Douglas Higginbottom wrote:They were great times and that's a great read and I really remember the game well. Especially the first goal from Neil Young. It was a very muddy pitch if I remember right and he was literally out on the touchline when he smashed it across. Bell as ever was brilliant and ran the show.
john68 wrote:Ant,
Believe it or not, Allison did enquire about the availability of Best and Doyle was even sounded out as a swap, to go to the swamp.
I'm not sure of the exact details mate but will go hunting and try and dig them out for you.
Passions ran high in those days and so did hatred of the rags and their players. Personally I think that Best would have met with a lot of initial opposition from Blues and losing one of our own in Doyle would certainly not have helped matters. If Best had done the business for us, it is likely that he may at some point have been accepted by many but methinks, not by all.
Off to check my records for you.
john68 wrote:Ant,
Believe it or not, Allison did enquire about the availability of Best and Doyle was even sounded out as a swap, to go to the swamp.
I'm not sure of the exact details mate but will go hunting and try and dig them out for you.
Passions ran high in those days and so did hatred of the rags and their players. Personally I think that Best would have met with a lot of initial opposition from Blues and losing one of our own in Doyle would certainly not have helped matters. If Best had done the business for us, it is likely that he may at some point have been accepted by many but methinks, not by all.
Off to check my records for you.
jimmygrimble2 wrote:The Sun is 40 yearss old today and they have reproduced their 1st edition - thought this would make interesting reading for us Old geezers and for you young 'uns that have not seen City win anything...
From the sun Monday November 17 1969:
For years Man City have had to live a drab existence in the gloomy shadow of neighbouring u****d's consistent and unending success.
Even when City won the the crown of league champions last year u****d upstaged them by lifting the european cup a few weeks later.
Until Saturday November 15 1969 that is.
Mark the date well for this is the day when City hit a new peak of perfection. They rubbed out those years of heartache with a performance of high-octance soccer that their manager Joe Mercer described as "Our greatest team performance - I couldn't see a flaw"
City did not just beat u****d 4-0 they destroyed them and then disdainfuly left them where they lay, a shattered wreck of a once great team.
It was a victory which said convincingy that u****d are now the "other" team in the area. And that City will be one of Englands outstanding clubs for the next five years at least. Take out ageless Tony Book and the oldest player is only 26.
U***d could not prise the midfield from the grasp of Colin Bell and Alan Oakes and neither Best or Law offered any threat to the City defence - how could they? you can't play if you don't have the ball..!
Perhaps City were helped by a fluke first goal just before half time - Young drove hard and low from the left wing some 30yds out, it looked more like a cross than a shot but it left Stepney groping thin air at the near post.
Citys 2nd goal a classic of simplicity and execution, a vivid ilustration of their finest quality - the ability to counterpunch with lightning speed and killing effect. A bad pass to Charlton was cut out by Oakes who raced 40yds then slipped the ball to Bell who beat off Sadlers challenge before lashing it in.
The luckless Sadler scored the 3rd trying to kick a Bowyer shot off the line and Bell grabbed the 4th after a superb run and cross by the elegant casual Young.
And I almost forgot - City also had 2 more disallowed. thats how overwhelming the slaughter was.
And in the same paper - George Best wrote a column predicting leeds to win 1970 European Cup, Manchester City for Cup Winners Cup and Liverpool for Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
he said " City play like I love to play, to hell with defensive caution - lets get at 'em. They are a rarity in the game - a team with 5 forwards all capable of thumping goals. Stop one of them and the other 4 are around your heels like irish terriers"
Ahh...those were the days!
blackburnblue wrote:Wonderful memories and still very vivid in my mind. We have still never emulated the "holy trinity" of Bell,Lee and Buzzer after all these years.....
I didn't read that report at the time as i have never or will EVER read that rag which is only fit for one thing- although it's not as good as Andrex.
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