Skip to main content
Ten Books to spring into spring with
With what seems like a never-ending lockdown Philosophy Football’s Mark Perryman has been reading up on the sport we’ve lost and what sport might become
The Miracle Pill by Peter Walker

WAY back when, during the first lockdown, March ’20, Jonathan Liew wrote a brilliant column on small sport versus big sport. What Jonathan meant by “big sport” was what we watch on the TV. And “small sport?” What we do, a jog, a bike ride, a workout session via Youtube, can be done on our own, non-competitive, little or no kit required, cheap. 

It is “small sport” that has persisted through the pandemic while “big sport” has been cancelled, postponed, threatened with financial oblivion.

As a handbook for these curious conditions read Jurgen Martschukat’s timely The Age of Fitness. His argument is that the obsession with individual performance via “small” sport is emblematic of neoliberalism. Does the potential exist for a sporting counterculture? Yes, but first we have to understand sport cannot be reduced to a simple binary opposition, big bad sport v good small sport. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Prime minister Boris Johnson in the stands during the UEFA E
Opinion / 9 July 2021
9 July 2021
The Socialist Worker's suggestion that an England Euros win would be celebrated as a victory for the PM is risible. Such miserabilism won't discourage fans – not least working-class socialists – from enjoying the successes of this inspiring, resolutely anti-racist squad
Men’s Football / 3 April 2020
3 April 2020
The coronavirus crisis has revealed much about football as a business. Mark Perryman of Philosophy Football argues mainly bad
Features / 19 September 2019
19 September 2019
MARK PERRYMAN explains why Brexit can’t be the sum total of a winning Labour campaign
England celebrate winning the ICC World Cup during the ICC W
Sport / 19 July 2019
19 July 2019
England’s Cricket World Cup has MARK PERRYMAN hunting out his favourite CLR James quote to make sense of it all 
Similar stories
Umea' Marta da Silva lifts the trophy after winning the UEFA
Women’s football / 19 March 2025
19 March 2025
As the transformation of the game in Europe continues, Umea IK is among the unfashionable clubs of yesteryear who know they can no longer compete
Warrington Wolves' Zane Musgrove (right) tackled by Huddersf
Sport / 28 February 2025
28 February 2025
This weekend’s Super League matches across the pond could be a boon for the sport, writes JAMES NALTON
Liverpool's Luis Diaz (right) celebrates scoring their side'
Men’s Football / 2 January 2025
2 January 2025
FIGHTING RACISM: Trafalgar Square, London, April 1978
Books / 2 August 2024
2 August 2024
The relationship between Britain and India is made accessible and entertaining through the lens of a personal story, says PAUL DONOVAN