This is a complete history of the Welsh rugby union team - told by the players themselves. Based on a combination of painstaking research into the early years of the Wales team to interviews with a vast array of Test match players and coaches from the Second World War to the present day, Ross Harries delves to the very heart of what it means to play for Wales, painting a unique and utterly compelling picture of the game in the only words that can truly do so: the players' own. Behind the Dragon lifts the lid on what it is to pull on the famous red shirt - the trials and tribulations behind the scenes, the glory, the drama and the honour on the field, and the heart-warming tales of friendship and humour off it. Absorbing and illuminating, this is the ultimate history of Welsh rugby - told, definitively, by the men who have been there and done it.
This was an unusual book in the way the story was told. It was made up almost entirely of quotations from the players, coaches and officials who were involved with the game. Even with the beginings of the game in Wales when all the participants are now dead there were anecdotes from people who had heard directly or indirectly about the exploits of the people involved with the early games. I very much liked the way tours and games were related by the players as if you were watching the game. This made for very interesting reading and gave an insight of just how hard the games were. There was also a good coverage of the way in which it became necessary to adopt more rigorous coaching methods to meet the highe standards of other national sides and the rather high handed attitudes of the officials towards the players it was a wonder that there were not more rebellions but the honor of playing for your country over rode any feelings of being taken advantage of. A very enjoyable read with some good touches of humour in the players comments.
Excellent read for a rugby fan. The early stuff was a bit slow going but once it get to events I can remember - seventies onward - it was entertaining and i learn't a lot of the background to events that have become a little mythologised over the years . The Mike Ruddock thing etc. shame it ended just before the 2019 world cup as that would have been a neater place to finish
This veritable hefty tome (464 pages) of rugby treasure is simply the best and most entertaining book on Welsh rugby (or rugby anywhere for that matter) I have ever read – and, believe me, I have read many!
The insights, philosophies, and anecdotes gleaned from hundreds of hours of lengthy, informal, individual chatty interviews the author has had with a vast number of past and present Welsh international players, and coaches, are gems of absolute rugby gold.
The monumental task of curating and ordering the various aspects of these conversations into a seamlessly flowing superb account of welsh rugby history (from 1881 to the present day) is astounding.
If you love the beautiful game of rugby, and especially if you are Welsh, this is the one rugby book you should not be without. This is the stuff you always wanted to know – what really goes on in and around the international game....... from those who actually do the business on the field.
“Behind the Dragon” really does go behind the spectacle of the game, like no other – and the author has done a fantastic job in getting those involved to tell it like it really is!