Kenny dalglish autobiography pdf




















You really get a feel for Carragher the man, his background, and what Liverpool Football Club means to him, together with an insiders glance at his fellow players, managers, and others that shaped his career. Mar 19, Andy rated it it was amazing Aytobiography I played county league many years ago and I hate it.

A Scouser through and through, Carra also has some forthright views on the England team, and tells why he rejected calls to return to the international fold. Jul 20, Kevin rated it really liked it.

Not Enabled Enhanced Typesetting: Carragher missed the FIFA World Cup to undergo knee injury; though he had the option to delay surgery this would have required him to miss pre-season training with Liverpool. This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are as essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website.

We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. After we had beaten Forest when the semi-final was eventually played at Old Trafford, I commented that there was one team who wanted to win more than the other.

For our fans' sake, Liverpool desired victory more than Forest. That was to be expected. Cloughe admitted that was true but that I didn't need to say it. There was no logic in Cloughie's comments. I wasn't being derogatory to his Forest players. Because of Hillsborough, it meant a lot more to us to win it than it did to Forest. Then Forest came to Anfield to play us in the League on 10 May.

Cloughie was unbelievably negative, playing with 10 men behind the ball who never moved, a wee bit pathetic really. We still won When we realised that people were dying at the Leppings Lane end, the Forest fans behaved superbly. They were a real credit to their club. A few Liverpool guys ran towards the Forest end, some aggressively, some simply to get away from the carnage at the front of the Leppings Lane. My immediate reaction had been that there was crowd trouble in the Leppings Lane, that Forest fans had got in there to cause hassle.

Many people thought that. Once people realised that the problem was congestion, the attitude of those running at the Forest fans changed. There could have been a full-scale riot if the Forest supporters on the Kop had reacted to the angry Liverpool supporters charging at them. The disaster was bad enough but if could have been even worse if the Forest fans had thought the Liverpool fans were trying to get to them. To their eternal credit, the Forest fans showed restraint. For their conduct at Hillsborough, Forest's supporters will always have a special place in my affections.

It son became apparent that what was going on at the Leppings Lane end wasn't crowd trouble but a major disaster. Liverpool fans were ripping down advertising boards to use as stretchers, trying to help people on the pitch, trying to lift people out from that terrifying crush. There was very little the stewards and police could do because they were on the wrong side of the fence. It's terrible to think how long the crushing had been going on. It is unbelievably depressing to realise that as the players kicked off and throughout those six minutes while a football match took place, Liverpool supporters were already dying.

The problem must have started earlier than people imagined. When we went to the hospital on the Monday, a supporter said to Big Al, 'When are you making your comeback? So either this guy was in late or was under pressure by that time. If he had come in late he wouldn't have been at the front, so we assumed he mush have come in early. We came out at 2. The crush must have started before 2.

The next day people began coming up to Anfield. They just wanted to leave tributes and flowers at the Shankly Gates. Peter Robinson got in touch with the groundsman and told him to open the ground. Liverpool Football Club didn't want supporters standing around on the street. That was a magnificent thing to do. Bruce Grobbelaar read from the scriptures. There was an awful sense of loss, confusion, frustation. So many emotions were felt. The players and their wives were determined to do something.

We all went into Anfield the next day. The wives were brilliant. Everything just stopped and rightly so. It comforted people coming into Anfield, talking to the players, the wives, and having a cup of tea.

Liverpool Football Club was the focus of so many people's lives that it was natural they should head for Anfield. It gave them somewhere to go, something to talk about. Most of the relatives of those who had died just wanted to talk about football. They kept telling the players: 'You were his idol. We were talking to a family and the widow said: 'My husband's favourite was Steve Heighway.

That was helpful to them. One of the relatives joked: 'My husband was a miserable old sod. He will be quite happy sitting up there in heaven watching all the games for nothing. Talking to them about football was very therapeutic. We comforted each other. One morning, before everyone was in, I went out on to the pitch and tied my children's teddy bears around a goalpost at the Kop end.

The goals, the pitch and the whole Kop were covered in flowers, scarves and tributes. I remember describing it as the 'saddest and most beautiful sight' I had ever seen. It really was like that. It was sad because of the reason whey the tributes were there, but it was magnificent to see them. Paul looked at all the tributes, the flowers, the scarves and said: 'Why did it have to happen to us?

Walking through the Kop was so emotional. A lot of tributes had been left by people in the place where their loved one had stood. People who had lost the person they stood next to to watch games would leave something special in remembrance.

Seeing two oranges left beside one of the barriers really moved me. It was difficult not to weep on coming across little tributes like that.

They were so insignificant and yet so full of meaning. Perhaps the two people took it in turn to bring oranges to matches, something to share at half-time. That really got to me. I wondered whether the person who laid the oranges ever returned to the Kop. I came across somebody's boots, left there by his mourning family.

Everywhere I walked there were endless messages, each of which embodied someone else's grief. It was so difficult to pass through. So many people left little trinkets as a memorial to somebody else, I realised that they stood in the same place week in, week out.

The variety of ages and backgrounds were amazing. There was a married couple, each around 60 year of age. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website.

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