Sports journalism, political journalism, foreign coverage
Simon Kuper is a British, and naturalized French, author and journalist, best known for his work at the Financial Times and as a football writer. After studies at Oxford, Harvard University and the Technische Universität Berlin, Kuper started his career in journalism at the FT in 1994, where he today writes about a wide range of topics, such as politics, society, culture, sports and urban planning.[2]
Kuper’s unique approach to sports writing, particularly on football, has earned him several prestigious accolades, including the 1994 William Hill Sports Book of the Year. He writes about sports "from an anthropological perspective."[6]Time Magazine has called him “one of the world’s leading writers on soccer”[7] and The Economic Times labeled him “one of the world's most famous football writers.”[8]
He is the author of several books, among them the William Hill awarded Football Against the Enemy and the Sunday Times Bestseller about UK politics, Chums: How a Tiny Caste of Oxford Tories Took Over the UK.
Born in Uganda to South African parents, Kuper spent most of his childhood in the Netherlands and lives in Paris.
Early life
Kuper was born in Uganda of South African-born parents, and moved to Leiden in the Netherlands as a child, where his father, Adam Kuper, was a professor in anthropology at Leiden University. He is named for his paternal grandfather, Simon Meyer Kuper, who was a South African Supreme Court judge assassinated in 1963.
Kuper joined the Financial Times in 1994. He wrote the daily currencies column and worked in other departments before leaving the FT in 1998. He returned in 2002 as a sports columnist and has worked there ever since. Nowadays he writes a general column for the Weekend FT on all manner of topics from politics[10] to books, and on cities including London, Paris, Johannesburg and Miami.[11] Kuper has also written for The Times and The Observer, [5]ESPN,[12] and The Spectator.[13]
Kuper is considered one of the most influential voices at the Financial Times.[17] Since joining the publication in 1994, he has held various roles, writing on a wide range of topics, from sports and popular culture to politics.[18][19]
He started his FT career as a reporter. His assignments have often taken him beyond his base in Paris, providing coverage and analysis on global events from different parts of the world.
His sportswriting is appreciated for its exploration of sports beyond mere scores and statistics, looking at the societal, political and cultural impact of sports globally. [20] Kuper discusses the culture that surrounds football — such as the Old Firm rivalry — as well as the on-field play.[21] He has written on cricket occasionally, with articles on cricket in the Netherlands[22] and cricket in apartheid South Africa.[23]
He has also contributed for many years to the FT's Weekend Magazine, as a Life & Arts columnist,[24] often with long-form essays and interviews spanning themes such as current affairs, travel, history and politics.
In 2003 he published his book Ajax, The Dutch, the War: Football in Europe during the Second World War. He co-authored the 2009 book Soccernomics with Stefan Szymanski. The authors subsequently put forward a formula allowing Kuper to predict that Serbia and Brazil would play the 2010 FIFA World Cup Final.[27]
His book The Football Men, which was published in 2011, offered a collection of articles about the world of football over a span of 13 years, along with new pieces written specifically for this book. The Independent wrote that "Simon Kuper is a refreshing antidote to the current media obsession with 'getting the nannies [nanny goats = quotes]', however banal, from players. He doesn't mince his words: talking of past greats, he dismisses Bobby Charlton as "a dullard", Michel Platini "a weak character" and Pele "a talking puppet."[28]
Kuper's book Barça: The Rise and Fall of the Club that Built Modern Football appeared in 2021. It won the Sunday Times award for Football Book of the Year 2022.[29]
Also in 2021, Kuper released The Happy Traitor,[30] an account of the life and motivations of George Blake, a British spy for the Soviet Union. The narrative, praised for its detailed exploration and understanding of Blake's complex character, sheds light on Blake's ideological shifts and personal struggles with identity and marks a significant addition to Kuper's body of work.[31]
In 2022 he published Chums - How a Tiny Caste of Oxford Tories Took Over the UK,[32][33][34] about the connections that enabled a university network to dominate Westminster.[35]
Personal life
Kuper lives in Paris with his wife, the American author Pamela Druckerman,[36] and their three children. In 2022, he wrote in the Financial Times that he had recently become a naturalized French citizen after living in Paris for more than 20 years.[37]
Bibliography
Football Against the Enemy (1994)
Ajax, The Dutch, The War: Football in Europe During the Second World War (2003)
Why England Lose: and Other Curious Phenomena Explained (2009)
The Football Men (2011)
Soccernomics (2012)
Barca (2021)
The Happy Traitor (2021)
Chums: How a Tiny Caste of Oxford Tories Took Over the UK (2022)
Good Chaps: How Corrupt Politicians Broke Our Law and Institutions - And What We Can Do About It (2024)