About the Product
- Buy one of only 100 copies commemorating Sir Geoffrey Boycott’s 100th first-class hundred.
- Front endpaper: signed by Sir Geoffrey and individually numbered, also featuring a photo of the shot that brought up the 100th hundred.
- Back endpaper: features a scorecard of the match during which Sir Geoffrey made his 100th hundred.
Please note that there are 100 individually numbered copies of this limited edition. We are unable to guarantee availability of specific numbers but if there are one or more numbers you would prefer to buy, please state this in the order notes when placing your order.
We will do our best to supply the number(s) you request and will contact you to confirm if your preferred number(s) aren’t available before despatching your order. Orders can be cancelled prior to despatch.
We will update the list of available copies on this page regularly. Please note this list is not a definitive indication of available stock.
Available numbers (correct as of 10/02/2023):
61-72, 74-76, 86-89, 91-98
When the first lockdown came, finding himself without cricket for the first time in his life, Geoffrey Boycott sat down and began to write a retrospective warts-and-all diary of each of his Test match appearances. It is illuminating and unsparing, characterised by Boycott’s astonishing memory, famous forthrightness and unvarnished, sometimes lacerating, honesty.
That 100,000-word document forms the basis for Being Geoffrey Boycott, a device that takes the reader inside Geoffrey’s head and back through cricket history, presenting a unique portrait of the internal and external forces that compelled him from a pit village in Yorkshire to the pinnacle of the world game.
Now 81 and still one of the most recognisable cricketers England has ever produced, Boycott has teamed up with award-winning author Jon Hotten in this catalogue of his tumultuous time with the national side.
Dropped for scoring a slow double hundred, making himself unavailable to play for England for several years, captain for eight seasons of a group of strong, stroppy and extremely talented players at Yorkshire, bringing up his hundredth hundred at Headingley against the Old Enemy, seeing David Gower and Ian Botham emerge as future greats, playing under Mike Brearley in the 1981 Ashes, in this enlightening book Boycott reveals a host of never-before-heard details regarding his peers and his playing days.