Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Travel By Coach by Coach Glynn Leyshon


Geat stories about my father in this book!!

Travel by Coach
Canadian National Wrestling coach Glynn Leyshon
as he travels the world with his band of wrestlers,
to whom he dedicates his book. It is also the story
of Leyshon's passion to promote the sport he loves
best in his native Canada, and his grappling with in-
competent wrestling o cials, bored bureaucrats and
indi
erent organizations.
The book is a journal of Leyshon's twenty- ve
year career starting with his rst high school coach-
ing/teaching job in 1956 and nishing in 1980. It is,
in Leyshon's words, not really about wrestling but the
\human comedy." There are some cultural insights:
Leyshon's respect for Russian training methods, their
passion, work ethic and spirit; his appreciation for
the exuberance of the Cubans; and his admiration
for a savvy Soviet tour guide named Lena. Lena ulti-
mately is invited to the Leyshon home in Canada and
is a less-than-gracious house guest, primarily intent
on making a capitalist killing before returning home
to Russia. The coach, in the book's nal chapter,
reveals his greatest disappointment{never getting a
shot at coaching the Canadian Olympic team, his -
nal chance quashed by the Western-Bloc boycott in
the 1980 Olympics.
But it's the anecdotes on almost every page that
keeps the journal from getting tedious. Leyshon and
his wrestlers are constantly strapped for money, are
traveling 'by coach' and housed in less than adequate
facilities. Every trip has its share of human hilar-
ity as clacking crustaceans invade their outdoor din-
ing digs in Cuba, creepy crones and drunken \inter-
preters" turn up on a trip to Dracula's castle in Ro-
mania, and the Coach is caught atop a pole trying
to lch a banner in Teheran while menacing thugs
and their Persian pin-up girl friends circle below in
pre-Ayatollah Iran.
Through it all the reader gets to know this com-
bative coach with a wry eye for humor and high
expectations for his wrestlers. He doesn't pull any
punches here either, and his assessments of his
wrestler's performances will make some of them wince
if they didn't measure up to his expectations. But
if humor is evidence of heart, there is much heart
abounding in this small chronicle from the crusty
Canadian coach. Even after the Russian tour guide
doesn't charm them after being invited to visit in
Canada, the Leyshon family, nding out years later
how bad things were in Russia, still send her a care
package. And, although his career in wrestling neces-
sitates \travel by coach," it's evident that the coach
knows that there's no place like home.
chronicles the travails of feisty

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