Being Unai Emery: Guillem Balagué on Villa’s Spanish Revolution cover art

Being Unai Emery: Guillem Balagué on Villa’s Spanish Revolution

Being Unai Emery: Guillem Balagué on Villa’s Spanish Revolution

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

When journalist and author Guillem Balagué arrived in England in 1991, there were only 13 foreign players in the Premier League. Three decades later, Spanish minds are shaping its future — and none more intriguingly than Unai Emery at Aston Villa.


In this face-to-face interview recorded inside the changing rooms of Biggleswade United, the ninth-tier club where Balagué is chairman, My Old Man Said takes the conversation far beyond the touchline. From Emery’s obsession with control and structure to the Spanish influence redefining English football, Balagué opens up about a year spent shadowing Villa’s manager for his new book The Rise of the Villans.


Expect fly-on-the-wall stories from Bodymoor Heath, conversations with Emery's mum, the mystique behind Emery’s intensity, what makes Villa’s project so unique, and how football has evolved from the Cantona-Wenger era to the analytical age of Emery, Guardiola and Maresca.


For Villa fans, it’s a rare insight into the inner workings of a club on the rise. For everyone else, it’s a journey through the modern game’s cultural transformation — told by one of football’s great storytellers.


UTV


Get a good deal on 'Rise of the Villans' here


Get tickets for the Witton Arms launch event


GET AD-FREE SHOWS and JOIN MATCH CLUB


Get ad-free shows and extra shows, and join My Old Man Said's 24/7 Villa community, Match Club.


For more details and to become a member, click here: Become a MOMS Member


Join the show’s listener facebook group The Mad Few.


Credits:


David Michael - @myoldmansaid

Guillem Balagué - @GuillemBalague

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.