Talk 60's 70's Football at Yahoo! Clubs sixtiesandseventiessoccer  
Bob 70-71 logo Where are they now ?  
Bob 70-71

Home

Latest News

70-71 Teams

A-Z Players

Search the Site

FAQs

Quiz

Thirty Years Ago!

Articles

Where are they now?

Quizlet

Links

Guestbook

E-mail me

Chat

About Bob 70-71

Caught In Time

Featured in the back of the Sports section of the Sunday Times, the Caught in Time series features a picture of a famous team, offers a profile of each player, and answers the question 'Where are they now?'.

Liverpool Pre-Season 1965

by Greg Struthers


This was a club going places. So Ian St John was told in the summer of 1961 when he joined Liverpool, who had spent eight years in the wilderness of the Second Division. Bill Shankly was in charge at Anfield and began to turn around the team with astute signings and a club ethos built on teamwork and confidence.

Four years later, in the summer of 1965, Liverpool had earned promotion to the top division, won the League title and the FA Cup, and reached the semi-final of the European Cup. More glory was to follow. So why were Liverpool so good ? "Because we had good players and the best manager," St John says. "We believed in our manager and he gave us the confidence to succeed. 'Shanks' was unique."

Shankly saw Liverpool's experiences in Europe as a learning process, and used the tactics in the cut and thrust of the English game. "We were the first team to use the flat back four, and Shanks was well ahead of his time."

Liverpool won the League title in 1966 for the second time in three seasons, after, losing only two of their last 19 games, and reached the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup, where they were beaten 2-1 by Borussia Dortmund, but they had turned the corner, and their haul of silverware has been steady ever since. The local community is still benefiting.

"The former players don't need much of an excuse to have a dinner or a golf day to celebrate the anniversary of this League title or that cup win," St John says." And the money we raise goes to charities that contribute to the needy in the Liverpool area."

1 Gordon Milne (Wigan Athletic)

One of Shankly's first signings, Milne was a regular in the midfield. He was capped 14 times for England, but was left out of the 1966 World Cup squad after being named in the original party. Joined Blackpool a year later and then went into management.
He was in charge at Wigan, Coventry, Leicester, Besiktas in Turkey and Nagoya Grampus 8 in Japan. He also coached the England youth team. Now works closely with Sir Bobby Robson at Newcastle

2 Gerry Byrne

He went down in Liverpool folklore when he broke his collarbone early in the 1965 FA Cup final against Leeds and played on for 117 minutes, supplying the cross for Liverpool's first goal in their 2-1 extratime win. Byrne joined the club in 1955 but was on the transfer list when Shankly took over. The manager kept him on to bolster the defence. After winning two England caps, he retired in 1969 because of injury. He became a carpenter and joiner, and worked as an odd-jobs man at Pontins holiday camp in north Wales. He has since retired and lives in Aintree

3 Tommy Lawrence (Liverpool)

He was known as the "Flying Pig" because of his acrobatics and agility, despite weighing nearly 14st. The Liverpool goalkeeper joined the club as a 15-year-old amateur in 1957, and after waiting five years for his League debut, he kept the No 1 shirt for eight years, missing only four games. Lawrence, who won three Scotland caps, moved to Tranmere in 1971. When he quit football, he worked the night shift at a wire factory in Warrington. He has retired.

4 Ron Yeats (Liverpool)

When Shankly signed Yeats for 30,000 pounds from Dundee United in 1961, he told the media: "I've just signed a colossus. Come In and walk round him"' The 6ft 2in centrehalf was an inspirational captain who used his size and astuteness to dominate in the air. After 454 games for the Reds, he moved in 1971 to Tranmere, where he became manager. He went into the haulage business and then catering before returning to Anfield, where he is a scout

5 Chris Lawler (Liverpool)

He was one ofthe original overlapping fu1lbacks in football, and scored 61 goals in 549 matches, using stealth and speed down the right flank. Lawler, a quiet member of the team, earned his debut in 1963, and was inked on to the teamsheet two years later, when he started a run of 241 consecutive games from October 1965 until April 1971. An England international, he had spells at Portsmouth and Stockport. He lives in Liverpool and coaches children.

6 Willie Stevenson (Stoke City)

The Leith born left half was settling into a new life in Australia when Shankly persuaded him to return to Britain. Stevenson had grown despondent playing for the reserves at Rangers, and moved to Anfield in October 1962. His fine passitig ability earned him 241,appearances for the club, but when he lost his place to Emlyn Hughes in 1967, he moved to Stoke City and then Tramnere. He became a publican and also ran a contract cleaning service. Now retired, he lives in Macclesfie1d

7 Ian Callaghan (Liverpool)

Playing a record 856 games for the club, Callaghan ran for Liverpool, up and down bright wing. He was a junior at the club when Shankly arrived in 1959 and was still there when the manager left in 1974. In fact, he was still there when Liverpool won their first European Cup in 1977, playing in central field at the age of 35. He turned out for Swansea and Crewe, then opened a pub in Rufford with former teammate Geoff Strong. He works for Littlewoods on their Spot The Ball competition .

8 Roger Hunt (Bolton Wanderers)
One of England's World Cup-winning team of 1966, Hunt was a brilliant goal-scorer who found the net 18 times in 34 games for his country . He was as prolific for Liverpool, scoring 286 goals in 492 matches. But his signing was fortuitous. The Liverpool chief scout, Bill Jones, had gone to see a player from the opposition in a Mid Cheshire League game, when he spotted Hunt. He signed in 1959 and never looked back. A member of the pools panel, he later ran a family haulage business

9 Ian St John (Liverpool)

The Motherwell striker was considering a move to Newcastle when Shankly persuaded him that he would have a great future at Liverpool in 1961. So he signed for a then club record 37,000 pounds. His ability in the air and skill to dart between defenders provided the perfect foil for the more direct Hunt up front. St John scored 118 goals in 426 matches during his 10 years in a red shirt. He then joined Coventry , before going into management. He was in line to take over at Leeds after Don Revie, but the club instead chose Brian Clough. So St John joined Portsmouth. "They had no money, so I wasn't able to buy a single player in my three years there," he says.
"The promising juniors were Sold on, and BT cut off the telephone line because we couldn't pay for it. I had to find a public phone if I wanted to contact other clubs. We couldn't pay the bus company to get us to games, and had to wash all our own laundry . Talk about running a club on a shoe string." St John moved into television and struck up a successful partnership with Jimmy Greaves.

10 Tommy Smith (Liverpool)

He joined the ground staff as a 15-year-old in 1960 and spent 18 years at the club. A tough-tackling defender who played in 637 games, Smith capped his career when he scored in the 1977 European Cup final. A weekly newspaper column and after-dinner speaking engagements keep him busy

11 Peter Thompson (Liverpool)

His brilliant ball control on the left wing became an asset for Liverpool in August 1963, when he was signed from Preston , for 40,000 pounds. Thompson spent 12 years at , Anfield and played in 414 games, scoring 54 goals. He finished his career at Bolton and then ran two caravan parks. He had a county pub in the Lake District and manages a hotel in Harrogate


From The Sunday Times 24 August 2003. Sports Section, p 26.

Many thanks to Paul Gillespie, for saving me this article to include on the site

Return to the Caught In Time Index

 
Bob Dunning
17 November 2003

BobNet Logo

Click here for the latest Soccer headlines www.bobdunning.net