Fans Favourite: Steve Bull – Wolves

Steve-Bull-6

Wolves fans of recent years don’t have to think too hard about a modern day hero at Molineux, there is one man’s name on the lips of most fans, no not David Kelly, but the legendary Steve Bull. It’s no surprise the find that he is Mick Harper’s Fans Favourite.

He was a one club man, he came from West Brom but he was very loyal to us. He could have gone on and played at a higher level but he didn’t.
I remember the first time I saw him play, I think it was Wrexham at home. Him and Andy Thompson made their debuts on the same day and I was asked on the Monday what I thought of them, I said I didn’t think too much of the little man, Andy Thompson, and he turned out to be really good, and I said I’ll reserve judgement on the other fellow. Sure enough he started to produce the goods.

I was at Cardiff in the Old Sherpa Vans Trophy when he scored his first goal, there were only 60 or 70 Wolves fans there. He was local lad who came from West Brom but he soon won us over, he hadn’t played too many games for West Brom so that was ok. I remember his 300th goal as well, that was against Bradford and that was an emotional night.

He was 100 per cent, whole-hearted, dedicated. A lot of people used to say that his first touch wasn’t very good but his first touch was often smashing it into the back of the net. He could ruffle all sorts of defenders, he had a lot of steel and that is maybe why his career finished prematurely, because of all the kicking he got.

I remember him coming on as a sub and scoring for England against Scotland, I toyed with the idea of actually travelling up and watching the game because it was him but we watched it on the TV and I remember jumping up in the air in front of my TV.

I think he should have had more games for England than he actually had, he had 13 actual appearances and he scored four goals, but he was only on the pitch for the equivalent of eight games so I like to think that he had a record of scoring a goal once every two games.

Initially I was worried that we might lose him but as time went on it came clear that he probably wouldn’t leave. The closest he came to leaving is when Coventry came in for him but I remember the relief when it was decided that he would be staying.

They are having a game against Aston Villa to celebrate 20 years of him signing and I think he will be playing in that.

I think he’d have done alright in the top flight, at his peak he would have been a 20-goal-a-season man in the Premiership.

Fans Favourite: Tommy Tynan – Plymouth Argyle

_93287131_tommy_tynan_rex3

As a fan of a side that he never had a team in the top flight Alec Henderson has had to endure what he calls ‘some pretty grim times’. But the Pilgrims fan can say that he saw one of the greatest exponents of goal-poaching to never play in the top division, Tommy Tynan, a player whom for many Plymouth supporters will always be the Fans Favourite.

We got him from Newport when he was playing in the same team as John Aldridge, we brought him down here in about 1984 and went on to knock in a lot of goals for us. We actually tried to sign John Aldridge as well but the board decided that we could only have one, we went for Tommy Tynan and we all know what happened to John Aldridge. If we had had the both of them who knows what would have happened, one season Tynan scored 31 goals and another he had a tally that went into the late 20s. Even today you still get remarks on the terraces along the lines of ‘Tynan wouldn’t have missed that’, he is a living legend.

Tommy and John Aldridge shared the golden boot one season and Tyan was also in the team that got us to our furthest everpoint in the FA Cup in 1984 when we lost to Watford in the semi-final. Tommy Tynan is a very big part of the history of the club. That semi-final was the highlight, the only highlight! The rest of the time you needed a strong prescription because it really was grim, we were down to crowds of 5,000 but that one season alone we will live on it forever. The chances of us going up into the top division, I wouldn’t say they are negligible, but I think we have found our level in the league now and we accept that if we can maintain a good Championship position then that is as much as we can really accept.

After that semi-final, Graham Taylor actually said that he was glad that it didn’t go to extra-time because he thought they would have lost. With about 10 minutes to go, Kevin Hodges, who later went on to become our manager, hit a shot that went past Steve Sherwood, it was going in, but it was something like a Shane Warne ball and it spun and went around the other side of the post and it was at that point that we thought no Wembley for us!

Tynan moved to Rotherham because his wife wanted to move back to Yorkshire, Norman Hunter signed him but there were rumours of a punch-up on the training ground and he came back to Plymouth on loan with the proviso that he didn’t play when the two sides met a few weeks later. However, he did end up playing, and he scored! Things between us and Rotherham weren’t too happy for a while! But in modern day football I would have to say that Tommy Tynan is the best we have ever seen.

Fans Favourite: Michael Hughes

52065432

Whilst many Eagles fans will be sporting the name Andy Johnson on the back of their shirts, for Palace fan Karl Cresswell it’s the name of a Northern Ireland international that he always looks for on the team sheet. Michael Hughes is the latest fans favourite.

My favourite player is Michael Hughes and I like him because he is fiery. He’s a classic midfielder who always gets yellow carded, for example in that game against Wales when he squared up to Robbie Savage. He can stand up to the most provocative of them and he likes to get stuck in so I like him for his tenacity.

Other than that he is a skilful midfielder as well, he is one of those players who can pass the ball about. He’s the sort of player who if ever I could be a player it would be him. He’s a bit of a journeyman, he’s not a primadonna, if your are playing on a cold January day in Preston then he would be the type of player to turn up, unlike some of these European players.

He scores some cracking goals and I remember him scoring one at Liverpool in the Premiership at Anfield last season. I went to watch it and he scored the equaliser with a header to make it 2-2. He’s one of those players who has been around the Premiership for a long time, he played at Wimbledon, Birmingham and also a spell at Manchester City, so he’s been around but he has never played for a big club. He’s the type of player that would work for you whatever side he was in.

My favourite goal from Michael Hughes would be the one he scored at Anfield. We were up there and they were playing really well and we were 2-1 down and the ball got swung in, he’s not a big man, but he scored a really powerful header running onto it from about the penalty spot. It was a good header and it summed up what type of player he is, making late runs into the penalty box.

The thing at Selhurst is that the fans favourite is always going to be Andy Johnson, but I think Hughes is a player who doesn’t always start but when he is fully fit he will get a game, a lot of time he will come on as a sub and get a yellow card. I would say that Hughes is a fans favourite because he gets stuck in, he works hard but he is also a clever player. The thing with Palace is that their midfield is full of young kids who are full of energy but they can’t put their foot on it and pass it, they tend to hit the ball away a lot which he doesn’t.

If I had to compare him to a better know player I would say that he’s a bit of a Robbie Savage or a Roy Keane, maybe a more skilful version, Hughesy can take free-kicks though, he’s a very clever footballer.

Karl Cresswell

Fans Favourite – Brian Deane

13977-zoom


Exiled Blades fan Emma Gilks follows the fortunes of Sheffield United from afar these days, but even though she lives in Toronto she has plenty of good memories of a player who earned himself an England cap after his exploits for the club.

My favourite United player of all time would have to be Brian Deane. Even though he defected to that other team in Yorkshire I would have to say his goals helped secure promotion and I don’t think his partnership with Agana has been matched since.

We got him from Doncaster Rovers and although he was a little bit rough around the edges when we first got him he developed into one of the most feared strikers outside of the top flight and continued to be prolific with the Blades when we got in there. He’ll go down in history as the first man to score in the Premiership when he scored after four minutes or so against Manchester United.

Don’t forget he played for England and after he failed to get the goals at Elland Road we got him back for almost half the price we received when he went up the road and he continued to score the goals for us, in total I think he managed to get 119 Blades goals.

Deano was also part of the side that played in my favorite game as a Sheffield United fan and it would have to be my most memorable moment. That would have to be United gaining promotion to the old First Division – last day of the season at Leicester and we won 5-2 which guaranteed promotion. After each of the five goals, Blades would invade the pitch with their fancy dress costumes. I hope this moment can be experienced again at the end of this season!

Brian didn’t score my favorite goal though, that has to be Paul Peschisolido’s against Forest in the 2003 Play Off Semi-Final.  At half time we were 2-0 down everybody was so low and thoughts of getting through to the final were slim.  However we got back to 2-2 and then Peschy scored a fantastic goal to make it 3-2, the ground went wild and I think his celebration reflected how much the goal meant to him and the Blades.

Emma Gilks

Fans Favourite – Billy Whitehurst

C3Px6pXWcAETDFa

The next time you hear somebody say the words ‘Billy’ and ‘Whitehurst‘ in the same sentence, be sure to pay close attention to how they say them. Chances are if spoken by a former player you’ll see a shaking of the head followed by an audible sigh. If it is someone who observed Billy from the terraces then a look of wild excitement will invariably race across their face as they steam headlong into an anecdote that you couldn’t possibly think true. Such reactions say a lot about the man.

It is customary in pieces such as this to state that the term legend is grossly overused and you’ll hear no argument from me there. Indeed, increasingly so it seems any skinny player with long sleeves and an even longer fringe that produced a back heel or two receives the accolade. Billy Whitehurst, or Rambo Billy as he was gloriously named by then Tigers’ Chairman Don Robinson for his physical likeness to the Sylvester Stallone character, was different. He represented what all football fans could achieve if they worked at their game…. all football fans blessed with a huge gorilla-like frame and fearless mental attitude, that is.

Plucked from the building site and semi-professional football with Mexborough Town, Tigers fans soon learned to overlook the fact he didn’t possess the skills normally associated with football legends. Indeed, he was what can only be described as ‘uncompromising’ and his second touch was often a tackle – and oh how we loved him for it. We loved the way he picked up the ball with his back to goal, turned and rampaged his way through a backpeddling opposition defence before smashing the ball past the bewildered keeper (69 goals in 252 games in a City shirt). We loved the fact that when the opposition viewed our teamsheet and saw his name, the game was won there and then and we had another victory during what was a golden period. But we especially loved the tales from colleagues old and new about his astonishing off-field antics.

My own abiding memory of Sir William centres around him returning to the Tigers via a long list of clubs in 1988 as part of the deal that took wonderkeeper Tony Norman to Roker Park (Billy originally left in 1985 to Newcastle Utd for a then record fee for both clubs). I eagerly entered Boothferry Park to witness his second debut versus Ipswich (1-1, Whitehurst scored, naturally) but my eyes were elsewhere than the hallowed turf. I looked up at the opposite end of the stadium in wonderment as my eyes fixed upon the huge spray-painted letters proclaiming the legend  ‘Rambo Billy’. Word had it that an inspired group of the citizens of Hull had broken into the stadium in the dead of night to let Billy know what his return home meant to us. The very same graffiti remained visible until the day we left our famous old home for pastures new, some15 years later. The signing of no player before or since has provoked anything like such a reaction among the City faithful. Billy Whitehurst – legend indeed.

Gary Bolton

‘Alan Shearer’s got my shirt: the Billy Whitehurst story’ by Rob Finch is released in November 2005.