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Wednesday, February 27, 2008

So who was City’s hardest player ever?

News that former City captain Andy Morrison has been charged with actual bodily harm made me wonder who City's hardest ever player is.

So here are a few suggestions to throw into the hat. The names are in no particular order, and hardness on the pitch has been carelessly blurred with 'being a bit of a nutter'. Current players are not included.


Mike Doyle

The son of a policeman, Doyle was taught to fight at his dad's police gym as a child after his father discovered he was having problems with some local kids.

A tough-tackler on the pitch, he was just as uncompromising off it. Doyle nurtured a genuine hatred of all things United, and took great delight in stoking up rivalries wherever possible.

'The night before a derby, I would go on ITV with Gerald Sinstadt and tell United we were going to thrash them, And why not? It was absolutely true. We were gutted the year we got United relegated, because while they were on the fixture list, it was a guaranteed 4 points every season. They might have had Best, Charlton and Law but when we played them it was a piece of p***,' he once told The Sun.

Time has failed to mellow the old warrior. His 2004 autobiography, Blue Blood, even has a chapter entitled 'Why I Hate United'.

The banner at Old Trafford that mocks our lack of success is a particular source of annoyance for Doyle. "I'd love to walk to the top of the Stretford End and rip that f***ing flag down," he once told the Independent.


Gerry Gow

A legend at Bristol City and, in my opinion, the key player in our 1981 Cup final team.

'If only a man like Gerry Gow was still playing today to act as role model for today's cosseted youth, brought up on suspect body shaving metrosexuals like Man USA's Ronaldo,' writes the author of this tribute to the Glaswegian Man of Steel.


Tony Coleman

When Malcolm Allison suggested signing the young winger in 1967, Joe Mercer's reaction was less than enthusiastic: 'Oh no, not Tony Coleman, no, no. I was at Lilleshall when he threw a bed out of the window. He did all sorts. No, Malcolm. No. He was in serious trouble with a referee'.

'He had a crew-cut, seemed to have tattoo marks all over his arms, wore jeans and a T-shirt, and spoke with a Scouse accent you could almost cut with a knife,' wrote Mike Doyle, who attended the same course at Lilleshall. Doyle believed the bed incident was a result of Coleman merely wanting 'to inject some excitement into what he felt was becoming a repetitive sort of existence'.

But Coleman proved an inspired choice for City, despite his lack of goals ('I don't like being kissed', was his reasoning for not scoring that often). Even Mercer was to later regard him with something approaching affection.

"Tony Coleman? I was the only manager he didn't hit," he once remarked.


"Big' Dave Ewing

The centre half played 279 games at 1953 and 1962. As that was a bit before my time, here are a few memories from Leo Fewtrell at McVittee:

'For Dave the player, marking an opponent usually meant exactly that. l was fortunate enough to get to know him well when he was coaching the Reserve team in the seventies. The players at the time all gave him plenty of respect because he was quite capable of knocking the sh*t out of all of them.'


George Heslop

A tough-tackling centre-half who's fondly remembered by Nimrod at Citymancs for once knocking Charlie George about 10 foot in the air after the Arsenal player had done a wonderful solo run.

According to a poster at the MEN, Heslop meted out the same treatment to Alan Ball.


Franny Lee

Famous for this punch-up with Norman Hunter, Lee was prepared to use his fists off the field too.

Rodney Marsh recalls one such incident form their playing days in his autobiography, Priceless.

The pair were in a club in Manchester's Piccadilly, but after getting abuse from a group of United fans they finished their drinks and left. The United fans followed them out and continued with the insults: "You City players haven't got the balls," said one.

'This wound Franny up. He turned on the guy and said to him, 'OK. You can have the first one’.
The guy smashed a right-hander into Franny's face, but Franny didn't budge an inch, hardly even flinched. Then he really started to lay into the guy. A couple of his mates steamed in to help but I pulled them off.
'Leave it,' I said to them. 'If they want to have a knuckle, let 'em have it'.
Franny gave the guy a real beating. There was blood everywhere. When the police arrived Lee was taken down the station and released early the next morning. Amazingly the press didn't get hold of it.


Below is my favourite ever photo of Lee, plus an example of why British society is going to the dogs.





Click on photos to see full-size image


And here are a few more that fall more into the 'biggest nutter' category:

Joe Corrigan
I forget where I read this, but apparently Big Joe really hated being beaten in training. If anyone chipped him from outside the box he’d lose his temper and chase them around the pitch.

Tony Grealish
Known as the 'bearded viking', Grealish makes the subs bench in the Rotherham United 'most mentally disturbed 11'. (Gow is in the starting lineup). 'He would be one of those uncles who would take his nephews/nieces to Macdonalds and buy them burgers until they were sick,' is Rotherham fan Alan Todd's considered assessment.

Eric Nixon
Fondly remembered by Gavin at Citymancs for punching Palace's Mark Bright (details here).

Stan Bowles
Left City as a youngster following a series of off-field incidents. Nearly got lynched by Sunderland fans a few years later for failing to show complete respect to the FA Cup winners.

~ And just to prove that bad-boy behaviour is nothing new, here's a newspaper story from 1903 about three City players who were fined by magistrates for 'behaving in a disorderly manner'.

~ There's a very funny story about George Heslop's wig over at Arsenal News Review.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Reaction, stats & ratings: City 0 Everton 2

Shades of Frank Clark about this performance - an early burst of neat passing (yet toothless) football followed by sucker-punch and ending in disarray.

Hard to say whether this was a tactical problem, poor individual performances or that Everton were simply a lot better. Though I suspect a lot of it was just us showing our age.

Against an Everton side that has been carefully matured over the last six years, we really did look the hastily assembled and incomplete team we are. Aside from Dunne, the ten other players that finished the game had only started 180 league games for City between them (details lower down).

I'm really not sure whether the tactics were wrong for this match, but it did leave me wondering what the correct tactics would be to break down a side as organised and well-disciplined as Everton.

City have been advertising for an opposition analyst this month (as well as a post-match and recruitment analyst) so maybe the new appointments can help figure it out. But right now my hunch is that the most effective way to approach the likes of Everton at home is to try to beat them at their own counter-attacking game.

As that would lead to some extremely tedious encounters at Eastlands, it's not exactly a thought I relish.

So maybe Sven's approach is the right one. It just needs a few more skillful acquisitions, more bite, more movement - and a lot more time to develop.

~ Match highlights
~ Sven's post-match interview
~ Photos from rtfract.com; Getty Images
~ Latest Premiership table

~ Here are the number of league games each player had started for City: Hart (16), Onuoha (41), Dunne (246), Richards (63), Ball (22), Vassell (76), Gelson (10), Hamann (35), Ireland (48), Petrov (26), Benjani (1). Subs: Elano (20), Caicedo (0), Castillo (1).


And here are the remaining fixtures:

Sat 01 Mar 17:15 Wigan (H)
Sat 08 Mar 15:00 Reading (A)
Sun 16 Mar 16:00 Tottenham (H)
Sat 22 Mar 15:00 Bolton (A)
Sat 29 Mar 15:00 Birmingham (A)
Sat 05 Apr 15:00 Chelsea (H)
Sat 12 Apr 15:00 Sunderland (A)
Sun 20 Apr 16:00 Portsmouth (H)
Sat 26 Apr 15:00 Fulham (H)
Sat 03 May 15:00 Liverpool (A)
Sun 11 May 15:00 Middlesbrough (A)


Player ratings

Ratings come from (in order): Manchester Evening News; Mattyc55, Gwil, gman07, rhysonaldinho, Bob Sponge, Meddler, Humlannitton, bert38, Father Dougal MaGuire, DAZ_11, alib (Bluemoon), Grob, Wooders, King Kev, irblinx, miss-mancity, DTeacher (Mancityfans), Setanta, Sky and the BBC.

Hart: 6.2 average
(5, 7, 6, 6, 6, 7, 7, 7, 6, 6, 7, 6, 7, 6, 6, 6, 4, 6, 7, 5, 6.2)

Onuoha: 5.1
(5, 6, 3, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6, 6, 6, 5, 4, 5, 5, 5, 4, 6, 5, 6, 4, 5.4)

Richards: 5.1
(5, 5, 3, 4, 4, 4, 6, 5, 6, 5, 6, 5, 5, 6, 6, 5, 6, 6, 6.5, 4, 5.5)

Dunne: 4.8
(5, 6, 3, 4, 4, 4, 6, 5, 6, 5, 4, 4, 5, 4, 5, 6, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5.8)

Ball: 6.0
(6, 7, 5, 5, 6, 6, 7, 6, 6, 5, 6, 6, 7, 6, 6, 7, 7, 6, 6, 5, 5.4)

Vassell (Castillo 75): 4.6
(6, 5, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, 4, 4, 5, 3, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 6, 5, 5.2)

Gelson: 6.9
(5, 7, 7, 7, 7, 5, 7, 7, 8, 5, 8, 7, 8, 8, 7, 8, 7, 8, 6.5, 6, 5.4)

Hamann (Elano 45): 5.1
(5, 6, 4, 4, 6, 5, 5, 5, 5, 4, 5, 5, 4, 5, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 4, 5.0)

Ireland (Caicedo 68): 3.9
(5, 4, 3, 3, 3, 1, 4, 4, 6, 4, 4, 1, 4, 4, 1, 4, 6, 5, 5.5, 5, 5.1)

Petrov: 5.3
(4, 5, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 7, 7, 5, 6, 3, 4, 6, 7, 7, 7, 6, 5, 3, 5.2)

Benjani: 5.5
(6, 6, 5, 5, 5, 4, 6, 6, 5, 4, 5, 4, 6, 7, 7, 7, 7, 6, 6, 6, 6, 4, 5.8)


Subs:

Elano (Hamann 45): 4.4
(5, 4, 2, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 6, 5, 5, 2, 5, 5, - , 6, 3, 5, 6, 5, 4.7

Caicedo (Ireland 68): 5.0
(5, 6, 5, 5, 6, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6, 5, 4, 5, 6, - , 4, 3, 5, 6, 4, 4.7)

Castillo (Vassell 75): 6.4
(5, 7, 6, 6, 6.5, 8, 6, 7, 7, 6, 7, 7, 6, 7, - , 7, 6, 7, 6.5, 5, 5.2)

Subs not used:
Isaksson, Corluka


Match stats

I'm really starting to dislike these match stats. Looking at this latest set you'd think that City had been unlucky, while last week's gave the impression that United had been robbed.

The stats at Setanta seem equally unrepresentative of this game, revealing that we had 63.2% of the possession (the BBC claimed it was 53%) and a tackle success rate of 71.8% compared to Everton's 62.5%.

You can find more detailed stats, including details of each player’s passes and tackles the Daily Telegraph.





Match reports



City 0 Everton 2


Yakubu powers Everton's bid for Champions League place (Ian Herbert)
David Moyes never fails to remind those who will listen that his side has been built while those like Sven Goran Eriksson's have been bought. But Everton demonstrated the gulf between the clubs' respective European ambitions last night with a win which means that a repeat of that all-Merseyside tussle for a Champions League place of three years ago is most certainly on. And no Everton fan needs reminding who won that one.


Everton show stamina in race for fourth place (Oliver Kay)
Their supporters have spent much of the season telling anyone who will listen that they are “going to City twice” and, if their performance last night is a sign of things to come, there is no reason why Everton’s ambitions need stop there. Their destruction of Manchester City was far more comprehensive than an impressive scoreline suggests and, on this evidence, they will not only be back here for the Uefa Cup final on May 14, but are increasingly strong favourites to beat Liverpool to fourth place in the Barclays Premier League.
It was City who were flattered by the winning margin, with Everton unfortunate not to have several more goals to add to those scored by Yakubu Ayegbeni, his fourteenth in his past 17 appearances, and Joleon Lescott in the first half. With Yakubu offering a masterclass in attack, they had two shots cleared off the line by Richard Dunne, forced two fine saves from Joe Hart and could have had as many as three penalties.


Lescott sinks City as Everton climb back into fourth (Daniel Taylor)
David Moyes's team were quicker to the ball, stronger in the tackle and played with an urgency that was strangely missing from the home side. All of which spares Styles another inquest into his officiating because the visitors also had a clear penalty turned down in the seventh minute when Richards, losing his balance as he charged down Tim Cahill's shot, tried to retrieve the situation by jabbing out his right arm to deflect the ball away.
The sense of injustice seemed to spur on the visitors. Their passing was crisp, they played with width and penetration and they looked particularly incisive when attacking down the left. City, in contrast, looked unrecognisable from the side that had beaten Manchester United in their last game - which was strange because Eriksson had chosen exactly the same team.


Everton stroll it as Man City surrender (Tim Rich)
"Tell me ma, me ma, to put the champagne on ice. We're going to City twice." Throughout their increasingly impressive Uefa Cup campaign, Everton's supporters have made this chant their own and if Everton reach the Uefa Cup final at Eastlands on May 14 and play like this, they will be lifting their first piece of silverware since Dave Watson caressed the FA Cup in 1995.
You would, however, have to search the very furthest corners of Europe to find a potential opponent who might perform as incompetently as Manchester City did last night. Had Micah Richards been punished for two blatant handballs - in the second half he almost attempted to catch the ball in the area - Everton would have been awarded two penalties as well as two goals.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Elano is the most subbed player in the Premiership

The Brazilian has been subbed in 17 of the 20 league games he's started, according to this story at Statbunker.com.

The site also reveals that Petrov is one of only ten players who have started every Premiership game this season.

Statbunker supplies player stats exclusively to the Telegraph and has data going back to the 98/99 season.

Its Know The Game section has a selection of unique tables, one of which reveals that Robbie Fowler is our second highest goalscorer since 1998.

Another section lists City players by time spent at the club. Surprisingly, it shows that Nedum Onuoha is our third longest-serving player, despite only making his debut in November 2004.

Elsewhere, I notice that Benjani is currently 5th in the Actim Index, making him our highest ranked player. Another indicator of his worth can be found at this Portsmouth talkboard, where Benjani's work-rate is singled out for praise.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Historic pictures of City: 1884 to present

I'm in the process of updating various sections on the main site, starting off with the photo archives.

Below are all the team photos I've found online. There's 81 images in all, 48 of which are newly added. I'll be updating the other photo sections next week, including the historic Maine Road gallery, and adding a new section which will have photos of managers and chairmen from the 19th century to the present.

(Click on the thumbnails to see a larger image)


1884 / 1898 / 1898


1903 / Apr 1904 / 1904


1904 / 1905 / 1906


1906 /1908


1933 / 1934 / c1935


1937 (broken link) / 1936-37 / Late 1940s


1949-50 / Oct 1950 / 1952


1953 / Jul 1953 / 1954-55


1954-55 (broken link) / 1954-55 (broken link) / Nov 1954


1955 / 1955 / 1955


Dec 1955 /1955-56 / 1955-56 (broken link)


Apr 1956 / May 1956 / 1957 (broken link)


1960 / 1960 / 1961


1963 / Mid 1960s / May 1966


1966 (broken link) / May 1968 / Aug 1968


1968-69 / 1969 (broken link) / Jul 1969


1969 / 1969-70 (broken link) / Aug 1970


1971 / 1971 / 1971-72 (broken link)


Aug 1974 / Aug 1974 / Jul 1975


1976 / 1977 / 1977


1977 / 1977 / 1978


1978 / Jul 1979 / 1979


1979-80 (broken link) / 1980 / 1980-81


1981 / 1982-83 (broken link) / 1987-88 (broken link)


1987-88 / 1990-91 / 1994-95


1996-97 / 1997-98 / 1998-99


May 1999 / 1999-00


2005-06 / 2006-07

~ You can find archives of historic City photos at Getty Images, Media Storehouse and the Manchester Local Image Collection.

~ If you haven't already visited, there's a fantastic collection of 128 historic City videos here at YouTube. The collection also includes a fly-on-the-wall documentary about City made by Granada in 1981 which is definitely worth watching.