Manchester United News

Saturday, April 30, 2011

Bryan Robson - Manchester United Legend


Bryan Robson spent thirteen glorious years at Manchester United. He was nick-named Captain Marvel by the fans, and was part of the team that ended a twenty-six year wait for the League championship. In total Robson made 437 appearances and scored 99 goals for the club.

Born in 1957, Bryan Robson signed an apprenticeship with West Bromwich Albion at the age of fifteen in 1972 and he signed a professional contract with them in 1974. During the 1974-75 season he was a regular in the West Bromwich reserve team and finally made his first tem debut towards the end of that season.

During the 1975-76 season, Robson struggled to hold down a regular first team place, and it wasn't until the following year 1976-77 that he began to appear more regularly. West Brom were now back in the First division after winning promotion the previous year, and while Robson was now playing more regularly in the first team, his season was then marred by injury after he broke his leg twice and later in the season broke his ankle, the injuries keeping him out of the team for long periods.

By the 1978-79 season, Robson was now a regular in the West Brom team, now under the management of Ron Atkinson. Missing only one league game as Albion managed to finish 3rd in the First division and reached the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup quarter-finals. He starred again as Albion finished 4th during the 1980-81 season, but Albion fans feared that when Ron Atkinson left to manage Manchester United, Robson would follow him.

Although he was offered an improved contract, Robson signed for Man United for a then record ?1.5 million in October 1981. Wearing the famous No.7 shirt for Manchester United, Robson went onto become a true legend. Without a doubt he was one of the best midfielders ever to play for the club. He settled into the team quickly, and was soon appointed as the club captain.

Robson's greatest assets were his motivational influence, amazing stamina, quick to the tackle and he possessed great passing skills as well as a powerful shot and heading ability.

During the 1983 season he missed the League Cup Final through injury as United lost to Liverpool, but regained his fitness for the FA Cup final, as United went onto beat Brighton 4-0 after a replay, Robson scoring two of the goals, and lifting his first trophy as club captain. In 1985 he captained the team as they won another FA Cup final, this time over Everton, who had won the league and European Cup Winners Cup that season.

United started the 1985-86 season in championship winning form with ten successive wins, but their form dipped and they eventually finished without a trophy and fourth place in the league. Robson only played 21 out of 42 league games after suffering a dislocated shoulder.

It was 1990 before United won another trophy, now under the management of Alex Ferguson, as they beat Crystal Palace in the FA Cup final, and Robson lifted the Cup for the third time in his United career, but a poor league season had seen the Reds finish in 13th place in the league, with Robson again missing many league games through injury.

The following season saw Robson plagued by injury again, as he featured in only 17 league games, but he played in the European Cup Winners Cup Final as United beat Barcelona 2-1 to win the cup.

During the 1992-93 season Robson made 14 league appearances as United won the title, as he battled with injury and also for his place in the team when he was fit, as he competed with the likes of Paul Ince, Brian Mcclair and the newly signed Eric Cantona. It was fitting that Robson scored his only goal of the season in the last game away at Wimbledon, the game which secured the League title.

By the 1993-94 season Bryan Robson's first team opportunities were becoming less frequent, but he managed to make enough appearances to secure a winners medal as United won the league again.

Robson left the Reds at the end of the 1993-94 season, joining Middlesbrough as player-manager, but he will always be remembered as a Man United legend.








Steve Goodwin is an expert author, football fan and retailer of Manchester United football gifts which are available from the man united shop all items are available to ship worldwide.


Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Manchester United FC is Every Football Player's Dream Club


Manchester United FC (Football Club) is one of the greatest football clubs in the world. An English Premier League football club, the home ground of MU is at Old Trafford in Greater Manchester. Manchester United FC was formed in 1878 as Newton Heath and in 1892 the club joined the Football League. Manchester United has been playing in the top division of English football since 1938. The only years it didn't play was in the 1974-75 season.

Today, Manchester United FC is the reigning champions of the English Premier League since they won the 2008-09 Premier League Championship Trophy. It is considered as one of the most successful football clubs in the history of English football. Since 1986, the team has won 22 major honors under the guidance of Sir Alex Ferguson. In 1968, Manchester United became the first English club to win the European Cup after they defeated Benfica 4-1. They won the European Cup for the second time in 1999 followed by another win in 2008. They finished as the runner-up in 2009. Manchester United FC holds the joint record for maximum number of English league titles and FA cup wins with the former being 18 and the latter being 11.

This football team is also considered as one of the richest clubs in the world since the late 1990s. Currently, it is ranked as the most valuable as well as richest club in any sport across the world and has an overall estimated value worth £1.136 billion ($1.870 billion/EUR1.319 billion). Known to its fans as the "Red Devils", the current manager of Manchester United FC is Sir Alex Ferguson and captain is Gary Neville.

The Manchester United club was known as Newton Heath L&YR F.C. in 1878 and went almost bankrupt in 1902. It was saved from bankruptcy by J. H. Davies who was the managing director of Manchester Breweries. The club came to be officially named as Manchester United on 26 April 1902. Davies then changed the club's colors from white and navy to red, white and black, which is symbolic in modern football.

Since 1904, The Red Devils have been winning and losing in different seasons till Matt Busby was appointed in 1945 as the manager. Busby had innovative ideas and they paid rich dividends in the form of the club's performance. Manchester United finished second in the English league in 1947, 1948 and 1949 and won the FA Cup in 1948. The Red Devils went on to win the league again in 1956 and at that time the average age of the players was 22. The players scored as many as 103 goals through the championship. Known as the Busby Babes and led by Duncan Edwards, they went on to win the league again in 1956-57. The team also became the first team to compete in the European Cup. Manchester United on their way to the semi-final defeated Belgian Champions Anderlecht 10-0 and till this day, it stands as their biggest ever win in any competition.

The team was nearly wiped out by the Munich air disaster on 6 February 1958 but what didn't get wiped out was the spirit of the Red Devils. Even today, the clock at Old Trafford shows the time of the crash but since then the team was created from scratch and they went on to win the FA cup in 1963 and the UEFA Champions League in 1968.








Kelly Hunter owns and operates Soccer Training Equipment and writes about Soccer Training Camps


Saturday, April 23, 2011

Manchester United's Top 5 Strikers Before the Reign of Alex Ferguson


Manchester United, almost certainly the biggest football club in the world. As a result, they've had a few pretty decent players run out onto the pitch for them over the years. Rightly or wrongly, the position in any football team that gets the most attention is striker.

With that in mind, who have been the top strikers for Man United over the years? For what they are worth, here are my thoughts on the top 5 strikers in the years prior to Sir Alex's reign at United. Don't worry, I'm well aware not everyone who reads this will agree with me.

Let's start in the past and work forward - seems to be fairly logical. I'm going to claim that the first forward of real note is a certain Jack Rowley who was part of the team before and during the Busby Babes era. Rowley played for United between 1937 and 1955, amassing a grand total of 211 goals in 424 appearances. That alone gets him a spot among my top strikers.

Overlapping in time and therefore sharing the pitch, my next selection is Stan Pearson who scored 148 goals in 343 appearances playing between 1937 to 1953.

Next I've picked out Dennis Violet who played for the reds of Manchester in no fewer than 291 games during the Busby Babes period. The lightening quick centre forward scored 178 goals for United and was one of the survivors of the Munich air disaster.

Moving on we have non other than Bobby Charlton - now Sir Bobby Charlton of course. Another member of the Busby Babes who also survived the crash in Munich Bobby netted 249 times for United - the club record. For a long time he also held the record for the most appearances for the club at 758, a figure that has since been surpassed by Ryan Giggs.

My final selection, and surely few will question this one, is a certain Dennis Law. 'The King' or the 'Lawman' as he was affectionately know played for Manchester United between 1962 and 1973. During that time he played for United a total of 409 times, scoring an impressive 237 goals. Law won European Footballer of the year in 1965, during a season in which he top-scored for United with 28 and helped then to win their first league title since Munich.

Well, there you have it. My selection of the best strikers to play for United in pre-Ferguson. Why did I make the distinction and only feature forwards who played for Manchester United before Alex Ferguson became manager in 1986? Well, there have been a good many years since then so the Ferguson reign deserves special attention. There are plenty of great strikers who have played for the red half of Manchester under Sir Alex. Details of my pick of that bunch will have to wait for another day.








Emil Flore is a pretty keen sports watcher - though he doesn't actually play much sport himself! Among his sporting passions is a love of football. This is reflected in his site http://www.footballshirtsearch.co.uk where you fill find Manchester United Shirts along with football shirts for many other teams.


Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Roy Keane - Manchester United's Irish Rebel


In 1993, Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson paid a then club record fee of ?3.75 million for the gifted Irishman. While at Old Trafford, Roy Keane proceeded to make a total of 326 appearances for the Reds finding the back of the net on 33 occasions. When he finally decided to leave the club in 2005, the faithful stalwart had helped Manchester United to win six Premier League Championships, including two doubles in 1994 and 1996.

He could be brutally thuggish as a player scaring the living daylights out of his opponents. Keeping Hibernian tradition alive, he was also widely known for drinking just as hard as he played the game. Nonetheless, the hard working skirmisher emerged as one of the most important players in Sir Alex Ferguson's brilliant side of the 1990s. Driven by a manic perfectionism, the Irish rebel was eventually appointed Manchester United skipper before the start of the 1997-98 season. A swashbuckling character if there ever was one, Keane would never accept the prawn sandwich brigade at Old Trafford.

An Irish international, Roy Keane made his debut for the Republic of Ireland in a friendly match at home to Chile in May 1991 and was a regular member of the Irish side for eleven years earning a total of 66 full caps. In 2000, both the Football Writers and the Professional Footballers Association voted him their Player of the Year. His behaviour often raising eyebrows by number, he was without doubt a deep and complicated footballer. Now, if you take the Irishness out of Roy Keane, he would probably stop being Roy Keane.

"Sometimes you wonder, do they understand the game of football? They have a few drinks and probably the prawn sandwiches, and they don't realise what's going on out on the pitch." Roy Keane quote.








United Blog Articles is a website dedicated to Manchester United. Soccer is without doubt the most popular sport in the world. And it is probably only fair to say that Manchester United is the most popular club world wide. Read more on Roy Keane at United Blog Articles.


Saturday, April 16, 2011

Why Manchester United is the Most Popular Sports Team in the World - A Quick History Lesson

I was born in January 1960, less than two years after the air disaster at Munich. The legends who lost their lives that day should have been the first team I supported. I should have watched Tommy Taylor and Duncan Edwards in their prime, but like millions of others, I was robbed of that privilege when the aircraft carrying the team crashed into the icy ground at the end of the runway aMunich Airpot in 1958. This is the true story about my love affair with Manchester United. My story obviously begins in the early sixties, when I started to play, watch and love football, but before I can tell it, I need to share a few facts and a little history.

Manchester United is the biggest football club in the world. In fact, they are by far the biggest sports franchise in the world. This has major advantages, like the ability to sell merchandise all over the world, but it also has disadvantages like losing its identity as a local team. I personally will take the wealth, as long as it continues to be invested in the team, but there is an air of sadness when half the accents at Old Trafford don't speak properly.

United have been champions of Europe three times and have won the Premiership ten times, more than anybody else by a country mile. They have also won more FA Cups than any other team and are the only English team to be crowned Champions of the world, and they have achieved this glory twice. United have the biggest club stadium in Britain, holding more than 76,000 and this is way too small for most games. I've been disappointed so many times when I've failed to get a ticket to a big game. Applications are usually over-subscribed and the ballot seems to skip my membership number with glaring regularity. Old Trafford would easily fill 100,000 if there was a sensible way of expanding the stadium.

The current team is made up of millionaire superstars but this has not always been the case. In fact, they have not always been called Manchester United. Surprisingly, they have not always played in the famous red shirts either; their first kit was green and gold, reflecting the colours of the industrial company where it all began in a suburb of Manchester. In the nineteenth century, Manchester was the heartbeat of England. The industrial revolution was born in Manchester and it was the most productive industrial city in the world. Manchester was also the birthplace of the railway.

In 1878, a group of football mad railway workers created their own football club. They were called, Newton Heath L.Y.R. (Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway). Newton Heath was denied entry into the Football League on several occasions and because of the lack of ability to take on the wealthy teams of the day, they struggled financially. Like so many twists and turns in the United legend, this adversity led to opportunity and the birth of success. Club Captain Henry Stafford took his St Bernard dog to a fund raising event for the ailing club. The event itself barely broke even, and worst still, the dog went missing. A few days later the dog was discovered at the home of local brewer and wealthy businessman, Henry Davies. When Davies, a rugby and bowls fan, met with Henry Stafford, he was intrigued by the clubs story and bought them, injecting much needed cash. Like many a traveler on his last legs, Newton Heath had been saved by a St Bernard dog.

Henry Davies also moved the club to a new ground at Bank Street in Clayton. This was three miles away from the railway works at Newton Heath and closer to Manchester city centre. He decided to change the name of the club and after much soul searching the names of Manchester Central and Manchester Celtic were both turned down (thankfully) and Manchester United was born in 1902. Within two seasons United were promoted to the First Division (the premier league of its day) and in 1908, United won its first league title, now playing in the famous red shirts.

United were also moving forward off the pitch as well. In 1910, they moved from their old Bank Street Stadium to a new purpose built ground at Old Trafford. It was just in the nick of time. Two days after moving to Old Trafford, strong winds blew down the main wooden stand at Bank Street. Even in the early days, the fortunes of Manchester United would have made an Oscar winning Hollywood script.

When Old Trafford was opened on February 19th 1910 it was described as the best football stadium in the world. (It is remarkable how a century later it is still regarded as one of the best football stadiums in the world.) The cost of the 1910 version seems modest today but it was a small fortune of 60,000 pounds at the time, with a capacity of 80,000.

During the Second World War, the Luftwaffe added their bit of history to the legend by bombing the ground. It was 1949 before it re-opened; looking exactly the same as it had before the bombing. In 1950, a roof was added to the famous Stretford End which packed in 20,000 fanatical United supporters. When floodlights were installed in the late 1950's, Bobby Charlton recalled that thousands of fans were congregated outside the ground before the season had started. They just wanted to be part of the story and witness the floodlights for the first time. United has always had that type of support.

The team's fortunes were up and down throughout the 1920's and 1930's, mainly down. In 1930 they made their worst ever start to a season, losing their first twelve games, and we thought the seventies were bleak! It was in 1945 that Matt Busby joined United, having turned down Liverpool. Matt was still at the helm of the club twenty five years later.

Busby's impact was immediate, leading the team to second place in four out of five years before eventually winning the championship for the third time in the clubs history in 1952. This was the end of one era and the start of the most legendary period in the history of sport, the birth of the famous Busby Babes. The Babes redefined football, winning successive championships in 1956 and 1957.

Most of the Busby Babes had graduated through the ranks, starting with the youth team. Matt decided that although they were incredibly young, he could not leave them out of the first team. The average age of the team that won the championship in 1956 was just 22. The following year, they won it again with a teenager called Bobby Charlton now in the team. The team had eleven stars but the two stand outs were Duncan Edwards and Tommy Taylor, possibly the best two players in the world at that time. Tommy was signed from Barnsley and scored an amazing 131 goals in just 191 games. Duncan is still revered by those lucky enough to see him play as the greatest player of all time.

In 1958, United were going after their third title in a row and at the beginning of February went to Arsenal, winning 5-4 in what has since been described as the greatest game ever. Of course, it was completely overshadowed by what happened just a few days later. Having triumphantly knocked out Red Star Belgrade on their way to the European Cup semi final; disaster struck. After refueling at Munich airport, the plane crashed at just after 3 o'clock on February 6th. Twenty one people died, including seven players, David Pegg, Liam Whelan, Eddie Colman, Roger Byrne, Geoff Bent, Tommy Taylor and Mark Jones. Fifteen days later, the great Duncan Edwards joined them in heaven, dying from his wounds. The Busby Babes were cut down before they'd even reached their prime. I still cry when I watch the Pathé News report of the day. The best way I can think to describe the feelings of the nation came by way of an anonymous poem, 'The Flowers of Manchester' first published in folk magazine 'Sing' and later attributed to editor Eric Winter after his death. There is an amazing a cappella song version by Mick Groves of the Spinners folk group. Mick, a fellow Salford lad, claims his proudest ever moment was when he sang it quietly to Matt Busby and Louis Edwards (then chairman of United). Mick's song can be found easily on the internet and if you haven't heard it, make sure you have a box of tissues handy. Here are those amazing words.

'The Flowers of Manchester'

One cold and bitter Thursday in Munich, Germany,

Eight great football stalwarts conceded victory,

Eight men will never play again who met destruction there,

The flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester

Matt Busby's boys were flying, returning from Belgrade,

This great United family, all masters of their trade,

The pilot of the aircraft, the skipper Captain Thain,

Three times they tried to take off and twice turned back again.

The third time down the runaway disaster followed close,

There was slush upon that runaway and the aircraft never rose,

It ploughed into the marshy ground, it broke, it overturned.

And eight of the team were killed as the blazing wreckage burned.

Roger Byrne and Tommy Taylor who were capped for England's side.

And Ireland's Billy Whelan and England's Geoff Bent died,

Mark Jones and Eddie Colman, and David Pegg also,

They all lost their lives as it ploughed on through the snow.

Big Duncan he went too, with an injury to his brain,

And Ireland's brave Jack Blanchflower will never play again,

The great Matt Busby lay there, the father of his team

Three long months passed by before he saw his team again.

The trainer, coach and secretary, and a member of the crew,

Also eight sporting journalists who with United flew,

and one of them Big Swifty, who we will ne'er forget,

the finest English 'keeper that ever graced the net.

Oh, England's finest football team its record truly great,

its proud successes mocked by a cruel turn of fate.

Eight men will never play again, who met destruction there,

the flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester.

This all happened two years before my birth in January 1960, and some fifty years later we still remember them. I have been the lead singer in many bands over the years and on several occasions tried to sing The Flowers of Manchester but I can never get through it without breaking down. God bless the Busby Babes and Manchester United.








This article is taken from Robert Carters' new book, 'From Salford to Tucson and Back Again, The Globetrotting Memoirs of a Manchester United Fanatic'.

Robert Carter is a successful businessman, author, poet, public speaker and wannabe rock singer. From Salford to Tucson and Back Again is his new book about his lifelong love affair with Manchester United Football Club. Available from: http://stores.lulu.com/in2thestratosphere

Friday, April 15, 2011

Manchester United Facts and Figures

Manchester United Football Club were formed in 1878 and were originally known as Newton Heath Football Club, before becoming MUFC on the 26th April 1902. Since 1902 Manchester United have won a wealth of titles and trophies. They have won the English league title 18 times, 7 of these being the old English division 1 title and 11 being the Premier League most recently for the 2008/09 season.

Man Utd have won the European Cup/Champions League 3 times and were the first English team to win the competition when they beat Benfica in 1958, they went on to win it again in 1999 and again in 2008 beating fellow English team Chelsea on penalties in Moscow.

The FA Cup is the world's oldest cup competition and Manchester United have won it 11 times, which is more than any other team, they last won the cup in 2004. Other honours include 3 League Cup Titles, 17 Community/Charity Shield's, 1 Cup Winners Cup, 1 UEFA Super Cup, 1 Intercontinental Cup and 1 Fifa World Club Cup.

Ryan Giggs has played more games for Manchester United than any other player and has played over 800 games for the club since making his debut in 1991. He is the only player to have scored in every season of the Premier League, and kept up the record for the 2008/09 Premier League season by scoring against West Ham United at Upton Park.

Denis Law scored the most goals in a season for Manchester United in a season when he scored 46 goals for the club in all competitions during the 1963/64 season, Dennis Violett scored the most league goals in a season when he netted 32 times during the 1959/60 campaign and more recently Cristiano Ronaldo scored the most goals in a 38 game league season during the 2007/08 Premier League winning campaign.

Sir Bobby Charlton has scored the most goals for Manchester United netting 249 times in his 758 appearances for Utd. The clubs second top striker is Denis Law who scored 237 times in his 404 appearances for the club.

United have always signed quality players in the transfer market as well as rearing their own players through their famous youth academies. The clubs record transfer fee is for Dimitar Berbatov who they signed for £31,000,000 from Tottenham Hotspur in 2008 before that the record signing was Rio Ferdinand who signed for the club from Leeds United in 2002.

United record win was 10-0 when they defeated Anderlecht in the European Cup in 1956 and the clubs record defeat is 7-0 and they have lost by that amount three times, most recently in 1931 to Wolverhampton Wanderers.








For Manchester United facts and Manchester United Tickets please visit United Ticket Agency.

Manchester United - The World Famous Football Team's Humble Beginnings

Manchester United is rated as one of the top three football teams in the world, along with Real Madrid and Barcelona. But the team known worldwide as the 'Red Devils' and one of the most successful and wealthiest clubs in the history of English football, as well as the most widely supported football team in the world, comes from a very humble origin.

Man United began life in 1878 as Newton Heath LYR Football Club, set up by the Carriage and Wagon department of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway at its depot at Newton Heath in north-east Manchester. Originally an amateur team that played other railway departments, in 1892 it formed the First Division of the Football League - but was relegated to Second Division after only two seasons. The team now known and loved worldwide almost never happened, because in January 1902, with debts of 2,670 - equivalent to 210,000 in 2010 (but nothing compared with its current debt of 520million) - it was served with a winding-up order.

Fortunately for future fans, four local businessmen paid 500 each to buy the club, and then changed its name. On 26 April 1902, Manchester United officially came into existance, and following their first league title in 1908 and the FA Cup a year later, Old Trafford was named as the team's future home. When United played their first match on 19 February, 1910, it was against arch-rivals, Liverpool United, who beat them 4-3.

The first plans produced gave the new stadium a seating capacity of 100,000, though it was eventually lowered to 77,000. On 25 March 1939 76,962 spectators filled the stadium -- a record attendance. Sadly not for a home team match, but for an FA Cup semi-final between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Grimsby Town, which ended in a draw. Old Trafford picked up its nickname when football legend Sir Bobby Charlton, one of Manchester United's most famous players, called it 'The Theatre of Dreams'.

Visitors to the Manchester United Museum and Tour may never get to play on the 'Hallowed Ground' - in fact, they aren't even allowed to touch it - but it is a magnet for fans worldwide. It's the WOW factor they get as they step out into the stadium and see it live for the first time. Most of them will have seen it many, many times on television, but to just to be in one of the stands, or sit in the Manager's box, where they've see Alex Furguson sit during a match, is magical to them."

The tour guides know everything and everything about the team and its home ground, but one of the biggest thrills for many visitors is one of the least expected - a visit to the home team's changing rooms, where shirts with each player's name hang from hooks in the wall, above a plain wooden bench. Everyone wants to sit where their idol sits and have a photograph taken alongside his shirt. Sadly, what most of them don't realise is that it really isn't his shirt, it's a copy from the Museum shop, but at least they're allowed to dream...

Throughout the tour there are memories of that fateful day in February 1958, when British European Airways Flight 609 crashed on take off from Munich. On board were the 'Busby Babes', a nickname given to Manchester United because of their manager, Matt Busby, and a number of supporters and journalists. Of forty-four passengers on board, twenty died, with another three dying later in hospital as a result of their injuries.

But the solemn mood changes when visitors enter the 'tunnel', prepared to follow in their favourite's footsteps onto the sacred pitch they've only ever seen on television. As the crowds roar and music blares, they run out - and turn very quickly to the right. No-one, unless you are part of the team or ground maintenance, ever gets to set foot on this Hallowed Ground.








I am a freelance journalist living in Valencia City, Spain, although my work takes me throughout the country. My work is pretty wide ranging, both in subject and geography, but my heart lies in Spain, which is where most of writing concentrates on. I've written two successful guide books to the Valencian region, on Spain's eastern coast, Inland Trips from the Costa Blanca and Small Hotels and Inns of Eastern Spain, as well as many articles for national and international press. While most of my work features the idiosyncratic side of Spain, I've also written extensively on wine, gastronomy and hotels.
To discover more about Spain, visit http://www.derekworkman-journalist.com and http://derekworkman.wordpress.com.