August 24, 20205 yr Rangers v Aberdeen. Bud up against Jim Leighton. The Govan Stand being built in the background.
August 24, 20205 yr Ibrox 1980/81 A fence happened to break, a gap appeared and suddenly some supporters got a free view of this Rangers game at Ibrox in Sept 1980. Until the police moved them out. The Govan Stand as shown in your picture Boyne, was at its very early stage of development.
August 24, 20205 yr 2 hours ago, Boyne said: Some fine players in this picture. Possibly the picture is before they flew out for the 1967 European Cup Winners Cup Final v Bayern Munich. The players in the picture are, I’m sure of the 1966/67 squad.
August 24, 20205 yr From this to this. Cathrin Park. Glasgow, former home of Third Lanark. Remains of the terracing. Edited August 24, 20205 yr by erskblue
August 25, 20205 yr Bayern Munich with the European Cup in 1974 after beating Athletico Madrid. Most of them seem to be wearing Athletico shirts.
August 25, 20205 yr ) football, Bundesliga, 1972/1973, Stadium am Boekelberg, Borussia Moenchengladbach versus FC Bayern Munich 0:3, running-in of the teams, f.l.t.r. Jupp Heynckes (MG), keeper Wolfgang Kleff (MG), Franz Beckenbauer (FCB), Ulrich Surau (MG), keeper Sepp Maier (FCB), Johnny Hansen (FCB) Original English caption.
August 25, 20205 yr 1 hour ago, erskblue said: Looks like Gerd Muller. One of the greatest strikers of all time. So sad that he is now suffering from Alzheimer's Disease.
August 25, 20205 yr 1 hour ago, Boyne said: Looks like Gerd Muller. One of the greatest strikers of all time. So sad that he is now suffering from Alzheimer's Disease. Agreed. Muller was some striker. And yes, so sad about him suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease.
August 25, 20205 yr A bit off subject but Brian Laudrup's Perfect XI. Some team and a couple of Chelsea players in it. The back four is impressive. https://www.fourfourtwo.com/features/brian-laudrup-perfect-xi Goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel The best ever. Peter’s charisma and character could change the game. His spirit spread to the rest of the team. Strong in the air, great reflexes and brilliant in one-on-ones. A true winner. Right-back Stefan Reuter My Bayern Munich team-mate is one of the most dedicated players I ever met. Extremely fast and athletic, even as right-back, he played a vital attacking role and scored goals. He was also great in one-on-ones – in attack and defence. Centre-back Richard Gough A true leader and real warrior, who led by example and looked after his team-mates. Also a great finisher from set pieces because he really attacked the ball. He scored a lot, and had the bruises and scars to prove it. The most professional player I ever met, which gave him a long career. Centre-back Franco Baresi A legend. A modern defender and unique in his day as a great ball-playing defender. Very elegant, he read the game superbly, had great speed and took a fabulous free-kick. Left-back Paolo Maldini Another legend, and still going strong, he simply never has a bad match. Very difficult to play against, a sublime passer and he’s scored a lot of goals too. Has an incredible physique and is the ultimate role-model. He’ll go down in the history books as perhaps the best left-back ever. Right-midfield Paul Gascoigne I played with him at Rangers and in his prime he was one of the best players in the world. He glided with the ball in a way that made him virtually untouchable for opponents and he was a match-winner, who had great technique when striking the ball. He was also a great entertainer – on and off the pitch! A tremendous natural talent. Defensive-midfield Marcel Desailly Definitely the hardest player to come up against – it was nearly impossible to get past him because, for a player of his physique, he had incredible balance. It was always good to have him on your team, because he did the work of three men. He was so good that he filled his offensive players with confidence. You knew, with him on the pitch, you’d never get caught on the counter-attack. Left-midfield Stefan Effenberg Some felt he was arrogant, and perhaps he was, but the presence of Bayern’s number 10 always gave the team a big boost. A powerful attacker with a great engine, he always took responsibility and could win a game for you on his own. If you got a penalty two minutes before the end you knew who would take it. He had great defensive ability too. Attacking-midfield Michael Laudrup My brother started as an attacker but became an elegant attacking midfielder, perhaps the most complete there has ever been. His vision, speed of thought and passing were on a different level; he always knew what was going to happen before anybody else did. If anyone had a ‘football brain’, it was him. Forward Gabriel Batistuta I was in a state of shock after my first training session with him at Fiorentina... he was terrible! But someone on the staff told me to wait until he got back into shape. I did and discovered a clinical finisher. He was merciless in front of goal and as strong as an ox. You simply couldn’t take the ball off him. Forward Gianfranco Zola ‘The magician’ did things with the ball I’ve never seen before or since. Had brilliant technique and incredible balance, almost a carbon copy of Maradona, with whom he played at Napoli. His free-kicks were extraordinary. A true artist, who could show you things you didn’t know about the game, and the perfect foil for a big, s�trong striker. Manager Walter Smith I have had many good managers but Walter’s man-management was incredible: he was the type of manager you wanted to play for. He had several big egos, like Ally McCoist and Gazza, in one team but still managed to hold everything together. Substitutes Andy Goram A sublime keeper, who had quick reflexes. A great motivator who was always at his best for big games. Jurgen Kohler A man-marker of the best and worst kind; even in training he’d advise you not to try to challenge him. A truly terrifying player. Dejan Savicevic They called him Il Genio, and he was definitely Berlusconi’s favourite, if not quite Capello’s. A genius and a perfect number 10, a bit like Zlatan Ibrahimovic today. His left foot was out of this world. Mark Hateley A classic British striker – I had a brilliant partnership with him. Great heading, a good left foot and impossible to stop. Typically, he would play the ball to me, I’d break down the wing and find him in front of goal. A great recipe.
August 25, 20205 yr Photo: Fans came on to the streets of Renfrew in great numbers to welcome their football heroes Renfrew Juniors back after the final at Hampden . Renfrew Juniors had just won The Scottish Junior Cup in 1962.
August 25, 20205 yr He started out at Aberdeen before moving to Dundee where he would win his first two caps before moving to Chelsea in '65 where he would gain the rest.
August 25, 20205 yr 58 minutes ago, erskblue said: Photo: Fans came on to the streets of Renfrew in great numbers to welcome their football heroes Renfrew Juniors back after the final at Hampden . Renfrew Juniors had just won The Scottish Junior Cup in 1962. Sorry, Renfrew Juniors had been beaten in the 1962 Scottish Junior Cup Final. A 1 - 1 draw watched by a crowd of 49,000. They lost 1-0 in the midweek replay.My apologies I mid read it. Edited August 25, 20205 yr by erskblue
August 25, 20205 yr 5 minutes ago, Boyne said: A couple of trouble makers. The Knitting Ultras have just arrived ! Couldn’t resist. Edited August 25, 20205 yr by erskblue
August 25, 20205 yr A young Charlie Cooke with Aberdeen. It’s been posted it in the Vintage Blues Thread.
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