The noise grew. Everywhere you looked Newcastle fans were on their feet,
United, at last, in song. St James' Park was rocking, a noise that
carried down from the cathedral at the top of the hill, down through the
city. It felt like a celebration. It wasn't. Newcastle -- facing
Tottenham Hotspur on the last day of the 2015/16 Premier League season
-- had already been relegated.
The fervent atmosphere was instead a final call of support for the
manager, Rafa Benitez. It was only his tenth game in charge -- not
enough time for him to steer Newcastle clear of relegation -- yet the St
James' crowd were imploring him to stay. The Spaniard had fallen into
the hearts of the people of Tyneside. Spurs -- second in the league
before kick-off -- were beaten 5-1. A club was stirring back to life.
The job at hand though, was huge: galvanise and resurrect a club and its
football obsessed city. He had to strip away years of neglect, breathe
life into flawed structures, clear dressing rooms, rebuild belief,
attempt to give the people of Newcastle their pride back.
Rafa's Way tells the story of the remarkable Championship campaign that
followed, the turnaround in the fortunes of Newcastle United and the
dramatic promotion. It charts Benitez's overhaul of everything within a
troubled club, his impact on its city, and how he immersed himself in a
community that persuaded him to stay, and could not bear to see him
leave.
Rafa's Way talks in-depth to Benitez, about his beliefs and the
challenge he faced, to the players, the key men in black and white
stripes who made Newcastle United champions, and delves into the very
heart of a football club as it emerged from the ashes.