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26-11-2013, 01:34 AM | #11 | |
first team
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
Lebih cocok disini Oom @troy andreas;
Selamat jalan Bill Foulkes.. Quote:
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26-11-2013, 01:47 AM | #12 |
first team
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
ManUtd 25/11/2013
Foulkes: A giant remembered As a footballer and as a man, Bill Foulkes defined the strong, silent type. Undemonstrative, implacable, near-metronomically reliable and utterly ruthless in the execution of his job, he was a key cornerstone of the Manchester United rearguard for more than a decade and a half, selected more times by Matt Busby than any other player during his managerial reign. Even the exuberantly ungovernable talents of Duncan Edwards and Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and George Best, the acknowledged icons of Busby's glittering empire in the 1950s and 1960s, needed a solid platform from which to unfurl, and that's where Foulkes came in. Seldom did he garner headlines of his own - though he made a glorious exception one heady night in Madrid when he fired the Reds into the final of the European Cup - but the Old Trafford boss, a master at blending disparate individuals into a compelling whole, recognised the incalculable worth of the whipcord-tough ex-miner to the United cause. Together they collected two league titles when Bill was still a young man learning the game as part of the legendary Babes, a tag of which Busby, incidentally, was not unduly fond. They both survived the Munich catastrophe of 1958, then were at the heart of a painstaking reconstruction process which led to FA Cup triumph, two more league championships and, the ultimate achievement, the lifting of the European crown 10 years on from the tragedy. Along the way the modest, taciturn Lancastrian shattered the United appearance record previously held by between- the-wars marksman Joe Spence, an outcome that frankly astonished certain sceptics at the club, who were less than impressed by his ball skills when he appeared in a trial game at St Bede's College, the headquarters of the Lancashire FA, in 1950. In all honesty, Foulkes, too, harboured his own doubts, which is why he insisted on enlisting as a part-timer when he was offered an Old Trafford contract in 1951. Thus he kept his job at Lea Green colliery near his home in St Helens, spending five days a week below ground, heaving trucks of coal which had slipped from the track back on to the rails, and training with United on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. It was back-breaking labour at the coalface, but Bill was a fitness fanatic who relished the task, and he was still a pitman - albeit by now a trainee assistant manager - when he was called into Matt Busby's office in December 1952 to be informed that he was to make his senior debut at right- back the next day against Liverpool at Anfield. Though he was nursing a sore ankle, he concealed the injury, desperate to grab the opportunity even though his direct opponent would be the Merseysiders' magnificent Scottish international flankman Billy Liddell. In the event, the formidably pacy Liddell opened the scoring after 10 minutes, but the feisty Foulkes refused to be cowed, settling to meet the challenge and eventually shining so brightly in a 2-1 victory that he was retained for the next game. After that his ankle ballooned and he missed the remainder of the campaign, but he had laid down a significant marker and in 1953/54 he displaced Tommy McNulty to claim the no.2 shirt on a regular basis. Such was Foulkes' consistent excellence in Busby's refreshing young team that, while still spending most of his working hours at the bottom of a pit-shaft, he was rewarded with what was to prove his only full England call- up, to face Northern Ireland in October 1954. Only after completing a Lea Green shift did he sail for Belfast to join his fellow internationals, then performed with customary competence in a 2-0 win before re-crossing the Irish Sea to resume his double life, an unimaginable scenario today. Having thus far resisted Busby's repetitive entreaties to become a full-time footballer, not least because he was making more money from mining than he was from the game, Bill relented in mid-decade, just as the Babes as a unit were evolving from precocious rookies into serial high-achievers. Captained by left-back Roger Byrne, and featuring the stellar likes of wing-halves Eddie Colman and Duncan Edwards, and marksmen Tommy Taylor, Dennis Viollet and Billy Whelan, United romped away with the league titles of 1955/56 and 1956/57 and lost the '57 FA Cup final to Aston Villa only after being reduced to 10 men for most of the match when goalkeeper Ray Wood suffered a controversial injury. In addition, with Bill an automatic selection at right-back, they had blazed a British trail into Europe, bowing only to the incomparable Real Madrid in the semi-final of the European Cup in 1957, then reaching the last four again in February 1958. That was when calamity overtook Manchester United. Twenty-three people lost their lives at Munich, including eight players, while two more were so fearfully maimed that they never competed again. Foulkes climbed from the wreckage of the crashed plane, physically unharmed but bearing mental scars that would never leave him. Less than two weeks later he was back in action, skippering a patchwork United side on an emotional rollercoaster ride which, against all odds, culminated in another FA Cup final, which was lost to Bolton Wanderers. Thereafter Busby, who had escaped only narrowly with his own life, set about rebuilding his decimated team. Soon Foulkes, who quickly relinquished the captaincy as he wasn't ready for it, was switched to his preferred position of centre-half, where he looked twice the performer he had ever been as a flank defender. Invariably facing the play with majestic composure instead of having to twist and turn against elusive touchline tricksters, he became one of the most dominant stoppers in the land, virtually unbeatable in the air, eye-wateringly ferocious in the tackle and intelligent in his reading of the action. In this pivotal role he helped to collect the FA Cup in 1963 and then, forming an outstanding partnership with the diminutive but fearsomely combative and equally astute Nobby Stiles, he was rarely absent as league titles were secured in 1965 and '67. That he was never called to his country's colours as a central defender can be explained only by his veteran status, having reached his mid-30s when he became a champion for the fourth time. However, that lack of recognition appears all the more perverse in view of his enduring influence as United - so fittingly in view of all that had gone before - went on to become the first English winners of the European Cup in 1968. Despite a debilitating knee injury which would have finished the careers of less resolute characters, Bill was a back-line bulwark throughout most of that term, yet it was as an opportunist hitman late in the second leg of the semi-final at the Bernabeu that he made his most sensational contribution. With the aggregate score at 3-3 after a United fightback, George Best danced down the right touchline and pulled the ball across the box. Bobby Charlton, Brian Kidd, maybe Johnny Aston might have been on the end of it, but it was Bill, who rarely left his own half, who astounded his team- mates by surging forward to slot home with a clinical efficiency that even the absent Denis Law could not have bettered. Still more climactically, in the final against Benfica at Wembley, the indomitable 36-year-old gave one of his most combatively effective displays, subduing the towering Portuguese target man Jose Torres, whose complaints to the referee about the calf lacerations inflicted by Bill as he repeatedly climbed above him fell on deaf ears. True, Torres escaped for one fleeting moment, in which he set up Benfica's late equaliser, but it was the heroic Foulkes who prevailed, United running out 4-1 victors after extra time. Thereafter, Bill made only a handful more senior appearances, fundamentally helping out when younger men earmarked to replace him had been found wanting, before concentrating on coaching, first at Old Trafford, and then successfully in the United States, Norway and Japan. Bill Foulkes, a devoted family man not enamoured of hectic socialising, was never dripping in stardust; but he was a loyal, supremely dedicated, vastly proficient professional - and he was a winner. |
26-11-2013, 01:51 AM | #13 |
first team
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
ManUtd 25/11/2013
Sir Alex's tribute to Bill Foulkes Sir Alex Ferguson has expressed his respect for Manchester United legend Bill Foulkes, who passed away in the early hours of Monday morning. The former United manager, now a club director and ambassador, says that Foulkes was a topic of conversation between himself and Sir Bobby Charlton only yesterday. "I was very sad to hear the news," Sir Alex told ManUtd.com. "Bobby and I were talking about Bill yesterday on the way down to Cardiff. He was a really nice man and a great servant to the club, too. “When I first came in as manager, Bill was managing in Norway and he used to bring players over to training at the Cliff. He came to training quite a lot and I got to know him well through that. He was such a nice, quiet man to know.” Having risen up from the coal mines to the peak of European football with United, via the tragedy and turmoil of surviving the Munich air disaster, Bill’s place in club folklore is set in stone. The defender captained a hastily-assembled United side less than a fortnight after Munich and, Sir Alex says, that courage made him a beacon during the Reds’ darkest hour. “The story of his life was absolutely incredible,” he said, “and he’s assured of his place in our history by his appearances and by the way he performed, particularly in the aftermath of the Munich air disaster. “Having gone through that, how he and Harry Gregg managed to perform a couple of weeks later, leading those young lads out against Sheffield Wednesday – and winning the game - was absolutely incredible. He was an exceptional man.” |
26-11-2013, 02:12 AM | #14 |
first team
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
Foulkes ke 4 dari kanan. Pict saat semifinal Bernabeu Sir Matt Busby dan Bill Foulkes saat perayaan Champion 1968 Bill Foulkes dengan The Busby Babes. Dia barisan belakang, dua dari kiri (Kiri ke kanan)Wilf McGuinness, Bill Foulkes, Mark Jones, Eddie Colman dan Ray Wood. Foulkes dan Harry Gregg saat menjenguk Kenny Morgans di Munich Foulkes memimpin skuad masuk ke lapangan pada laga pertama setelah tragedi Munich.. |
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26-11-2013, 06:57 AM | #15 |
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
R.I.P Bill Foulkes #Legend
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26-11-2013, 12:06 PM | #16 |
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
Gw ga terlalu ngerti kisah perjalanan Foulkes, dan mungkin di waktu senggang gw coba mengenal lebih deket lg. Yang pasti namanya udah ga familiar lg karena sbg salah satu yg selamat di tragedi munich..
RIP, Legend! Always be Remembered!
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26-11-2013, 04:01 PM | #17 | ||
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
Quote:
Bill follows Jimmy Murphy ahead of the FA Cup Final at Wembley in 1958. Bill training solo at Old Trafford in 1960. Bill meets Prince Philip before the 1963 FA Cup Final. Bill and the lads salute the 1967 league title triumph.
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28-11-2013, 08:27 AM | #18 |
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
RIP our legend
slamat jalan gbu |
25-11-2015, 10:08 AM | #19 |
manager
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
TRIBUTE TO UNITED STALWART BILL FOULKES
Two years ago, Manchester United lost one of the giants of the club's illustrious history when Bill Foulkes passed away at the age of 81. Only three players - Ryan Giggs, Sir Bobby Charlton, Paul Scholes - have made more appearances for the Reds than the Munich survivor won four league titles, the FA Cup and the European Cup. Sir Alex Ferguson described him as an "exceptional man" while Sir Bobby feels simply he is a "hero"... As a footballer and as a man, Bill Foulkes defined the strong, silent type. Undemonstrative, implacable, near-metronomically reliable and utterly ruthless in the execution of his job, he was a key cornerstone of the Manchester United rearguard for more than a decade and a half, selected more times by Matt Busby than any other player during his managerial reign. Even the exuberantly ungovernable talents of Duncan Edwards and Charlton, Denis Law and George Best, the acknowledged icons of Busby's glittering empire in the 1950s and 1960s, needed a solid platform from which to unfurl, and that's where Foulkes came in. Seldom did he garner headlines of his own - though he made a glorious exception one heady night in Madrid when he fired the Reds into the final of the European Cup - but the Old Trafford boss, a master at blending disparate individuals into a compelling whole, recognised the incalculable worth of the whipcord-tough ex-miner to the United cause. Together they collected two league titles when Bill was still a young man learning the game as part of the legendary Babes, a tag of which Busby, incidentally, was not unduly fond. They both survived the Munich catastrophe of 1958, then were at the heart of a painstaking reconstruction process which led to FA Cup triumph, two more league championships and, the ultimate achievement, the lifting of the European crown 10 years on from the tragedy. Along the way the modest, taciturn Lancastrian shattered the United appearance record previously held by between-the-wars marksman Joe Spence, an outcome that frankly astonished certain sceptics at the club, who were less than impressed by his ball skills when he appeared in a trial game at St Bede's College, the headquarters of the Lancashire FA, in 1950. ANFIELD DEBUT In all honesty, Foulkes, too, harboured his own doubts, which is why he insisted on enlisting as a part-timer when he was offered an Old Trafford contract in 1951. Thus he kept his job at Lea Green colliery near his home in St Helens, spending five days a week below ground, heaving trucks of coal which had slipped from the track back on to the rails, and training with United on Tuesday and Thursday evenings. It was back-breaking labour at the coalface, but Bill was a fitness fanatic who relished the task, and he was still a pitman - albeit by now a trainee assistant manager - when he was called into Matt Busby's office in December 1952 to be informed that he was to make his senior debut at right-back the next day against Liverpool at Anfield. Though he was nursing a sore ankle, he concealed the injury, desperate to grab the opportunity even though his direct opponent would be the Merseysiders' magnificent Scottish international flankman Billy Liddell. In the event, the formidably pacy Liddell opened the scoring after 10 minutes, but the feisty Foulkes refused to be cowed, settling to meet the challenge and eventually shining so brightly in a 2-1 victory that he was retained for the next game. After that his ankle ballooned and he missed the remainder of the campaign, but he had laid down a significant marker and in 1953/54 he displaced Tommy McNulty to claim the no.2 shirt on a regular basis. ENGLAND CALL Such was Foulkes' consistent excellence in Busby's refreshing young team that, while still spending most of his working hours at the bottom of a pit-shaft, he was rewarded with what was to prove his only full England call-up, to face Northern Ireland in October 1954. Only after completing a Lea Green shift did he sail for Belfast to join his fellow internationals, then performed with customary competence in a 2-0 win before re-crossing the Irish Sea to resume his double life, an unimaginable scenario today. Having thus far resisted Busby's repetitive entreaties to become a full-time footballer, not least because he was making more money from mining than he was from the game, Bill relented in mid-decade, just as the Babes as a unit were evolving from precocious rookies into serial high-achievers. Captained by left-back Roger Byrne, and featuring the stellar likes of wing-halves Eddie Colman and Duncan Edwards, and marksmen Tommy Taylor, Dennis Viollet and Billy Whelan, United romped away with the league titles of 1955/56 and 1956/57 and lost the '57 FA Cup final to Aston Villa only after being reduced to 10 men for most of the match when goalkeeper Ray Wood suffered a controversial injury. MUNICH DISASTER In addition, with Bill an automatic selection at right-back, the Reds had marched boldly into Europe, bowing only to the incomparable Real Madrid in the semi-final of the European Cup in 1957, then reaching the last four again in February 1958. That was when calamity overtook Manchester United. Twenty-three people lost their lives at Munich, including eight players, while two more were so fearfully maimed that they never competed again. Foulkes climbed from the wreckage of the crashed plane, physically unharmed but bearing mental scars that would never leave him. Less than two weeks later, he was back in action, skippering a patchwork United side on an emotional rollercoaster ride which, against all odds, culminated in another FA Cup final, which was lost to Bolton Wanderers. Thereafter Busby, who had escaped only narrowly with his own life, set about rebuilding his decimated team. Soon Foulkes, who quickly relinquished the captaincy as he wasn't ready for it, was switched to his preferred position of centre-half, where he looked twice the performer he had ever been as a flank defender. Invariably facing the play with majestic composure instead of having to twist and turn against elusive touchline tricksters, he became one of the most dominant stoppers in the land, virtually unbeatable in the air, eye-wateringly ferocious in the tackle and intelligent in his reading of the action. TROPHY HAUL In this pivotal role, Foulkes helped to collect the FA Cup in 1963 and then, forming an outstanding partnership with the diminutive but fearsomely combative and equally astute Nobby Stiles, he was rarely absent as league titles were secured in 1965 and 1967. That he was never called to his country's colours as a central defender can be explained only by his veteran status, having reached his mid-30s when he became a champion for the fourth time. However, that lack of recognition appears all the more perverse in view of his enduring influence as United - so fittingly in view of all that had gone before - went on to become the first English winners of the European Cup in 1968. EUROPEAN HERO Despite a debilitating knee injury which would have finished the careers of less resolute characters, Bill was a back-line bulwark throughout most of that term, yet it was as an opportunist hitman late in the second leg of the semi-final at the Bernabeu that he made his most sensational contribution. With the aggregate score at 3-3 after a United fightback, George Best danced down the right touchline and pulled the ball across the box. Bobby Charlton, Brian Kidd, maybe Johnny Aston might have been on the end of it, but it was Bill, who rarely left his own half, who astounded his team-mates by surging forward to slot home with a clinical efficiency that even the absent Denis Law could not have bettered. Still more climactically, in the final against Benfica at Wembley, the indomitable 36-year-old gave one of his most combatively effective displays, subduing the towering Portuguese target man Jose Torres, whose complaints to the referee about the calf lacerations inflicted by Bill as he repeatedly climbed above him fell on deaf ears. True, Torres escaped for one fleeting moment, in which he set up Benfica's late equaliser, but it was the heroic Foulkes who prevailed, United running out 4-1 victors after extra time. Thereafter, Bill made only a handful more senior appearances, fundamentally helping out when younger men earmarked to replace him had been found wanting, before concentrating on coaching, first at Old Trafford, and then successfully in the United States, Norway and Japan. Bill Foulkes, a devoted family man not enamoured of hectic socialising, was never dripping in stardust; but he was a loyal, supremely dedicated, vastly proficient professional - and he was a winner. http://www.manutd.com |
26-11-2015, 11:58 AM | #20 |
manager
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Re: [Legend] Bill Foulkes
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