Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Huddy's flair is there, but it's not the whole picture
PETER MASON reviews a book with a sometimes candid look at the Chelsea star that doesn't get under his skin
Alan Hudson posing in his Chelsea kit in 1968

Huddy: the official biography of Alan Hudson
Jason Pettigrove
St David’s Press, £13.99
 
 


AS A gifted midfielder for Chelsea, Stoke and Arsenal, Alan Hudson was a maverick English footballer who won the hearts of terrace fans during the 1960s and ’70s but whose carousing lifestyle and anti-authoritarian attitude resulted in a career that fell short of its initial promise.
 
[[{"fid":"2135","view_mode":"inlineright","fields":{"format":"inlineright","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":false,"field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":false},"type":"media","field_deltas":{"1":{"format":"inlineright","field_file_image_alt_text[und][0][value]":false,"field_file_image_title_text[und][0][value]":false}},"link_text":null,"attributes":{"class":"media-element file-inlineright","data-delta":"1"}}]]While Hudson won cups with Chelsea and became a legendary figure at Stoke, he played just twice for England. Many thought he should have had 50 or more caps, but his peak years were seen out in the backwaters of the North American Soccer League. 
 
Once his footballing days were over, alcoholism, bad judgement and bad luck played their part in a disjointed, sometimes troubled, later life, which in recent years has been blighted by the horrific injuries he sustained when a hit-and-run driver mowed him down on a street in east London.
 
Jason Pettigrove’s account of Hudson’s ups and downs is easy to digest and engaging enough to be read in one hit.

Entertaining and well informed about his playing days and insightful about some of the painful times that followed, it’s also refreshingly candid in places, conceding readily, for example, that Hudson was an inattentive husband and father who frequently put alcohol and womanising before the needs of his family. 
 
It’s also upfront about his mood swings and debilitating periods of depression, some of which have taken him to the edge of sanity.
 
But there’s also a one-sidedness to the project, for, although the book presents us with the occasional voice of a critic, in general there’s little to hear from anyone who might have an alternative to Hudson’s idiosyncratic world view. 
 
Given that he’s such a tricky personality to understand, any detailed attempt to explain Hudson’s complex psyche would have been more than welcome, especially as Pettigrove is a friend. 
 
Instead, on the occasions when we do get to consider the nature of the man, analysis is often confined to the idea that “Alan is Alan, and that’s just the way he is.” 
 
This is particularly disappointing when there are so many fascinating avenues to explore in that direction, including a consideration of how much Hudson was responsible for his own footballing difficulties and how much the conservative forces in control of the game were to blame for stifling his influence. 
 
While the benefit of an official biography is that it provides access to inside information that might not otherwise be available, the flip side is that it can result in a one-eyed portrayal.

While this book is by no means a hagiography and is well worth a read, it never quite provides us with a three-dimensional profile.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
flam
Dance / 30 May 2025
30 May 2025

PETER MASON is wowed (and a little baffled) by the undeniably ballet-like grace of flamenco

IT'S JUST NOT CRICKET: Protesters demonstrate outside Lord's Cricket Ground in London, on February 25 2025, against England playing Afghanistan in a Champions Trophy match, as female participation in sport has effectively been outlawed in Afghanistan since the Tailban returned to power in 2021
Books / 25 May 2025
25 May 2025

PETER MASON is surprised by the bleak outlook foreseen for cricket’s future by the cricketers’ bible

(L) Mudlark kneels on a rocky shore, collecting objects; (R) Medieval pilgrim badge. Pics © London Museum
Exhibitions / 22 April 2025
22 April 2025

PETER MASON is enthralled by an assembly of objects, ancient and modern, that have lain in the mud of London’s river

POWER-DRESSING: Miriam Grace Edwards as Mary in Mrs Presiden
Theatre Review / 5 February 2025
5 February 2025
PETER MASON applauds a thought-provoking study of the relationship between a grieving woman and her photographer
Similar stories
(L to R) How many Aunties?, Back Hares Mount, Leeds, 1978; M
Photography / 14 April 2025
14 April 2025

Peter Mitchell's photography reveals a poetic relationship with Leeds

The crowd at Manchester Punk Festival 2024
Culture / 11 April 2025
11 April 2025
Ben Cowles speaks with IAN ‘TREE’ ROBINSON and ANDY DAVIES, two of the string pullers behind the Manchester Punk Festival, ahead of its 10th year show later this month
Aboubakar Traore
Global Routes / 2 December 2024
2 December 2024
Two new releases from Burkina Faso and Niger, one from French-based Afro Latin The Bongo Hop, and rare Mexican bootlegs
ARROGANCE AND IGNORANCE: Group of six European men sitting,
Book Review / 24 September 2024
24 September 2024
FRANCOISE VERGES introduces a powerful new book that explores the damage done by colonial theft