Irish author Conor Niland is the winner of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award 2024; ‘The Racket’ is the first book about tennis to take the prize; “it really is a dream come true to fly the flag for Ireland,” says Niland…
Former Irish tennis professional Conor Niland hopes his book, The Racket, will help people fully understand the reality of the sport.
Niland is the winner of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award 2024 with his memoir, ghostwritten by sports journalist Gavin Cooney.
Speaking exclusively to William Hill, Niland said: “I’m floating. I can’t believe it. I felt like The Racket could have a chance, but to actually win the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award is just amazing.
“The perception of tennis is that people tune in for the four Grand Slams and see it all to be big cheques and strawberries and cream. But for all the guys lower down the rankings, grinding it out to make it there, it is a lot more difficult.
“I was fortunate enough to be just outside the top 100 so I caught glimpses of the very top, but I also spent a lot of time lower down the rankings which is why I was able to show both sides of the story in this book.
“I was only able to really move on from that when I was writing the book. I used to think about my Wimbledon loss every day. That happens less and less since writing this book and I’m just over the moon with what this book turned out to be.”
Flying the flag for Ireland
The Racket becomes the first tennis book to clinch the world’s longest-established and most valuable literary sports-writing prize in its history and Niland is the first author from the Republic of Ireland to win since Paul Kimmage’s Rough Ride: Behind the Wheel with a Pro Cyclist in 1990.
Expressing his pride in picking up the award, Niland added: “There haven’t been many Irish people to win the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award, so it really is a dream come true to fly the flag for Ireland.
“I’ve loved some of the William Hill winners of the past, they’re some of my favourite books. They’re also books that stick around, and I wasn’t sure whether this book would last a summer, or six months, but having won this award, I hope it sticks around a little bit longer!”
Diverse shortlist
Niland’s memoir was crowned the winner by a judging panel comprised of chair Alyson Rudd, Clarke Carlisle, Gabby Logan, Dame Heather Rabbatts, Mark Lawson and Michelle Walder.
In addition to the prestigious trophy, Niland also claims the winning £30,000 prize. He was nominated alongside David Peace, who told the story of Manchester United in the months following the 1958 Munich air crash, in his book Munichs.
Double Olympic champion Kelly Holmes was also shortlisted with her autobiography Unique, as was former British champion swimmer Rebecca Achieng Ajulu-Bushell’s memoir These Heavy Black Bones.
Also included on this year’s shortlist was My Beautiful Sisters by Afghanistan women’s football captain Khalida Popal and When I Passed The Statue Of Liberty I Became Black – a posthumous memoir written by Britain’s first Black Olympic medallist Harry Edward, edited by Neil Duncanson.
The William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award is dedicated to rewarding excellence in sports writing and was first presented in 1989.
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