Conrad Posted February 14, 2014 Posted February 14, 2014 (edited) RIP A true gentleman of the game I remember well his interview after the 5-0 against Forest. He'd never seen a better display of attacking football in his lifeIt really set the seal on that performance. EDIT - just seen this in the other thread, but I think Tom Finney deserves his own thread. As mentioned elsewhere, Shanks' favourite player Edited February 14, 2014 by Heighway 61 Revisited
New York Red Posted February 15, 2014 Posted February 15, 2014 He had a great run. 91. Is there any film of him? RIP.
5InIstanbul Posted February 15, 2014 Posted February 15, 2014 Legend in a true sense for once. RIP Tom.
kop205 Posted February 15, 2014 Posted February 15, 2014 If he was good enough for Shanks then he was good enough for me.
Runehammer Posted February 15, 2014 Posted February 15, 2014 He had a great run. 91. Is there any film of him? RIP. There are a few clips on Youtube but they are awful quality (as you'd expect). Despite this sentence coming from a piece on the Fail online it brilliantly sums up the man: When the Italians of Palermo came knocking on the door of his terrace house in 1952 offering a £10,000 signing-on fee, £100 a week, a staffed villa on Lake Como and a Maserati — on top of what would have been a record transfer fee of £50,000 — he chose to stay on £12 a week at Deepdale, explaining to his bewildered suitors: ‘I’m a Preston man, always.’ That's a proper legend; RIP.
kop205 Posted February 16, 2014 Posted February 16, 2014 There are a few clips on Youtube but they are awful quality (as you'd expect). Despite this sentence coming from a piece on the Fail online it brilliantly sums up the man: When the Italians of Palermo came knocking on the door of his terrace house in 1952 offering a £10,000 signing-on fee, £100 a week, a staffed villa on Lake Como and a Maserati — on top of what would have been a record transfer fee of £50,000 — he chose to stay on £12 a week at Deepdale, explaining to his bewildered suitors: ‘I’m a Preston man, always.’ That's a proper legend; RIP. The other version of the story of course is that the Preston chairman told them to f*** off before they even got to him. But either way, no sulking, no threats of going on strike, no transfer request, he just got on with it. Sad really that his passing has attracted so few comments on here, especially given the regard in which Shankly held him.
Rich Gobey Posted February 16, 2014 Posted February 16, 2014 Stan Mortenson was asked the question, who was the finest crosser of a ball, Finney or Stanley Matthews. Mortenson chose Finney as he said he always got the laces on the ball to face face the right way. I.e, so Mortenson didn't have the laces scratch his forehead.
matty Posted February 16, 2014 Posted February 16, 2014 There are a few clips on Youtube but they are awful quality (as you'd expect). Despite this sentence coming from a piece on the Fail online it brilliantly sums up the man: When the Italians of Palermo came knocking on the door of his terrace house in 1952 offering a £10,000 signing-on fee, £100 a week, a staffed villa on Lake Como and a Maserati — on top of what would have been a record transfer fee of £50,000 — he chose to stay on £12 a week at Deepdale, explaining to his bewildered suitors: ‘I’m a Preston man, always.’ That's a proper legend; RIP.Lake Como to Palermo is a tricky old commute, like.
Stevie H Posted February 16, 2014 Posted February 16, 2014 Sad really that his passing has attracted so few comments on here, especially given the regard in which Shankly held him. i just never saw him play so it's hard to comment really. but the shanks endorsement is obviously pretty telling like.
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