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Although the book addresses some of the more negative aspects of sport, it seems fitting that its gestation should coincide with two of the world’s major sporting events – the 2014 World Cup in Brazil had just finished when I started writing, and the 2016 Olympics, also in Brazil, are due to take place around the time of publication. Like many fans, I have gained great pleasure from watching the World Cup on TV over the years. I enjoyed even more being in London during the 2012 Olympics, where I watched live athletics, hockey, cycling, water polo, basketball, the wheelchair marathon and Paralympic swimming.
My own participation in sport is less spectacular, but it ranges from schoolboy rugby union (continued in later life with less success) and judo to low-level athletics (hammer–pole vault–steeplechase combination – my contribution to the Corinthian pursuit of points for my club in Southern League Division 7) and occasional back-of-the-pack triathlons. Nowadays I still manage regular five-kilometre parkruns and the odd 10-kilometre race, but I ran my best marathon (in London, in three hours, one minute and 43 seconds) 30 years ago. I am not taking a standpoint epistemological view and insisting that readers should heed me because I have done, and therefore ‘know’, sport, but I occasionally mention my sport activities where relevant. I also draw on relevant experiences from my doctoral fieldwork and work for the Home Office.
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