Codify Infotech
Currency and Language Translation >>>
Currency and Language Translation >>>
Carrello 0
Something Changed: Beefy, Boadicea, Brixton, Bunting and How Cricket Helped Change the Nation
PUBLISHED JULY 2025

Something Changed: Beefy, Boadicea, Brixton, Bunting and How Cricket Helped Change the Nation

Prezzo di listino £18.99
Cricket's Greatest Summer
And How It Shaped Modern Britain
In his latest work, "Something Changed", Ben Dobson pulls off something remarkable: he makes cricket feel like the skeleton key that unlocks an entire era of British history. This isn't just another sports book – it's a fascinating exploration of how the summer of 1981 became a pivot point for British society, told through the parallel stories of two unlikely companions: cricket hero Ian Botham and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Dobson, drawing from his three decades of experience in sports management at Adidas, brings both an insider's perspective and a historian's eye to this cultural intersection. His previous book, which examined football managers of the 1970s, demonstrated his ability to navigate the delicate balance between sports and social commentary. In this work, he elevates that expertise to unprecedented levels.
The book's central premise – that there were remarkable synergies between Botham and Thatcher – might initially seem far-fetched. But Dobson makes a compelling case, weaving together their stories with the broader tapestry of a nation in flux. He shows how both figures, in their own ways, embodied a particular strain of British individualism that would come to define the decade.
Dobson's ability to seamlessly transition between detailed cricket analysis and broader social observation is what makes this book particularly engaging. His description of the transformative 1981 Headingley Test Match, where Botham's legendary performance turned both the series and his career around, serves as a metaphor for Britain's own struggles and eventual transformation under Thatcher's leadership.
The author is at his best when exploring the cultural undertones of the era – the punk movement, racial tensions in Brixton, and the evolution of British identity. Cricket serves not just as a sport but as a lens through which to view these changes. Dobson's chapter on the relationship between cricket and class mobility in the early 1980s is particularly illuminating.
Where the book occasionally stumbles is in its attempt to draw direct parallels between contemporary Britain and the 1981 era. While some of these connections feel natural and insightful, others seem somewhat forced. However, this is a minor quibble in what is otherwise a masterfully crafted narrative.
The research is impeccable, drawing from a wide range of sources including personal interviews, newspaper archives, and social history documents. Dobson's writing style is accessible yet sophisticated, avoiding both academic dryness and oversimplified sports journalism.
"Something Changed" is ultimately a book about transformation – personal, sporting, and national. It's about how moments of sporting triumph can become intertwined with a nation's self-image and how cultural icons, whether wielding a cricket bat or political power, can shape the course of history. 
For cricket enthusiasts, this book offers a fresh perspective on a golden age of the sport. For students of British history, it provides a unique angle on the social changes of the 1980s. And for general readers, it's simply a compelling story, well told.
In an era where sports writing often falls into either dry statistical analysis or overwrought hero worship, Dobson has produced something genuinely original: a book that understands that sometimes a cricket match is more than just a cricket match – it's a window into the soul of a nation.
ROYAL MAIL TRACKED 48 Delivered to You 2nd Week, July 2025 
Some publishers release new titles early, so our ETA above could change.

Published: July 7, 2025
Hardback: 320 pages
ISBN-10: 1836801629
ISBN-13: 978-1836801627
PRE ORDER NOW
 Image
Cricket's Greatest Summer
And How It Shaped Modern Britain
In his latest work, "Something Changed", Ben Dobson pulls off something remarkable: he makes cricket feel like the skeleton key that unlocks an entire era of British history. This isn't just another sports book – it's a fascinating exploration of how the summer of 1981 became a pivot point for British society, told through the parallel stories of two unlikely companions: cricket hero Ian Botham and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Dobson, drawing from his three decades of experience in sports management at Adidas, brings both an insider's perspective and a historian's eye to this cultural intersection. His previous book, which examined football managers of the 1970s, demonstrated his ability to navigate the delicate balance between sports and social commentary. In this work, he elevates that expertise to unprecedented levels.
The book's central premise – that there were remarkable synergies between Botham and Thatcher – might initially seem far-fetched. But Dobson makes a compelling case, weaving together their stories with the broader tapestry of a nation in flux. He shows how both figures, in their own ways, embodied a particular strain of British individualism that would come to define the decade.
Dobson's ability to seamlessly transition between detailed cricket analysis and broader social observation is what makes this book particularly engaging. His description of the transformative 1981 Headingley Test Match, where Botham's legendary performance turned both the series and his career around, serves as a metaphor for Britain's own struggles and eventual transformation under Thatcher's leadership.
The author is at his best when exploring the cultural undertones of the era – the punk movement, racial tensions in Brixton, and the evolution of British identity. Cricket serves not just as a sport but as a lens through which to view these changes. Dobson's chapter on the relationship between cricket and class mobility in the early 1980s is particularly illuminating.
Where the book occasionally stumbles is in its attempt to draw direct parallels between contemporary Britain and the 1981 era. While some of these connections feel natural and insightful, others seem somewhat forced. However, this is a minor quibble in what is otherwise a masterfully crafted narrative.
The research is impeccable, drawing from a wide range of sources including personal interviews, newspaper archives, and social history documents. Dobson's writing style is accessible yet sophisticated, avoiding both academic dryness and oversimplified sports journalism.
"Something Changed" is ultimately a book about transformation – personal, sporting, and national. It's about how moments of sporting triumph can become intertwined with a nation's self-image and how cultural icons, whether wielding a cricket bat or political power, can shape the course of history. 
For cricket enthusiasts, this book offers a fresh perspective on a golden age of the sport. For students of British history, it provides a unique angle on the social changes of the 1980s. And for general readers, it's simply a compelling story, well told.
In an era where sports writing often falls into either dry statistical analysis or overwrought hero worship, Dobson has produced something genuinely original: a book that understands that sometimes a cricket match is more than just a cricket match – it's a window into the soul of a nation.
ROYAL MAIL TRACKED 48 Delivered to You 2nd Week, July 2025 
Some publishers release new titles early, so our ETA above could change.

Published: July 7, 2025
Hardback: 320 pages
ISBN-10: 1836801629
ISBN-13: 978-1836801627
PRE ORDER NOW

Maggiori informazioni su questa collezione

Please select

0
Complete