‘Compelling and harrowing . . . interesting characters . . . Freeman has a good story to tell . . . he writes well about the nightmarish chaos into which Iraq has descended’ (Sunday Telegraph 20060521)
'
Baghdad FC reveals a huge amount about Iraq . . . comprehensive and informative' (Metro [London] 20060601)
'Simon Freeman, after 200-odd pages of intelligent and thorough research, can only conclude that in football, like everything else in Iraq, the situation is "mad and sad".' (The Times 20051104)
‘One of modern football’s most compelling tales . . . a thought-provoking read . . . What Freeman documents with great deftness and empathy is the malevolent manner in which the state infiltrated every area of Iraqi life’ (Scotland On Sunday 20050821)
'Brilliantly told, tempering the deluge of horror stories with an easy, personable style . . . a piece of social commentary . . . it's a welcome one' (Arena 20050819)
‘[A] perceptive glimpse of a rotten tyranny going belly up . . . [Freeman is ] an honest witness to a brutalised country’s hatred for its bungling liberators’ (Literary Review 20050901)
'Excellent'
(Sunday Times Travel Magazine )
‘Iraq’s football story is fascinating’ (Independent )
‘Highly readable . . . a detailed study of what must rank as one of the darkest episodes in football’s history . . . draws on a fascinating array of characters’
(Mail on Sunday )
‘This perceptive book makes clear that sport in Iraq was and still is a microcosm of the country itself’
(Sunday Times / Culture )
‘The fascinating and shocking story of football in Irag, pre- and post-invasion’
(Andrew Baker, Daily Telegraph )
‘Freeman’s account of the chaos following the ‘liberation’ makes for grim reading’
(Simon Shaw, Mail on Sunday )
‘Few [tracts] will be as stark or as accessible as this.’
(Scott Wilson, Southern Daily Echo )
'There are sports stories, and then there are real sports stories. The torture of athletes at the hands of government is about as real as it gets. Simon Freeman ably chronicles one of the most dramatic chapters in the history of sports. It is a fascinating, complex story that demands to be told, and to be read. In many ways, it is the story of Iraq itself'
(Tom Farrey, ESPN )
'Highly readable . . . the book draws on a fascinating array of characters to explain what it was like to be a sportsman in Saddam’s Iraq'
(Ireland on Sunday )
‘The story is a good one . . . Freeman does some good delving to reveal these horrors and he provides intriguing portraits’
(Times Literary Supplement )
‘Tells of brutality, brief triumph, cowardice, paranoia, boastful self-justification and a thwarted quest for truth . . . troubling’
(Traveller )