Dirty Leeds eleven -
Sprake
Mills
Kenny Burns
Molenar
Aizlewood
Collins
Vinny
Batty
Yorath
Baird
Hankin
wouldn't be the most skillfull team but could probably stop those who thought they were.
Selby White wrote:Dirty Leeds eleven -
Sprake
Mills
Kenny Burns
Molenar
Aizlewood
Collins
Vinny
Batty
Yorath
Baird
Hankin
wouldn't be the most skillfull team but could probably stop those who thought they were.
isrodger wrote:Selby White wrote:Dirty Leeds eleven -
Sprake
Mills
Kenny Burns
Molenar
Aizlewood
Collins
Vinny
Batty
Yorath
Baird
Hankin
wouldn't be the most skillfull team but could probably stop those who thought they were.
4 lads in the revie team who were hard/dirty beyond this lot hunter, Bremner, Giles, Clarke.
Aces wrote:Joe Jordan would be in for me, he was and still is as hard as nails.
davidbattyspants wrote:These kind of comparisons, whilst interesting are largely pointless because the conditions of the game are so very different.
If you magically transported a team from the 70s' and put them in today's Premier League, provided they could adjust to not being able to commit GBH when tackling, they would get trounced. The physical and metal fitness of the modern player far outstrips that of the 70's players.
That said, had George Best, Jimmy Greaves, Tony Currie, Martin Peters, Colin Bell, Alan Hudson, Denis Law, Allan Clarke, Francis Lee, Peter Osgood, Tony Green, Charlie George, Jimmy Greenhoff, Archie Gemmill, Martin Chivers, Derek Dougan, Supermac, Leighton James, Frank Worthington, Bob Latchford, Trevor Francis, Trevor Brooking, Stan Bowles or Gordon Hill been born in 1980 and had Sir Alex as his manager, he would probably made Messi look like a drunken carthorse. Eddie Gray, with modern training, equipment, conditioning, diet and physiotherapy would have been sold to Real for £150m.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 18 guests