Memory Hole: The Forgotten European Nights

Thanks are due to Jonathan Derbyshire (in comments) for corrections to this post. Not forgotten by fans of the teams concerned! but it’s interesting, in the light of the English dominance of European club football between 1977 and 1985 to take a look at what happened immediately prior to that period. Throw in Celtic and…

In Addition..

The same line of thought as the previous post – I just wanted to ram home how reluctant/uninterested the English are when it comes to taking the kind of action that would produce international success. Would we be discussing our level of skill – or our need to improve it – if we weren’t falling…

Skill In The English Game

Rumours are going around that Steve McClaren has said that English players are not as skilful as their foreign opponents. I say rumours, because I’ve been unable to locate a primary source for this, so let’s just use it to start the discussion. At any given point in time, there are English players who are…

Manchester United’s Top Fifty – and the Missing

Here, from that huge new Manchester United book that only the Glazers can afford, is a top 50 Manchester United players of all time: Manchester United Opus: Top 50 Players of All Time: Sir Bobby Charlton, George Best, Roy Keane, Duncan Edwards, Denis Law, Bryan Robson, Eric Cantona, Peter Schmeichel, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes, Wayne…

Steve McClaren and the Future of England

Yesterday, McClaren was in the company of Walter Smith, Laurie Sanchez and John Toshack at the launch of a road safety scheme, and took the opportunity to hand down some clues as to where he sees England going. Regular readers will know my own feelings on the matter – that we are about to embark…

Not Alan Pardew’s Hubris

It’s impossible not to feel sympathy with Alan Pardew, sacked by West Ham yesterday. It was never a comfortable berth for this talented manager, and with the exception of a short period last season when his side were playing the best football outside the top four, he has had to live with calls for his…

Edwardian (well, Georgian really) Football Redux

Courtesy of Mark Holland, here’s a link to a comparatively lengthy clip of a 1913 Tyneside Derby. The quality of the film is abysmal, of course, and the camera angles spectacularly unhelpful if you want to get much idea of what’s going on. But there’s enough there to suggest three things about the game of…

Kervin on Woodward

One late addition to my books of the year is Alison Kervin’s Clive Woodward: The Biography. Usually a sporting biography will fall into one of these categories: The pointless but money-spinning autobiography The tabloid hatchet job The ivory tower hatchet job The hagiography Kervin manages to stay clear of any of these, partly because she…

Thoughts on the Ashes

Now that England have gone 2-0 down in the series, the usual scapegoat hunt is well underway, with Duncan Fletcher in the firing line and Freddie Flintoff’s captaincy being questioned by those who think that remembering Ian Botham’s short-lived tenure is a sign of age and wisdom. For once, I think that the debate’s overcomplicated….