Josh 76
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Beating the scousers was the icing on the cake and the Barry Davis commentary was the cherry on the icing! The days when all that mattered in life was football. Great great days!
Beating the scousers was the icing on the cake and the Barry Davis commentary was the cherry on the icing! The days when all that mattered in life was football. Great great days!
Look at the names on the back of the shirts celebrating with him and how young they are, that's what a captain and leader looks like.
Eric Cantona is one of the most passionate, eccentric and eclectic human beings to ever play the sport. The club captain in 1996-97 and lead players like Beckham, Giggs, Neville, Solskjær, Scholes, Keane, Poborsky, Pallister and more. That is a hell of a roster to shine ahead of everyone on. Deciding that that was that and retiring at the age of 30. A lot of football greats retired between ages 32-34 because they were injured or they lost their magic, but Cantona just decided to do something else despite being one of the best in the world.
What a day and what a goal that was
Good morning Everyone i am sorry for bumping an old thread but i hope you can make an allowance for me as i created an account on here. just so i could add a comment.
So let me begin by saying i was not a United fan in the 90's in fact i liked Newcastle so Man Utd broke my heart and i hated them plus the annoying glory hunters you would get in school didn't help. However i begrudgingly had a soft spot for Cantona and from him maybe even created a bit of a closet United fan inside me though i would never admit it.
So i have been on a bit of a Cantona binge yesterday on youtube and i think as other people have said already if you are a person of the 90's then modern society, culture and Football is just not hitting the spot like it used to and Cantona is prime example of that.
The modern day fantastista type players are now being killed out of the game so everbody has to run, nobody is allowed to think for themselves and you are called redundant if you don't run and can't create anything through the wall of super athletes set up to spoil end to end games.
Anyway to my favourite memory of Cantona which i didn't see raised on here and never see it get mentioned anywhere
Man Utd vs Celtic 2001 Ryan Giggs testimonial
there was a bit of excitement around this game at the time because it was the first time we saw Van Nistlerooy and Veron. Utd were already the best but now they had added expensive exotic World Class from the continent.
Van Nistlerooy scored a brace but and hit the crossbar for a Hatrick and Celtic went 4-2 up in a really feisty game
Then on about 71 minutes the number 18 came up for Scholes to come off but there was no number of the replacement, Martin Tyler say's we await to find out who the replacement will be, there is a bit of a pause before the announcer over the tannoy
Coming off number 18 paul Scholes,,,long pause, and coming on Number 7 Eric Cantona!!
I have never heard a roar like it and it gives me chills now as i type
It was like Elvis returning from the Dead
He was'nt bad either the touch was still there and he made a couple of good passes, had he have scored i might seriously consider it better than Nadal-Federer
For me you can stick Messi and Ronaldo up your ass stats are for nerds, Cantona was someone who made you feel.
Eric was not only a top player, he was as cool as feckGood morning Everyone i am sorry for bumping an old thread but i hope you can make an allowance for me as i created an account on here. just so i could add a comment.
So let me begin by saying i was not a United fan in the 90's in fact i liked Newcastle so Man Utd broke my heart and i hated them plus the annoying glory hunters you would get in school didn't help. However i begrudgingly had a soft spot for Cantona and from him maybe even created a bit of a closet United fan inside me though i would never admit it.
So i have been on a bit of a Cantona binge yesterday on youtube and i think as other people have said already if you are a person of the 90's then modern society, culture and Football is just not hitting the spot like it used to and Cantona is prime example of that.
The modern day fantastista type players are now being killed out of the game so everbody has to run, nobody is allowed to think for themselves and you are called redundant if you don't run and can't create anything through the wall of super athletes set up to spoil end to end games.
Anyway to my favourite memory of Cantona which i didn't see raised on here and never see it get mentioned anywhere
Man Utd vs Celtic 2001 Ryan Giggs testimonial
there was a bit of excitement around this game at the time because it was the first time we saw Van Nistlerooy and Veron. Utd were already the best but now they had added expensive exotic World Class from the continent.
Van Nistlerooy scored a brace but and hit the crossbar for a Hatrick and Celtic went 4-2 up in a really feisty game
Then on about 71 minutes the number 18 came up for Scholes to come off but there was no number of the replacement, Martin Tyler say's we await to find out who the replacement will be, there is a bit of a pause before the announcer over the tannoy
Coming off number 18 paul Scholes,,,long pause, and coming on Number 7 Eric Cantona!!
I have never heard a roar like it and it gives me chills now as i type
It was like Elvis returning from the Dead
He was'nt bad either the touch was still there and he made a couple of good passes, had he have scored i might seriously consider it better than Nadal-Federer
For me you can stick Messi and Ronaldo up your ass stats are for nerds, Cantona was someone who made you feel.
I still have the program from that Testimonial! Unreal atmosphere inside Old TraffordGood morning Everyone i am sorry for bumping an old thread but i hope you can make an allowance for me as i created an account on here. just so i could add a comment.
So let me begin by saying i was not a United fan in the 90's in fact i liked Newcastle so Man Utd broke my heart and i hated them plus the annoying glory hunters you would get in school didn't help. However i begrudgingly had a soft spot for Cantona and from him maybe even created a bit of a closet United fan inside me though i would never admit it.
So i have been on a bit of a Cantona binge yesterday on youtube and i think as other people have said already if you are a person of the 90's then modern society, culture and Football is just not hitting the spot like it used to and Cantona is prime example of that.
The modern day fantastista type players are now being killed out of the game so everbody has to run, nobody is allowed to think for themselves and you are called redundant if you don't run and can't create anything through the wall of super athletes set up to spoil end to end games.
Anyway to my favourite memory of Cantona which i didn't see raised on here and never see it get mentioned anywhere
Man Utd vs Celtic 2001 Ryan Giggs testimonial
there was a bit of excitement around this game at the time because it was the first time we saw Van Nistlerooy and Veron. Utd were already the best but now they had added expensive exotic World Class from the continent.
Van Nistlerooy scored a brace but and hit the crossbar for a Hatrick and Celtic went 4-2 up in a really feisty game
Then on about 71 minutes the number 18 came up for Scholes to come off but there was no number of the replacement, Martin Tyler say's we await to find out who the replacement will be, there is a bit of a pause before the announcer over the tannoy
Coming off number 18 paul Scholes,,,long pause, and coming on Number 7 Eric Cantona!!
I have never heard a roar like it and it gives me chills now as i type
It was like Elvis returning from the Dead
He was'nt bad either the touch was still there and he made a couple of good passes, had he have scored i might seriously consider it better than Nadal-Federer
For me you can stick Messi and Ronaldo up your ass stats are for nerds, Cantona was someone who made you feel.
Great vid
Which testimonial was it where he dribbled past 2-3 players and lobbed the goalkeeper from short distance in the end?I still have the program from that Testimonial! Unreal atmosphere inside Old Trafford
He has a beutiful way with words, wonder if his French is as cool as his English.Tweet
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This is a brilliant description. The way the camera kind of free pans and enter stage right le chest. HahaI watched all those goals again last night.
"Now what's he going to do?... There is your answer"
The Arsenal one, though, was the most Cantona goal you'll ever see. The ball cleared and bouncing away when out of nowhere Cantona's chest appeared to take control of the situation.
Even when he took it down nobody else but him had an idea what he was about to do.
It was pure Cantona. Power, Poise, Arrogance, Imagination
Aye, fantastic book that captured his journey from the start both as a unique person and footballer. Started to read it for the second time few days ago. Definitely a must-read.And for anyone who haven’t read the book - Phillip Auclair’s The Rebel That Would Be King is still the bible of football.
Amazing biography of the myth that is Cantona.
Best football book with Keane and Gascoigne’s I read.
fecker deserved it.He watched too many Jackie Chan movies.
Giggs sounded bitter and whiny when he told that story. The prick. (Legend Giggsy though on the field obviously).I love the story, as told by Ryan Giggs on MUTV where Eric turns up and isnt wearing a club blazer, contrary to Fergies explicit instructions. When Giggs mentioned this to Fergie he was told "When you can do what he does on the pitch, you can do the same off it!" SAF was the ultimate man manager.
The stories of his tenure in the french league is something else. Think there’s a passage of where he assaults a player more than the hooligan-incident, and it just sticks in my mind. The temper, the way of seeing football as art. One can understand his (and many of our own’s) disaffection of where modern football has ended.Aye, fantastic book that captured his journey from the start both as a unique person and footballer. Started to read it for the second time few days ago. Definitely a must-read.
Heard that McGrath one is also brilliant, so it's next on my list.
Awesome video, some great comments by him. I loved the bit where he spoke of the ghosts of the past Utd that weigh heavy on some players, but it actually motivated him even more. This is the mentality problem with many signings over the recent seasons.
In the modern game I'm not sure we'd call him a striker, definitely not a no.9, maybe an attacking midfielder, a sort of cross between and 8 and 10 maybeUnironically would be the perfect striker for us in the modern game.
Huh? He was clearly a support striker that dropped off of whoever he played next to. That’s literally ideal for a modern striker with inverted wingers on either side.In the modern game I'm not sure we'd call him a striker, definitely not a no.9, maybe an attacking midfielder, a sort of cross between and 8 and 10 maybe
He was also a ball carrier from deep, and what is a support striker? He wasn't a no.9Huh? He was clearly a support striker that dropped off of whoever he played next to. That’s literally ideal for a modern striker with inverted wingers on either side.