the league with Leeds. Clough wins the league with Derby. Revie leaves Leeds. Clough takes over Leeds to win the league 'better'. Revie gets the England job coveted by Clough. Clough goes to Nottingham Forest and wins the European Cup twice. All that stuff. All that stuff which, come to think of it, isn't in this book.
Instead, prepare to wrap up warm and spend evenings in the rainy postwar north east watching Middlesborough Reserves as Hermiston conducts a successful attempt to shed new light on this rivalry to end all rivalries. This is unashamedly a book for the connoisseur/anorak, and I loved the way in which our man Hermiston brought dusty old team sheets back to life. There are some brilliant vignettes: star players falling off their bikes on the way home from the pub and missing important games, Colin Grainger supplementing his footballing income by crooning in local clubs, billed as 'The Voice With A Kick In It' - loads of them, and they are what makes this book what it is.
It would've been nice to have had Clough and Revie's whole careers covered, obviously. But if that had happened, there would've been no room for all those tiny details, and this would've been a very pedestrian book. Instead, it provides a fascinating and entertaining understanding of the lost environment in which the most famous personal rivalry in football was born, and if your boat has ever been floated by that sort of thing, you're going to love it.