When Sven-Goran Eriksson passed away a few months ago, my father and I conversed about the clubs the Swede had coached. After mentioning the obvious ones I could recall like Manchester City, Leicester City and the England and Ivory Coast national teams, my father added 'he was also involved with a lower division club, wasn't he?'
I had actually forgotten all about Sven's time as director of football at Notts County. My dad triggered a memory of being stunned at the appointment and the controversy which occurred after it.
And then I moved on from reminding myself about back in the day.
Last week, I once again found myself facing the 'Sven at Notts County' story whilst looking for a book to read from Net Galley. I came across a title in the sports section which intrigued me. I instantly asked to be able to read a copy.
The Trillion Dollar Conman: The Astonishing True Story of the Most Audacious Fraud in Sport by Ben Robinson covers Notts County's sale to a consortium which included Russell King - a businessman who had spent time in prison for fraud.
King was able to bring Eriksson to Notts County as director. This move ultimately led to the club signing Sol Campbell and Kasper Schmeichel. All three, in their own way, were newsworthy signings considering Notts County - even though a historic club - was playing its games in the English League 2.
Robinson's work documents everything that went down with the Magpies during that period. But, there is a lot more to the story than that.
A heck of a lot.
The Trillion Dollar Conman spotlights all the scams Russell King was involved with. These range from trying to get himself involved with Formula One racing as an owner, being behind a failed bid of Newcastle United and then - in his last batch of cons - fleecing a bunch of companies overseas to advertising revenue by falsely claiming to publish culture and travel magazines in the Middle East.
And more.
I was stunned at the chutzpah which was displayed by King in all of the schemes he carried out. Every few page turns resulted in me either shaking my head or having to lift my jaw after it dropped. There were so many twists unravelled by the author. I was particularly stunned to read a part where Eriksson was whisked off to North Korea with the Notts County people in an attempt to seek funds for the club. The football man was unaware of the con going on at the time, of course.
Robinson has done an excellent job with concise research into this stunning story. It truly was, as the subtitle indicates, audacious.
And then some.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Thank you to Net Galley and Icon Books for allowing me to read The Trillion Dollar Conman in return for a review of the title
Order a copy of The Trillion Dollar Conman from Amazon.co.uk
Hello David, thanks so much for your very kind words. This was my first book and something of a passion project, so it means a great deal to receive such positive feedback. Thanks again Ben
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ben. It was a pleasure to read. Best of luck!
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