Posted in June 2012

All Together Now: Ireland at Euro 2012

WORDS: SEAN DUFFY

The “sing-songs” of the Irish supporters in Poland highlighted the opportunity this tournament presented for cultures to come together and people to unite. For some of those who shared in the experience, it was hard to stomach accusations of a “win or lose, we’re on the booze” attitude…

Peaks and Troughs: We Are Swindon Town!

WORDS: NICK JUDD

They’ve seen more protests than Swampy, more takeovers than English banks and they haven’t beaten their fiercest rivals since 2001, yet lifelong fan Nick Judd (pictured, below right in specs and scarf) explains why it’s not all bad when you follow the “fifth most stressful club to support in England…”

Then And Now: Dragan Stojkovic (1st Leg)

WORDS: DOMINIC BLISS

Dragan Stojkovic accidentally became my first football hero when his sticker fell out of a cereal box in 1990. Now, in the first part of a two-legged interview with TheInsideLeft, he recalls his move to Marseille, European Cup final anguish and his refusal to let serious injury beat him…

My Five: Lille Exports

WORDS: MATTHEW RICHARDS

The transfer story of the summer so far has to be Chelsea’s capture of Eden Hazard from Lille, the club where the Belgian creator became a French League and Cup Double-winner in 2011, as well as a household name across Europe. But Hazard certainly isn’t the first star to have made his name in Lille and, as supporters said farewell to another inspirational talent, we turned to one of their number to select his five stand-out departing heroes from the club known to its friends as LOSC…

Football Against Adversity: A Japanese Odyssey

WORDS AND PHOTOGRAPHY: SEAN CARROLL

After moving to Tokyo, British football writer Sean Carroll discovered a rapidly developing passion for the sport as he travelled across Japan to cover the J.League. But, as the nation looked to recover from the disastrous earthquake of March 2011, he witnessed the game take on an entirely different cultural significance…

National Dilemma: A French Revelation

WORDS: MATTHEW GOODING

When a Parisian romance led to marriage, Matthew Gooding began to fall in love with French football as well and, after years of supporting Paris Saint Germain, his affections for the national team have grown and grown. Last week, when his new darlings met his native England, he had a decision to make…

Irish Eyes: Roddy Doyle

INTERVIEW: DOMINIC BLISS

Football has been a part of Roddy Doyle’s life since the late Sixties and the Booker Prize-winning author has been going to watch his beloved Ireland play for decades now. Shortly before the start of Euro 2012, TheInsideLeft caught up with him to discuss major tournaments, the “Granny Rule” and how Italia 90 came to form the backdrop to one of his great novels… 

Here Comes The Inside Left!

Image: Â·HD (via Flickr)

The inside left has always been the player who sees the game from a different plain. Cutting, incisive and visionary, it’s the role so many of us wish we could have done justice to on the pitch. Having failed on that score, we’re now aiming to bring the spirit of the inside left to the world of football writing.

Our new online journal is dedicated to telling thought-provoking football stories – no news, gossip or reports, just the best comment, analysis and anecdotes from players, managers, supporters and a team of talented contributors who span the length and breadth of the globe, as well as the depths of the league pyramid.

Over the coming weeks, the pages on our menu that currently sit empty will slowly come to life. Our Odysseys section will bring you the remarkable stories of those who have travelled far and wide to new lands, all for the love of football, while the One Love section will reveal the culture behind various clubs and their fan bases, as life-long supporters give us the inside track on the team of their hearts.

If that doesn’t sound nostalgic enough for you, our next two features will dive back into the past with two feet. In Revisited, we will take a look at those events consigned to the file in football history marked ‘forgotten’ and talk to the people who were there about some extraordinary moments. Retroselective, meanwhile, should get you all talking, as we ask the experts to name their dream XI of modern-day players to fit into the antiquated playing systems of the game’s formative years.

Finally, in My Five, we will turn once again to the whim of our contributors, and ask them to select five great examples from any given aspect of football’s broad and illustrious past. If you want to see us select our five favourite anything (within the boundaries of the beautiful game, of course), get in touch with us through the Contact page.

As for our title, well there is, without doubt, something magical about the inside left, even if nobody uses the term anymore. I have a friend whose face lights up at the mere mention of the name Hagi. With wide eyes and a smile, he usually responds with one word – ‘legend’ – before presumably nipping off to search for the great man on YouTube.

A good inside left is creative and insightful, but most importantly carries an air of nostalgia – after all, no matter how fast, how strong and how fit professional footballers become, there will always be a need for the man who sits between the lines and just knows when and where to play the final ball.

So we know you’ll understand when we say we want to write about football like the inside left plays it.

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