Bronze Age - Laterals/Wingers
Dalglish - Isn't it ironic that a Celtic's legend had grown up in the shadow of the Ibrox stadium and supported Rangers as a boy. Isn't it "remarkable" that the same legend was there at the all 3 biggest stadium disasters in 1970s-80s (1971 Ibrox Park, 1985 Heysel, and 1989 Hillsborough)
"All three disasters had different circumstances of course. But each one of them you could never anticipate. You hope it will never happen again. And then there was another one. And then another one…."
He was unbearable to live with after the Hillsborough disaster, admits Kenny's wife Marina. For decades Dalglish has held himself together in public; during all those funerals he attended and the hospital visits he made. He even did so in one clip when he stands at the top of a country lane and looks down into the valley where Sheffield Wednesday’s stadium towers in the distance. He will never go back there...
Kenny Dalglish was voted into the Greatest Ever Celtic Team and was also voted Liverpool’s Greatest Ever Player – a truly unique fantastic footballer.
Rensenbrink - The Snake Man who came so close to immortality. 1978 World Cup Final, 90 minutes and 15 seconds. ONE (!) inch further to the right and Robbie would have become the winner of the World Cup, the tournament's leading scorer (Golden Boot), the World Cup best player (Golden Ball), and would have joined a special collection of players to have scored a World Cup winning goal...
Rensenbrink was diagnosed with a muscle disease and died as a result of the illness...
Rensenbrink, a man who never went into coaching, remains locked within that vivid moment when he hit the post with only seconds to go in the 1978 World Cup final. He remains a man under-appreciated by many in his homeland, and one often forgotten by football generally. Regardless of that, he will always be a man who hypnotically owned the ball, one who so very nearly inherited the world.