merse
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Post by merse on Nov 9, 2009 20:39:26 GMT
I sense some of us on this site are starting to tell the same tale for a second or third time. One of mine concerns a group of us - in Manchester for the United v City game at Old Trafford - knocking on the door of Maine Road one Saturday breakfast time in 1973. A cleaner lets us in and asks us where we're from. Once we say Torquay she starts reminiscing about "a smashing young man called John Benson" who'd left City for Plainmoor a good eight or nine years previously. Funny enough Barty, when I was new into my job at Plainmoor; the late Fred Easton made it possible for me to spend a short visit to the Commercial Department at Maine Road and on the Saturday we were playing at nearby Crewe Alexandra where I was to rendezvous for the coach back to Devon after the game. Whilst I was having one last look around the stadium I met the legendary Colin Bell in the treatment room and the attendant in there started going on about "Benno" and how he should never have left City as a youngster. I shared a taxi to Piccadilly Station with a young youth player whose name I've long forgotten, but on the train we were joined by someone who's name I will never forget ~ the great Wyn Davies who was playing against us for Alex that afternoon and he entertained us all the way with tales of "Mad" Harry Gregg the manager at Gresty Road! A very hospitable club was City in those days and in the true traditions of Manchester people, so friendly and down to earth.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 9, 2009 21:02:53 GMT
on the train we were joined by someone who's name I will never forget ~ the great Wyn Davies who was playing against us for Alex that afternoon Come on without Come on within You've not seen nothing like the Mighty Wyn
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Jon
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Post by Jon on Nov 11, 2009 0:11:16 GMT
......Certainly in 1954 we had dual 'stoppers' at the back in Webber himself and Griff Norman, which in retrospect was surprising as everywhere else was probably entrenched in the old 3-2-5........the formation was definitely 4-2-4. ......When Eric Webber retired from playing, Griff Norman moved from No.6 to No.5 and was mostly partnered by Jimmy James who was more of a defensive wing-half. So for the next two seasons it was back to 3-3-4. ......George Northcott played alone in the centre of defence, and at No.6 were successively Nobby Clarke, Eric Johnson and most notably Colin Rawson, none of whom could justify the modern description of central defender, but were more like 'holding players'. So once again it was virtually 3-3-4. ......Ray Spencer and David Hancock were also paired in 'midfield' during this period, but Colin Bettany and then Alan Smith still patrolled the centre of the defence unaided …...until the arrival of John Benson as sweeper and organiser in 1964......And yet, remarkably, looking back from these days when workrate is at a premium, there were still only two, Cox and Trevor Wolstenholme, in midfield, because Alan Smith and George Allen were by no stretch of the imagination overlapping full-backs, and Ernie Pym and Micky Somers certainly were not noted for 'tracking back' as wingers. This was 4-2-4 in its heyday and it was great to watch. Stewart, That is an absolutely fantastic post - very enlightening indeed. Thank you so much for taking the time to put that together. All the tactical shifts between the introduction of the defensive centre half in 1925 and Ramsey's wingercide forty years later seem to revolve around the players in the 4,6,8 and 10 shirts. I imagine that in just about any English team of that period the roles of numbers 1,2,5,3,7,9 and 11 stayed pretty much the same. I talked about WM becoming 4-2-4 through two separate changes - the inside forwards splitting into one striker and one midfielder and the wing halves splitting into one defender and one midfielder. What is clear from your post is that these two things did not necessarily happen together. I think the splitting of inside forwards was probably earlier and more widespread. As you say Collins and Mills was a classic pairing of two totally different types of inside forward - one goal poacher and one playmaker - much like the Greaves and Haynes England combination. Two Collinses or Greaveses would not miss any chances, but might not create many. Two Millses or Hayneses would create plenty but might not stick so many away. Inside forwards splitting but wing halves staying as they were would leave, as you say, a kind of 3-3-4 - or almost a 3-2-1-4 with two tackling half-backs protecting the playmaker - a Mills or a Haynes. Looking at TUFC teams from 1946 to 1964, it does look as if they mostly turned out in a 3-2-1-4 – with the exception that you note of the two and a half seasons when Webber and Norman played together. It appears that we were quite “ahead of our time” then in playing 4-2-4, but as you say that was probably a case of having two excellent “centre backs” and having to accommodate them rather than a tactical masterplan. Before Norman established himself in the team, Lewis and Towers look like a pair of half-backs and after Webber hung up his boots so do Lewis and James, Lloyd or Clarke. It is interesting that when Webber stopped playing, it does not appear to have crossed his mind to bring in another centre half and stick with 4-2-4. That almost suggests that having to accommodate himself and Norman was an inconvenience and he was happy to get back to a back three and two proper half backs. Another interesting point is that when Webber missed a match during the Webber/ Norman years, he would replace himself with a proper centre half in Henry McGuinness. Whenever Norman missed a game he would be replaced by a wing half such as Towers or Lloyd. So we only ever played the back four when Norman was in the team. Now you have sorted out the 1950s and 60s Stewart, do you have any older friends who can come on here and tell us all about the 20s, 30s and 40s?
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Post by stewart on Nov 11, 2009 19:05:37 GMT
Following all my reminiscences of 1950s and 60s in my earlier post, I also remembered what was an hilarious incident in a match against Southend United at Plainmoor in the early 60s, although it has more to do with programme changes than tactical formations.
The programme stated that the Southend No. 11 was due to be Billy Wall, their usual outside left. In fact he was replaced by Bud Houghton, a centre forward who, shall we say, knew how to put himself about.
After a series of very robust tackles and challenges by Houghton, one elderly individual on the popside began to berate him with such cries as "You dirty bastard, Wall!!" or "You're a f*****g disgrace, Wall!!"
Eventually Houghton got fed up with all of this, turned on the person concerned and roared at him "My name's not Wall, you f*****g stupid old git! I'll put you through that f*****g wall over there if you don't shut your mouth!"
Never have I seen a supporter shrink so quickly into a state of panic and embarrassment.
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Dave
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Post by Dave on Nov 11, 2009 19:40:08 GMT
stewart what wonderful contributions you have made on the forum this week, a real joy to read and I marvel at your great memory. I'm sure in many years to come others will read your posts and learn so much about TUFC.
I loved the story you have told and shows that while the game has changed so much over the years and as you say money has played the biggest part in that, fans have not changed.
I joked once about having a time machine as I would love to be standing on the popside for a game in the 50's and it would be great if when you have the time you could write a post that compares how it felt being a fan back then, to how you feel today.
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merse
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Post by merse on Nov 11, 2009 19:42:43 GMT
A group of us were at Griffin Park watching a youth game one evening where the number 7 was impressing us. There being no programmes we didn't know who he was until Romford Kev bawled out to him "Number 7 what's your name?"The poor kid was so shocked he gave us his name, date of birth and agent's phone number!
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 11, 2009 20:25:41 GMT
stewart what wonderful contributions you have made on the forum this week, a real joy to read and I marvel at your great memory. I'm sure in many years to come others will read your posts and learn so much about TUFC. Agreed. Brilliant stuff.
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Post by phipsy on Nov 13, 2009 18:12:48 GMT
great message jm gull relating to harry smith. i played with him for 1 season for the old torbay gents team,along with your old man. he would give you the most mercllious bollockings during a game. he ws ok when you earned his respect and he realised you were not a complete dummy.
previously someone mentioned sammy collins and his penalties, well the first one saw him take was early in the 54-55 season against millwall at plainmoor.it was saved by malcom finlayson,later a wolves star. i believe it was the only one not converted in collins carear. i am a bit surprised that goalkeepers didn/t latch on the fact that he always put them to the keepers left.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 16, 2009 22:22:46 GMT
One or two further thoughts.
Firstly, the original issue of formations in programmes considering 2-3-5 was routinely used for at least forty years after the introduction of the third defender in the mid 1920s. Maybe its' retention was purely habitual or even simply stylistic in that it added visual variety to the programme? A "diagramatic representation" in the same way the tube map was just a diagram? And was it dropped because it was out-dated or merely to incorporate the inclusion of substitutes in line-ups from the mid 1960s?
Secondly, the issue of how Torquay United played in the 1920s, 1930s and even earlier. Are we to take it that 2-3-5 - common currency by the late 1880s (having mutated from 1-2-7 and 2-2-6) - was the vogue from the club's formation in 1899 right through until around the time we entered the Football League? Thereafter did we go into the Football League with a third defender?
Thirdly, I'm intrigued by the extent people discussed tactics and formations before I became aware of arrangement such as 4-2-4 and 4-3-3 as a kid in the mid 1960s. At the time 4-2-4, for instance, always seemed to be mentioned in the same breath as the Brazilian World Cup teams of 1958 and 1962 (although that's not quite how it was according to the Jonathan Wilson book). Is that how it was described at the time? Equally was it always "WM" or was a numerical interpretation used for that formation?
In other words were fans talking "numbers" back in the 1950s?
Lastly, thanks to Jon for mentioning Jack Butler's name in conjunction with the introduction of the third defender in the 1920s. That's a nice little Torquay United connection and a change from Herbie "Policeman" Roberts getting all the glory.
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Dave
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Post by Dave on Nov 16, 2009 22:38:48 GMT
Barton, I’m not sure if was just the case at my secondary modern school, but when we were taught football and played in games for the school, we were only taught one formation and that is how I thought the game was played by every team at any level back then.
We are talking about the years between 1965 and 1970
The number on your shirt would correspond with the position you were playing.
We always lined up 3- 4-3
Keeper, right back, centre half, left back, right midfield, left midfield , right wing, left wing, centre forward, inside left, inside right
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merse
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Post by merse on Nov 17, 2009 3:56:48 GMT
Barton, I’m not sure if was just the case at my secondary modern school, but when we were taught football and played in games for the school, we were only taught one formation and that is how I thought the game was played by every team at any level back then. That football pitch at Coronation Road had to be the smallest pitch I ever played sport on, it was only really suitable for eight a side. During the summer when it was in use as an athletics track you had to do eight laps to get a mile in and ended up feeling giddy! We used to play rugby with Highweek, sending our Second Fifteen along to play your Firsts and it wasn't a fixture we fulfilled with much enthusiasm I can tell you. You had a very good fullback called Phil Loder who could kick goals at the other end from underneath his own crossbar and the fastest thing on two legs I've ever tried to catch ~ Keith Payne, who would run you ragged if you gave him an inch of space.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 17, 2009 8:44:45 GMT
when we were taught football and played in games for the school, we were only taught one formation and that is how I thought the game was played by every team at any level back then. We are talking about the years between 1965 and 1970 The number on your shirt would correspond with the position you were playing. We always lined up 3- 4-3 Keeper, right back, centre half, left back, right midfield, left midfield , right wing, left wing, centre forward, inside left, inside right That sounds like an evolution of WM (which dates from the 1920s) rather than the ancient 2-3-5 (from the 1870s). Nonetheless - with the exception of midfielders as opposed to half-backs - all the traditional positions are mentioned in Dave's formation. I've lifted this representation of WM from Wiki: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Formation_(association_football)It's been initimated in this thread that we would now see this as 3-2-2-3 although, as the Wiki article suggests, it would also have been variously seen as 3-4-3 or 3-2-5. Provided I'm reading his post correctly, Dave's formation differs from classic WM in that the four midfielders are strung across the pitch - as opposed to attacking and defensive midfielders (inside-forwards and half-backs respectively in old terminology) - and that the wingers are amongst the midfield four rather than the front three. But there's still no sign of a fourth defender and - as Stewart implies - there are examples dating from the 1950s of Torquay United playing with four defenders (see discussion of the Webber/Norman pairing). That, to use Merse's theory about football in schools, either suggests some teachers were still behind the times in Dave's 1965-1970 period (but maybe not quite as outmoded as we'd originally thought) or - with a more charitable outlook - well ahead of the game in playing a flexible 3-4-3 formation. Yet it's the lack of a fourth defender that intrigues me. Looking at Jonathan Wilson's book the extra defender is absent from Spurs' double winning side of 1961 (Blanchflower and Mackay in front of Baker, Norman and Henry in 3-2-2-3) but he's there for England in 1966 and for Celtic in the European Cup final of 1967 (which Timbo remembers well). Are we to take it that, by 1965-1970, the fourth defender was virtually universal in professional football but still largely absent from schools football? And what of the Western League and the South Devon League in the 1950s and 1960s? How was the game being played at local semi-professional and amateur level? Was this different from other parts of the country? Indeed, it would be interesting to know how quickly tactical ideas spread in those largely pre-televised football days. By contrast I can still remember the outbreak of "sweepers" - at nearly every level of the game - at the start of the 1990/1991 season after the Italian World Cup....
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Post by aussie on Nov 17, 2009 9:40:37 GMT
1 Keeper 2 5 3 Right back Sweeper Left back 4 6 Right half Left half 7 8 9 10 11 Right wing Inside right Striker Inside left Left wing Thats what we were taught in under 10`s, by under 12`s whether we meant it or not would line up like that and nearly instantly drift to a natural WM with the two half players spreading wide and the two inside players droping in behind the striker, it worked really well for along time especially when we were up against massive Greak or Italian hairy tree trunk legged giants! 1978 that was, the game seemed to evolve into some wierd and wonderful formations after that! Exactly what I put Dave, this is how it was back in the day when we were nippers!
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Post by stewart on Nov 18, 2009 0:03:53 GMT
This thread has certainly thrown up some intriguing questions, not least those posed by Barton in his last two posts.
He asks: "Were fans talking numbers back in the 1950s?"
I'm pretty certain that the answer is no, in fact I don't think that it even dawned on football fans to think in terms of numerically expressed formations.
The key to this is, I believe, the way teams were shown in programmes from the Second World War until the late 60s, i.e. in a virtual 2-3-5 formation. For supporters during that era, this was how their teams always lined up.
There were slight changes in that shape as time passed , namely the withdrawal of the centre-half and also of one inside-forward, but these were not sufficiently significant as to make readers feel that the programme was incorrect or out of date.
The fact that lists eventually replaced birds eye views in programmes could well be due, as Barton suggests, to the need to name the substitute, but it could also be that compilers of the programme were no longer sure how a team would line up, such were the changes in tactics taking root at the time.
I personally never heard anyone at a match, or elsewhere for that matter, mention WM, in fact I was always under the impression that this was a 'phrase' which was mostly employed by intellectual, blackboard-orientated 'coaches' of whom Walter Winterbottom was the most acclaimed.
Some of the descriptions of formations from the past, such as 2-3-5, 3-2-5 and WM were, I believe, not adopted and repeated by fans, in this country at least, until a definite change to 4-2-4 brought about the need for easily understood comparisons.
Much as I would wish to cast any doubt on the shape of Dave's team at school, I can't see that WM in its literal form (3-4-3) has ever been a recognised formation at Football League level, and my problem with this lies at the front of a team rather than at the back.
WM implies wingers flanking a single centre-forward which, while possibly being seen in the modern era (Carlisle-Sills-Stevens in some matches being a simple example), was certainly never employed while there were only three at the back. Generally, inside- or centre-forwards have played as pairs, even under Alf Ramsey when wingers were thought to be obsolete.
I believe that the permanent introduction of the fourth defender (as opposed to the temporary Webber/Norman pairing at Torquay), can also be traced back to the influence of Sir Alf. In the 1962 World Cup, Bobby Moore played as a conventional wing-half alongside Ron Flowers, yet by 1966 he had taken up a position next to Jack Charlton as a kind of safety net to his less talented partner.
One could say that a similar change took place at Torquay, where John Benson slotted in next to Colin Bettany and then Reg Wyatt. Interestingly, when Alan Smith was given another spell in central defence alongside Wyatt and then Ken Brown, Benson's role became that of a marauding sweeper in front of these two, sniffing out trouble and closing people down with great effect.
After 1966, most clubs began to adopt 4-3-3 as their preferred formation, although a few went with Ramsey and used a stopper with a skilful player like Moore, some simply went for two stoppers, while others (Tottenham, Dave Mackay and Manchester United, Nobby Stiles) had a hard-tackling minder as cover for Mike England and Bill Foulkes).
Barton also mentions the obsession with sweepers in later years, particularly after Italia 90. I myself played in that position in Hampshire League football throughout the 1970s, covering across the whole of the back line of three. When we played a strong side, I would only venture upfield for corners, but against weaker teams I would frequently run out to support the midfield. I loved every minute of it.
Some years ago, a friend of mine and I were having a discussion about the ideal game of football. I have always been a lover of end-to-end play and entertainment, and said that I would much rather a game ended 5-3 any day. My friend was adamant that a 1-0 scoreline was better as it would mean that fewer mistakes had been made. I could never understand that point of view.
I recently began to think about why the game is played as it is in modern times, with all the frantic running, tackling and tactical obsession. When I first started watching football, we had three defenders and four forwards. Now we often have five defenders and one forward and the whole encounter is submerged in a morass of 'workrate' and pre-arranged planning. Why?
I came to the conclusion, quite simple really, that it is because everyone has followed suit and now does it. At various stages in the past decades, the game has been influenced by cautious or over-dogmatic individuals to the detriment of the game as a spectacle and of players' techniques in shooting or heading at goal, among other things.
If only TV footage of games played in the 1950s or 60s were still available, people who disagree with that would at least have the opportunity to judge for themselves. It's all about personal opinion, after all.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 20, 2009 22:51:32 GMT
Another smashing contribution from Stewart to this thread.
Amongst all the great points made, it seems to confirm my suspicion that "numbers" were only widely quoted with the switch to 4-2-4 a few years before I became interested in the game. Certainly, leafing through old copies of Soccer Star, there appears to have been sceptimism about such "technicalities". Indeed, as Stewart reminds us, that sort of stuff was seen as the preserve of the Walter Winterbottoms of this world (and you can imagine my dad's opinion in that direction). What would that generation now make of the fact we've gone to four numbers in many instances?
I've now reached page 57 of Inverting the Pyramid and it mentions the FA's decision to make shirt numbers compulsory in 1939. In fact this may have only been a Football League decision at the time and, for sure, bigger events put paid to its implementation in the 1939/40 season. The point, however, is that shirt numbers were assigned following the logic of 2-3-5 even though it was largely out-of-vogue in English professional football by then.
I guess this simple decision did much to perpetuate the myth of 2-3-5 and instil in us the idea of numbers assigned to positions in time-honoured fashion. The counter-argument is to ask what if numbers had been applied à la WM in 1939? Would we have had something like this?
- - 1 - - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11
Big number 3s and 10s; creative 7s, speedy 9s - not quite the same, eh? And that classical pyramid layout did look so good in the programme....
Thanks again for the contributions.
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