Cricketer Marcus Trescothick was one of the most productive all-design Britain players of his age, indenting up something like 14 Test hundreds and 12 ODI hundreds.
His global profession was stopped in only six years because of dysfunctional behavior.
The book describes his excursion as a cricketer playing for Somerset and Britain and intensely addresses the psychological sickness that at last finished his vocation.
Trescothick's story is surprising not as a result of it's life span, but rather in light of the fact that he was the solitary high profile cricketer to open up to the world about his battles when dysfunctional behavior was still exceptionally derided.
The most awesome aspect of the book is the humble humor that he uses to great impact as an offset/lighthearted element to the more serious and hazier undercurrent of the super topic of dysfunctional behavior.
The book is a should peruse inferable from Trescothick's story being the very first example of psychological instability and sports being brought into the consideration of an overall crowd.
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