Packed with insight and interesting debate, The Greatest Comeback is both deeply poignant and extremely topical. David Bolchover has expertly woven one huge, tragic strand of twentieth-century history together with a great footballing story. --Henry Winter, Chief Football Writer, The Times
Béla Guttmann was the first of a breed of globetrotting superstar football coaches, achieving his greatest successes before Pep Guardiola or José Mourinho were even born.
He was also a Holocaust survivor. In 1944, much of Europe had wanted Guttmann dead. He hid for months in an attic near Budapest as thousands of fellow Jews in the neighbourhood were dragged off to be murdered. Later, he escaped from a slave labour camp before a planned deportation and almost certain death. His father, sister, and extended family were murdered.
But by 1961, as coach of Benfica, he had lifted Europe's greatest sporting prize--the European Cup, a feat he repeated the following year. From the death pits of Europe to champion of Europe in little more than sixteen years, Guttmann performed the greatest comeback in football history.
An extraordinary and compelling account of the life of football coach Béla Guttmann.
David Bolchover is an author and commentator. He has published three previous books, including the bestselling 90-Minute Manager (Pearson Education, 2002), which explored the various management styles of the great football coaches. He has written for a number of leading newspapers, such as The Times, The Telegraph, and the Financial Times, and has frequently appeared on the BBC, Sky, and other broadcast outlets.