"The story of two men who saved their football club from extinction. Secret plans to turn Spotland, the home of Rochdale AFC, into a housing estate are spied. David Kilpatrick and Graham Morris set upon a desperate mission to save their beloved, beleaguered football club. The Spring King is toppled and his staunch but jaded boardroom acolytes ('a mobile drinks party') are moved on. They then have to take on what many fans consider to be the 'enemy within'. They work tirelessly, persuading companies to write off debts so they can buy back the land on which the club stands, a tricky proposition when you are skint and bottom of the football league. Meanwhile, it's the early 1980s and the town of Rochdale is deep in recession, the last of the cotton mills closing down. The limit of most fans' investment in their club is routinely the price of a season ticket. Directors risk their houses and businesses, sometimes forfeiting marriages, families and health in the name of their club. Even in the corporate age, these Overcoat men - self-made local businessmen serving on club boards - are often the unseen, unsung heroes of football."--Page 4 of cover
Mark Hodkinson is the author of Believe in the Sign (long-listed for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year), Blue Moon: Down Among the Dead Men with Manchester City, and The Last Mad Surge of Youth (Q magazine's Novel of the Year). Mark has written for the Times for two decades, and has produced and presented documentaries for BBC Radio 4.