Quote from: cdvillafan on April 23, 2011, 02:01:57 PMWhile I dislike Man U, the FA forced them to pull out of the FA Cup.yeah, cus Fergie always does everything the FA says
While I dislike Man U, the FA forced them to pull out of the FA Cup.
Quote from: john e on April 23, 2011, 03:25:32 PMQuote from: cdvillafan on April 23, 2011, 02:01:57 PMWhile I dislike Man U, the FA forced them to pull out of the FA Cup.yeah, cus Fergie always does everything the FA saysHe has to. They're to blame for so much but this one wasn't their fault.
For those who think the Beeb are blowing smoke up Manchester Uniteds arse, I'd avoid BBC2 on Thursday evening.
would much rather see a documentary on the FA cup final of the previous year, i think the mighty Busby Babes lost, you know the ones that were the greatest ever football team etc/quote]Actually the BBC did produce a documentary on this a couple of yrs back. It compared the '57 final with the 2007(?) final. I seem to recall that Villa had a lot of positive coverage in that.
would much rather see a documentary on the FA cup final of the previous year, i think the mighty Busby Babes lost, you know the ones that were the greatest ever football team etc
it is my opinion that this topic has no place on this board.
Stan started out with Aston Villa, with whom he won the FA Cup in 1957, beating Manchester United 2-1 in the final. Less than a year later, in February 1958, Stan had signed for United for £18,000 in the wake of the Munich air disaster, and scored on his debut against Sheffield Wednesday in the FA Cup! Stan’s signing was remarkable as he wasn’t too keen to leave Villa. Manchester United’s stand-in manager Jimmy Murphy recalls: "Eric Houghton was Villa manager at the time and he had told Stan that we were interested in him. He didn't want to leave Villa, but Eric got him to come to Old Trafford to watch the Sheffield Wednesday game.“On the way up he told him he thought that he should help us out, but Stan told him he hadn't brought any kit with him. ‘Don't worry, I've got your boots in my bag’, Eric said. We met at about half-past five and an hour before the kick-off he'd signed!"
It's also the reason they started to get supporters from all over the country. They don't need any more.I'd rather see a documentary about something that isn't already so well known. That bloke Friday that used to play for Reading or something like that.
Quote from: mal on April 23, 2011, 09:01:10 PMit is my opinion that this topic has no place on this board.Your entitled to your opinion my friend, but I would hope we continue to discuss other football related topics in addition to Ashley Youngs free kicks and Richard Dunnes waistline.The accepted protocol is to mark the topic '0%Villa' which is what I did.Having said that, one of our players Stan Crowther joined Man U as part of the need for them to field a 1st team for the rest of that season.Quote Stan started out with Aston Villa, with whom he won the FA Cup in 1957, beating Manchester United 2-1 in the final. Less than a year later, in February 1958, Stan had signed for United for £18,000 in the wake of the Munich air disaster, and scored on his debut against Sheffield Wednesday in the FA Cup! Stan’s signing was remarkable as he wasn’t too keen to leave Villa. Manchester United’s stand-in manager Jimmy Murphy recalls: "Eric Houghton was Villa manager at the time and he had told Stan that we were interested in him. He didn't want to leave Villa, but Eric got him to come to Old Trafford to watch the Sheffield Wednesday game.“On the way up he told him he thought that he should help us out, but Stan told him he hadn't brought any kit with him. ‘Don't worry, I've got your boots in my bag’, Eric said. We met at about half-past five and an hour before the kick-off he'd signed!"
Quote from: cdvillafan on April 23, 2011, 11:52:02 AMIt's also the reason they started to get supporters from all over the country. They don't need any more.I'd rather see a documentary about something that isn't already so well known. That bloke Friday that used to play for Reading or something like that.My Mate wrote a book on William Garbutt, 'The Godfather of Italian football'He went over there and radically changed the Italian game, because of him Italian players still refer to the Manager as 'Gaffer.'That would make a good documentary.