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Podcast 5 and a New Look

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What can I say? You people are just soooo lucky!

Not only do you get a new podcast to listen to, but you also get to gaze in awe at our lovely new look!

Yeah, you like that don't you!

So, we've given the place a bit of a spring clean and to celebrate this, we've recorded another podcast!

This time it's all about World Cup Memories, so sit back and wallow in an hour of fuzzy FIFA warmth... We've also used a special theme tune, just this once...

Oh and get to hear Rich describe it as the "bed poscat ida the world"

Enjoy!


Great Tracksuits of Our Time: No.10

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England (1986)

Our recent podcast covering World Cup Memories has given me the perfect excuse to mention Mexico 86 again and what better way to do so than by selecting Tracksuit No.10.

Considering the staidness of the England kit of the time, this is actually quite a flashy affair...albeit flashy in a rather staid way of course.

The merest hint of collar, far from the huge winged articles of the 70s, gives an air of modern cool that continues with a mixture of horizontal pinstripes and chest panels that would have looked at home on the tail fin of a British Airways Concorde.

We're getting hints of style and international air travel. It's the 80s in nylon! With this tracksuit, we are going places...mainly the quarter finals...

The fashion police 'disappear' another perp
One other point of note is that this was also one of the last England tracksuits that actually was a tracksuit....i.e. before the dreaded Shellsuit appeared...check out Italia 90 and it's all crinkly nylon and geometric shapes...rave on! (just not too close to an open fire!)

Thankfully, Bobby refused to take part in this unbecoming trend and instead, stepped out in a grey double breasted suit instead. Legend!

Seen any great tracksuits from football's rich and illustrious past? Tell us all about them by dropping us a line to admin [at] thefootballattic [dot] com. We could feature your words on our website!


Other Great Tracksuits of Our Time:

Logacta (1976)

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If you happen to find yourself thumbing through some 35-year-old copies of Shoot! magazine, it’s quite possible your eye will be caught by a small advert somewhere near the back for ‘Logacta.’

Subtitled ‘Chart Soccer’, it mysteriously offered the chance to organise league, cup and international competitions with “all the suspense and excitement of the full football season.” Several years ago, my eye was caught in just such a way. What was this game? How was it played? Why was it never sold in shops along with other football games? I searched the internet for information, and ultimately eBay provided me with the answers.

In its original form, Logacta was sold as a small white box containing numerous printed grids and instructions, cards and seven dice with different coloured numbers on. What I found on an eBay auction several years ago was someone selling all the original printed materials scanned in and saved as JPEG files onto a recordable CD along with a description of how each of the die were configured. In essence, this was a do-it-yourself version of Logacta but no less intriguing to my curious mind.

Having won the auction and received the CD through the post, I examined its contents. I didn’t know where to begin. So many JPEGs, all named but some more descriptively than others. There was a set of instructions, but they seemed wordy and complex. There had to be an easy way to start playing the game, but I couldn't find one and decided to print all of the files out instead.

It didn’t really work. I stared blankly at the mountain of paperwork now covering the desk in front of me. In my head, I was trying to break out of the mental connections I was making. “Paperwork = forms = administration = accounting = book-keeping = drudgery...” Maybe if I cleared all the papers away in a folder and had another look tomorrow with fresh eyes, I’d be able to make some progress...

Five years later

I rediscovered my folder in a cardboard box, one of many that had arrived at our New Zealand home after we relocated in September 2012. I knew the time had come to try once again to learn the mysterious art of Logacta.

With a bit of application, I found that actually it was fairly easy to play, once you’d got started. It was, however, a long and arduous journey to enlightenment, so here is an overview of how to play ‘Chart Soccer’.

Super League

First of all, you’re invited to create a 16-team Super League made up of teams from anywhere in the UK. Because Logacta was made back in 1976, I tried to include teams that were among the best around back then. Of the 14 English teams I chose, all but one - my team, West Ham - were playing in the First Division, the other two being Celtic and Rangers.

Having filled their names in on the Fixtures and Results (F&R) Chart and the Super League Points Recorder, I was ready to start my new league championship competition. A glance at the F&R Chart revealed that each square in the fixture grid had a number relating to each of the 30 gameweeks. I looked for all the squares numbered ‘1’ and prepared myself to fill in some scores.


The dice

So how do you create scores in Logacta? Easy - by using two of seven coloured dice. Each one contains its own unique set of numbers which, when two are rolled, determine the score of every match. The numbers are weighted for certain types of team; for instance the blue die has slightly higher numbers than the red die, thereby making the former more suitable for the team with home advantage than the latter.

Unfortunately my ‘DIY’ Logacta set didn’t contain any dice, so I decided to make my own using the number sets specified. They look OK, but to be honest they were rather fiddly and time-consuming to make and if the thought of playing with card, scissors and a Pritt Stick doesn’t appeal, you might want to use another system instead.

For the first four weeks of the Super League, only the red and blue dice are used to keep things nice and simple. With that in mind, I raced ahead and recorded the scores and points totals for the first four gameweeks. It’s fair to say that some teams realistically mirrored their 1976 vintage while others didn't. After Week 4, Ipswich, Man United and Tottenham shared the lead with six points from a possible eight (two points for a win, remember) while at the bottom were Derby and West Bromwich Albion on two points.

For Gameweeks 5 to 8, the choice of dice used for both teams was made differently. Before every game, I had to work out the difference in points between the two competing teams by looking at the Super League Points Recorder. Once that was done, I had to cross-reference a sheet called the Dice Selector to find out which colours the dice should be. Here’s an example: If Celtic had 10 points and Wolves had 5 points at the point when they played, the Dice Selector would tell you that you should roll the blue dice for Celtic and the grey dice for Wolves. As with all dice permutations, the final result should go in favour of the team with more points, but an upset is always possible as in real football.

The League Cup

On I went, rolling dice and scribbling numbers onto my sheets of paper until Gameweek 8 was completed. With Tottenham now clear at the top of the table, I noticed my Points Recorder chart telling me it was time for League Cup Round 3.

For this and all the Cup competitions, you’re allowed a free choice of any teams to compete as long as you have the right amount of each type. For instance, in the opening round of the League Cup, you’re allowed 11 teams from Division One, 10 from Division Two, 6 from Division Three and 4 from Division Four along with the current holders. Luckily a handy sheet is provided that lists who was in which division and who had won what the previous season.

Having chosen my teams, I then had to make the draw for Round Three. The original Logacta kit had 32 numbered cards which could be used in the absence of the Football League’s velvet bag of wooden balls. I, however, couldn’t be bothered to print and cut out the cards on my CD, so I used Random.org to generate my random numbers electronically.

For all League Cup games, the Dice Selector works on the basis of which divisions the two competing teams are in. So for instance if Nottingham Forest (1) were playing Southend United (3), you’d know that Forest would use the brown dice and Southend would use the yellow one.

So off I went again on my dice rolling exploits, but this being a Cup competition, I had to follow the right procedure for drawn games. A replay was sometimes required and even Extra Time. For that, I had to roll the yellow dice to determine any extra decisive goals. Exciting stuff. Well, kind of.

The Form die

With League Cup Round 3 done and dusted, it was back to the Super League but now I had to roll a ‘Form’ die during every gameweek. The principle was thus; for every four-week block of matches, the team(s) that scores the most points is entitled to potentially score extra goals in the next four-week block by rolling the extra yellow ‘Form’ die. In other words, the better your form, the better your form will probably be in successive weeks.

Tottenham and QPR had scored the most points in Gameweeks 5 to 8 of my league, so they got to roll for more goals with the yellow die in weeks 9 to 12. For one of them, it was to prove decisive.

The FA Cup, The League Cup Final and Europe

Weeks went by and the Form die was already helping to sort the league’s high-flyers from its whipping boys. Just past the mid-way point, Liverpool and QPR led the table with 24 points from 32 while Derby were at the other end with just five.

Around the same time, the FA Cup Fourth Round appeared on the calendar and once again I had to pick and draw the competing teams. Fun though it is at first to re-enact every draw that arises, the novelty does start to wear off as you just want to get on with playing the matches. For all that, however, I did have the undeniable pleasure of seeing West Ham beat Colchester 3-2, therein justifying my decision to include The Hammers in every competition possible.

This was borne out when West Ham reached the semi-finals of my League Cup competition but inexplicably they were beaten 6-5 on aggregate by Wigan Athletic, then of Division Four. Outraged but willing to accept the result as it stood, Wigan then went on to beat Newcastle 2-1 in a replay of the League Cup Final after the first match was drawn 3-3.

As if that wasn't enough to satiate your interest, the three European competitions then arrived hot on their heels. In drawing up the starting lists for The European Cup, The European Cup-Winners’ Cup and the UEFA Cup, one had to observe the ranking system for all possible competing teams - 1 for the strongest countries down to 5 for the weakest. These grades would have an effect on which dice were used, but with Scottish teams ranked the same as those from Russia in the European Cup and Spanish teams in the Cup-Winners’ Cup, one could never be quite sure if all was as it should be.

Anyway, the 24 European games were drawn and played and through completely random misfortune, all my English clubs were eliminated at the first hurdle. And the late-70’s was supposed to be a high point for English teams in Europe...

The final push

And so it went on. Blocks of four Super League games regularly interrupted by successive rounds of either the FA Cup or the Euro competitions. My brain slowly started to melt under the strain of processing so many numbers with each passing game. The suggested tip of filling in the charts with a pencil so that mistakes could be rubbed out also proved of great value as my faltering mind started to make occasional errors in my calculations.

As the season grew to a close, I wanted more and more for the whole thing to be over. In my Super League, QPR had hit top position in Week 20 and stayed there right through to the bitter end, winning the title with three weeks to spare. At the other end of the table, however, Manchester City had ‘wooden spoon’ written all over them from even earlier in the season and were easily the worst team on form as well as points.

The FA Cup was won by Southampton, 2-1 winners over Nottingham Forest. Not a bad foresight of the two teams that were to appear in the real 1979 League Cup Final. As for Europe, PSV won the European Cup Final 5-4 over Cologne after extra time, Anderlecht beat Barcelona 3-1 in the Cup-Winners’ Cup and Stuttgart beat Torpedo Moscow 4-3 in the UEFA Cup Final.

The end at last...?

So that was it - except it wasn’t, according to the game’s manufacturer. Logacta implores you to play season after season, applying promotion and relegation to the Super Leagues and giving byes to previous Cup champions as you go. There were also charts that enable you to play out your own version of the European Championships or even the World Cup. I, however, had had enough.

I’d enjoyed the process of understanding the complex logic of Logacta, not to mention the way one observes the unfolding development of various League and Cup competitions.

The trouble is, it takes too long to complete one season, there’s too much scribbling to do on too much paper and if you’re playing it on your own, you've not even got anyone to share your experiences with during the long journey.

But hey, I can now say I've played Logacta with all the weary pride of someone completing the London Marathon. Will I be doing it all over again any time soon, though? Not unless someone can write me a computer program to automate everything, and even then I'm not so sure...


Subbuteo Team Collections - Andrew Rockall

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We received an email from Andrew Rockall (Statto_74) yesterday, showing us his recently discovered collection of Subbuteo teams. We're very happy to showcase them here as it's damn impressive! Over to Andrew for the background...

Twenty years ago I made a conscious decision to save my Subbuteo things for any future children I might have. I came across the box of goodies last week and thought it was time to dust it down and take a nostalgic look.

I was amazed to find I still have 33 teams. As you can see from the kit designs, I made almost all of my purchases during the 80's. What surprised me were several teams I know I had but have somehow mislaid.

My brother and I used to play for hours and fought for nearly as long. We had a traditional cloth pitch for several years but our Dad made a plywood base with wooden sides which we covered in adverts from papers and magazines. He also pinned an Astropitch to that and painted the base for extra realism. I was distraught to discover he broke this up in 2000 whilst I was in Australia.

We also had the 5-a-side pitch that we got in a jumble sale (an indoor boot sale, for any kids out there!) which was great fun, especially at the time of year when Soccer Six was broadcast from Manchester's GMex.

I do now have a son. He's only 10 months old at present so I will be packing these bits away for another 4 to 5 years, but I cannot wait for then. My biggest fear is him saying "Dad I'd rather play FIFA 18..."

No son, no!

Click on the image for the full size version... it's worth it!

Back Row: England, Netherlands, Denmark, Honduras, Wales, Brazil, Northern Ireland, Ireland Away, Wales, Germany, Scotland, England (I had 2 teams numbered 1-22)

Middle Row: Wimbledon, Norwich, Ajax, Manchester City, Everton, Manchester United, Leeds United, Ipswich Town, Oxford United, West Ham United, Chelsea

Front Row: Arsenal Away, Birmingham City, Chelsea, Watford, Juventus, Liverpool, Tottenham Hotspur, Nottingham Forest, Celtic

Many thanks to Andrew for allowing us to share this. If you'd like to share your nostalgia memories with us, why not get in touch? Just drop us a line to admin [at] thefootballattic [dot] com and we'll do the rest!

WA & AC Churchman's 'Association Footballers' Cigarette Cards, 1938

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There’s is the forgotten era, a vacuum in which football survived purely for the people playing it professionally and the ordinary masses that paid at the turnstiles every Saturday afternoon to watch.

We have no lasting conscience of them now. They played in baggy clothes and heavy boots, thrilling thousands upon thousands every week with their artistry and tenacity. Their captivating style and humble grace made them champions in the eyes of the fans that idolised them unfalteringly. In observing their easy way with the ball, reputations based on strength, speed and accuracy were nurtured and augmented in the minds of those that watched their stiff-collared heroes from the terraces.

This was the late-1930’s, a time when Britain was yet to feel the prolonged anguish and suffering of a second world conflict. Events of significance were reported and transmitted from source to destination slowly and deliberately. Newspapers dutifully used their carefully chosen words to inform and enlighten every man, woman and child while the wireless radio painted pictures of its own in the collective subconscious.

This was how football fans learnt of the weekly sporting battles involving their favourite players, their team and their opponents. What couldn't be heard or read had to be suggested by other means, and here the photographic and painted illustrations of the simple cigarette card played their part.

Fleeting glimpses of players seen among the boisterous hurly-burly of the Saturday afternoon game were now made permanent for those falling for tobacco’s allure.

Players like Ronnie Dix who broke the record as the youngest scorer in the league at 15 years 180 days while at Bristol Rovers.

Players like Eric Stephenson of Leeds United who, we we’re told, “is interested in the Boy’s Brigade Movement and is a Lieutenant in the 30th Leeds Battalion.” Stephenson, a Major in the Gurkha Rifles, died six years after this card was printed during active service in Burma.

Players, too, like Fulham’s Michael Keeping who started out at Southern League Southampton in 1924 and finished his playing career at Craven Cottage in 1939. After the war, he spent two years as coach of Real Madrid.

These were the players of the forgotten era of British football, the central focus for ardent fans of all ages, lauded and appreciated for their efforts on the field of play.

Every man jack of them learned the game, honed what skills they had, suffered the pain of injury and sweated in their pursuit of glory long before their stories could be told to a worldwide audience. And what stories they had to tell.

Instead, we, as a football-loving community, have allowed their endeavours and their very sense of importance to wither and die. These men, immortalised on cigarette cards, were the Panini heroes of their day. The internet and television arrived too late for their stories to be told and yet we use this as a convenient excuse to say “too bad, but never mind.”

Yet just because their images live on in black and white, there’s no reason to label them as a by-product of football history that has nothing in common with the modern game. We’d be watching these players on our TV screens now if time and technology were better matched.

They’d all be celebrating their 100th birthday around now had they lived to the present day, and for that reason we issue a reminder to all football fans that we should never forget the football heroes of yesteryear.

Seek out their names, remember their faces but above all, do your utmost to keep their spirit alive.

Top 5 Subbuteo World Cup Accessories That Never Were

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Subbuteo, as we all know, created many many accessories to enhance the realism of the beautiful tabletop game. Some were great and their existence was without question... Others made you wonder who exactly came up with the idea (ball throwing goalies on sticks?!?!).

To that end, I hereby present some more Subbuteo accessories that, for all we know, may have been one step away from production... assuming the decision makers were tripping balls of course...

Triggs - Roy Keane's Dog

Forget host country South Korea's extraordinary journey to the semi final. The true star of the 2002 World Cup was a bit more hairy though probably covered just as much ground.

Meet Triggs, the lovable labrador who shot to fame after Roy's early exit (I'd say hissy fit, but I value my legs too much) from the Republic of Ireland's base camp.

Combine him with any Roy Subbuteo figure and the TV Tower and you too can recreate those hazy days 11 years ago when the world media chased a bloke and his pooch round the streets while the rest of the world wanted to watch some football... at 9 o'clock in the bloody morning...

USA 94 Diana Ross / Exploding Goal Edition

WOOH! USA!! WORLD CUP!!! AAAAAAAAARGH!!!!

Who can forget USA 94? People born in 1995 probably, what with them not having memories to actually forget... Anyway... Woooooooh!!! SOCCER!!!

Actually one of my favourite World Cups (as discussed on the latest podcast) due to the sunny weather, 2am matches and a beautiful Adidas template... Waaaait a minute!

For those who can remember, cast your mind back to the opening ceremony. Look, there's Diana Ross miming singing away... but wait, she's got a soccerball... she's one on one with the keeper! And Ross must score!

The USA 94 DR/EG playset comes with all you need to recreate that truly brilliant moment. A corner kick taker replete with curly black wig, a confused looking goalie (on a stick) and a regular World Cup goal that your brother stood on. Place your finger on the goal to hold it together, use the other finger to flick the corner kick taker and watch in wonder as the ball flies nowhere near the goal (just like real life!)  Release your finger, while enunciating 'boom' and rock back and forth as the goal and your love of the game collapses.

Graham Poll World Cup 2006

Often referred to as a 12th man by bitter members of the losing team, the Referee is, like it or not, an integral part of the game and Subbuteo have had a Ref accessory in their catalogue for aeons. This limited edition version was* an added extra included with the 2006 World Cup Edition.

The usual Ref / Assistant Refs were there, but this was included for those awkward moments where you liked a player so much you just couldn't bear to see him removed from the field of play.

The Graham Poll Referee figure is therefore replete with not one, not two, but all three yellow cards necessary to recreate those golden World Cup moments we all know and love.

* wasn't

Qatar 2022 World Cup Bid Pack

What better way to celebrate the World Cup taking place in another new continent than by re-staging the process that made it all a reality?

Recreate the exciting moment when Sepp Blatter first opened the briefcase that contained all the important notes documents!

Revel in the logic of the decision!

Laugh all the way to the bank host choosing ceremony!

Mmmm...satire!


and finally...

1982 Kuwait World Cup Team












For classic moments that have actually been recreated in Subbuteo form, check out the brilliant Subbuteo Art.

Panini: Football 81

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You could hardly miss Panini’s Football 81 sticker album as it rested on the newsagent’s shelf alongside the Angling Times and the latest instalment of Carrier’s Kitchen. The bright yellow cover and dynamic picture of Ray Wilkins taking on Gerry Francis shouted ‘come and get me’ to any passing 10-year-olds, and I'm proud to admit that I was one.

By now, a strong format had become the foundation of the annual Panini sticker album. First Division teams had a double-page spread upon which were printed rows of stickers showing head-and-shoulder pics of the manager and various players. A team picture and foil badge headed it all up with mini player biographies and a club profile thrown in for good measure.

The page layout had been changed from Football 80, however, with two fewer player stickers on show. To compensate for that, however, the single Team picture was now made up of two stickers, half-and-half style. The foil badges had changed too, no longer silver but back to gold as they had been in Football 78.

Because of the double-sized Team pic, the club profile was moved from the top of the first page to the right hand side. This made for a big column of space that had to be filled, so as well as the usual details like ‘Manager’, ‘Honours’ and ‘Record Attendance’, there was also a factual nugget called ‘From the history books’ which appeared here for the first and only time.


The player sticker design took elements from Football 78 and 79 with a red border ring-fencing the picture, club badge, player details and the returning pictogram. Among the high-class fizzogs captured for posterity in this album were a 20-year-old Gary Megson playing for Everton, the ever-giving Sam Allardyce at Sunderland and a Leicester City team clearly trying to go one better than Coventry City’s moustachioed outfit from the year before.


A nice touch by Panini in this collection was to give every Second Division team a big foil badge and a two-part team picture of their very own. Though the individual half-size player pics from Football 80 had to be sacrificed, this somehow seemed a more pleasing way to show off the teams in question. Mind you, that whole issue of getting the two halves of each team pic to match up perfectly was always going to trip up some people - something that was still evident with Panini’s Euro 2012 collection.

For the first time ever, the Football League Third Division was featured in a Panini album of this kind, and here each team had it’s own single-sticker team pic alongside the ubiquitous profile of the club. Sadly there wasn't the space for a foil badge in each case, but I doubt supporters of Blackpool or Chester City would have been complaining back in the day.

Fans of Scottish clubs might have been happier too. Compared to Football 80, Panini finally gave Premier League teams a page each once again, however the players all still appeared on half-size stickers as they had done the previous year. At least there was a full size badge and two-piece team pic to restore some pride, but that would have been nothing compared to the pride felt by Scottish First Division supporters who also saw their teams making their Panini début.


In each domestic Panini album there were always two variables you could hang your hat on: the opening page and the middle section (after the First Division teams). In the case of Football 81, the former was dedicated to showing off the ‘Players of the Year’, namely Terry McDermott (England) and Davie Provan (Scotland). A nice little biography for both players was provided in what was a suitable opening gambit for the album, if not a greatly exciting one.

The middle section also seemed to lack a little pizazz in its remembrance of the 1980 FA Cup Final. True, there was a four-part sticker pic of the winning West Ham team and a couple of other two-part pics showing action from the Wembley showdown, but somehow this full-page feature lacked any real zip. Probably just as well this kind of thing would improve in future Panini albums.

With a sketchy pen and ink illustration bringing things to a close on the back cover, it’s fair to say this wasn't the finest hour for the Italian sticker makers, but at least their standards hadn't dropped since the previous collection. Onwards and upwards to Football 82, perhaps...

Fantasy Nostalgia: Subbuteo 1900

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While writing our recent article about football cigarette cards from 1938, it occurred to me that the game of soccer in the UK back then must have been a very colourful one indeed. Like many of you, I've occasionally seen pictures of footballers from the early twentieth century and marvelled at the garish colours and antiquated styles of the uniforms worn in that long-forgotten era.

But the thought quickly came to mind that if football really was so colourful back then, what would a Subbuteo poster from that era have looked like if the game had existed?  It was at this moment that I hatched a plan to create the image you see below:

Click for larger version
To be specific, I tried to create the image of a Subbuteo poster as it may have looked back at the start of 1900. The teams that are featured are from the Football Leagues of England and Scotland during the 1899-1900 season as well as international teams. Not that there were many of the latter; only England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales were playing football at international level until 1902.

Where the kits are concerned, I've used artistic license from time to time where specific details were unavailable for the start of 1900. In those cases, I've used an approximate image based on the nearest kit recorded to that date. In short, this is a very generalised depiction of the kits being worn back in the day.

As for the poster itself, I've kept the styling fairly simple to maximise overall clarity because if the Victorians liked one thing, it was ornate decoration. Don't get me wrong - I like a curlicue as much as the next man, but one can have too much of a good thing.

Anyway, you're invited to click on the image for a closer look at the teams playing at the start of the last century (apologies for small index text, by the way), and if you can't find your favourite club, they either hadn't been formed, hadn't joined the league or were operating under a different name back then. No prizes for identifying any teams in the last category!

(To view the image at full size, left-click on the image above, then when the image appears on your screen, right-click on it and save it to your computer. Once there, you can view it in a graphics package or Windows.)

Tried and failed: The Case of the Missing Ribbons

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Sometimes, if you look hard enough throughout its long and illustrious history, you can find evidence of a failed attempt to make football better.

Here's an example from the 1976 League Cup Final where we see Man City captain Mike Doyle proudly lifting the trophy. But where are the coloured ribbons of the winning team?


The answer? There weren't any, because in 1976 some bright spark thought it would be a great idea to do away with tradition and replace the ribbons with a rosette instead.

This neatly explains the reason why we still see ribbons attached to the FA Cup and League Cup today: because tradition is good and new-fangled forward thinking rarely, if ever, works. Here endeth the lesson.

Seen any other backfiring attempts to make football even better than it already is?  If so, drop us a line - we're at admin [at] thefootballattic [dot] com.

Football Attic Retro Roundup

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There's a whole host of retro loveliness out there on that world wide web and while we will often retweet / share these articles, we thought it'd be nice to collate all the excellent stuff we've been reading each week.

To that end, we present the 1st of our (hopefully) weekly Retro Roundups




A personal tribute to the late BBC commentator Tony Gubba by his former colleague, Barry Davies.

Got Not Got takes a delivery of long-forgotten football posters, the first two of which see the light of day here and here.

John Devlin ponders on two intriguing away kit designs seen recently in the Champions League at True Colours...

Old School Panini focuses on the top 10 vintage haircuts from Panini’s 1995-96 Belgian sticker album...

Not quite the football phone service of the same name, but here’s a club call on Brighton & Hove Albion from 1972-73 over at The Goldstone Wrap

Gazza takes some light refreshment with his friends over at Same Old Subbuteo Brand New Kits...

Some gorgeous imagery among the pages of a 1935 Umbro catalogue - brought to you by Who Ate All The Pies...

And finally, for those on twitter, check out @andrewastewart 's timeline from 9th March for a fantastic selection of photos from old footy mags from the 80s & 90s including this beauty!


More next week :)

England v Spain programme, 1968

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You can tell how old this match-day programme is because on page 2 there’s an explanation of what the European Championships is all about and how it came to be formed. Your average English football fan actually had to be told what the competition was all about.

This somewhat thin pamphlet commemorating the occasion of England’s quarter-final against Spain in April 1968 may not contain much, but it gently informs and educates the reader about a tournament that was still only eight years old at the time. Of the two previous occasions when it was held, England hadn't taken part in the first and had been eliminated in the Preliminary Round during the second.


Things were different now, however. England were world champions and had qualified for the quarter finals of the 1968 European Championships by finishing top of a group featuring Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Spain, the visitors to Wembley for the first leg of this knockout tie, were European champions but had struggled to edge past a decent Czechoslovakia side in their group.

The Spanish side were making their second visit to Wembley in less than a year, as shown on page 4. A friendly match in May 1967 had resulted in a 2-0 win for the home side but “victory did not come easily, nor soon.” England fans had waited until the 72nd minute for Jimmy Greaves to break the deadlock while Roger Hunt added a second six minutes later.

Sunday Mirror journalist Sam Leitch made light of the fact that there was an abundance of goalkeeping talent at England’s disposal. As well as the legendary Gordon Banks, Sir Alf Ramsey could also call upon the talents of Chelsea’s Peter Bonetti and Manchester United’s Alex Stepney.

For those who think Chelsea’s free-spending habits are a recent development, Leitch provides food for thought: “How remarkable that both Bonetti and Stepney began last season with the same club - Chelsea! Despite having the security of Bonetti. Chelsea went out and paid a new record fee for a goalkeeper of £55,000 to Millwall for Stepney. Then put him in the reserves.”

The top talent between the sticks didn’t end there. Peter Springett (Sheffield Wednesday), Peter Grummitt (Nottingham Forest) and Peter Shilton (Leicester City) were all pushing for attention as well as someone who Sam Leitch came desperately close to tipping for future greatness: “Then there is a young man called Dave Clemence who appeared for England’s Under-23 team against the Welsh Under-23 earlier this season. Clemence is the Liverpool reserve keeper!” I wonder whatever happened to Liverpool’s ‘Dave’ Clemence...?

Jack Rollin, statistician par excellence, was on hand to give a profile of Spain’s recent success in the European Championships as well as England’s previous matches against them. Fortunately for the English, Spain had only won three of the last nine encounters, although one had contributed to England’s disastrous campaign in the finals of the 1950 World Cup.



With fortune on their side, then, Ramsey’s team could stride confidently out onto the Wembley turf knowing that only an earlier rendition of ‘Oklahoma’ by the Band of the Irish Guards could possibly outshine them.

By the end of the night, the home fans would witness a 1-0 win for England thanks to a late Bobby Charlton goal, and if they’d forked out the £21 fare for a two-day trip to Madrid the following month, they’d have also seen the 2-1 win that ultimately earned Sir Alf’s men a place in the Euro ‘68 semi-finals.



Great Tracksuits of Our Time: No.11

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Borussia Mönchengladbach (circa 1976):


Just when you thought Puma weren't capable of producing a decent retro tracksuit, think again. Here's Charlton's very own Allan Simonsen sporting a very tasty tracksuit top during his time at Borussia Mönchengladbach.

But wait a minute... doesn't this look a wee bit familiar?

That's right. This could almost be an inverse representation of Northern Ireland's away shirt (designed by Umbro) in 2011. (And if Puma's lawyers are thinking of suing, remember who tipped you off, OK?)

Yes, this is the double-chevron that was worn by the West German league champions in the mid- to late-70's. As you can see, it's a vivid green colour with a two-tone flappy collar and black waist band, but a nice touch here is the placement of the Puma logo (a little lower than you'd normally see on a football top) and the inclusion of the name 'A.Simonsen') just below it.

Of course this wasn't the first time that the players' names were seen on a tracksuit top, but in this case a bit of style and restraint went a long way to impart a sense of quiet dignity to the job of identifying who was who.

So there it is, Puma's debut entry into our Great Tracksuits series, and a fine one it is too. For a reminder of the others that went before it, check out the links below.

The Great Football Attic Easter Egg Badge Hunt

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Q: What do kids love about Easter?

If you answered "Celebrating the death and subsequent rebirth of Father Christmas" then it's likely you need either re-educating or intensive therapy!

If you answered "Easter Eggs", then hurrah, welcome home friend!

And what do kids love most about easter eggs? Aside from eating them... Yes, it's hunting them! I mean hunting for them!

And what could be better than an easter egg hunt?  Why, an easter egg hunt that results in you owning a Football Attic logo badge of course!!!

So, that's what happening...

We have 20 of these beauties to give away, but you're gonna have to work for it (and probably way too hard for a tiny badge, but hey!)

How to play:

We're hiding 8 golden Football Attic logos deep within the blog. With each logo is a letter. Find all 8 letters, then rearrange them into a Football Attic-related word or phrase.

Once you've worked out the word / phrase, email us at admin [at] thefootballattic [dot] com with your answer. Once the closing date's reached, we'll see how many of you could be bothered to jump through all these hoops and if necessary, pull the 20 winners' names out of a hat... though now I'm gonna have to buy a hat. Man, this is getting costly...

The competition goes live at midnight on 19th March (tuesday morning!) and you've got just 10 days to find all the golden Attic logos, after which our big badge hunt will be over, so get cracking, find those letters and win yourself a badge!

Happy Hunting!

Panini: Got, Got, AAAARGH! 2

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Last year we took a look at Panini's stranger offerings and if there's one thing we've learned in life, it's that a sequel is always a good thing...so let's take another journey into Panini's dark side with Panini - Got, Got, AAAARGH! 2

Speaking of the dark side, ever wondered what Darth Vader looks like on a day off? Wonder no more for here we see the Sith lord, just about to embark on a  morning run...I'm guessing this was just before the Emperor came to check on the progress of the 2nd Death Star as he does look somewhat tense...

Sticking with the theme of film references, imagine Brad Pitt is rehearsing for the final scenes of the film Se7en, where the cardboard box is delivered to that remote location and Morgan Freeman's character opens it, recoils in disgust and urges his colleague not to look.

Anyone who's seen that film , knows full well that he does indeed take a sneaky peek at the contents. It's rumoured that to prepare for that moment, to truly capture the sickening horror of what his eyes would fall upon, Mr Pitt used this image as inspiration...this is a face that has seen things...horrible things...worse than Mrs. Brown's Boys!


And speaking of seeing things (can I keep these links up? Let's see...), remember those photos you'd get on programmes like Arthur C Clarke's Mysterious World, where someone had taken a picture of their friend or relative, but when the film was developed, there was someone in the background who they swear wasn't there when it was taken?  Well it happens to famous people too...here we see the great Johan Cruyff...but who's that behind him?
"That irashcible fellow washn't dere a minute ago", swore the Dutch legend.
Spooky!

Last movie reference for you now..."Regardez, sur la gauche, c'est le monstre de Frankenstein"

And on the right...OK, Mr. Potato Head, we're ready for your close up!  Honestly, we've seen terrible examples of bad head planting before (Robbie Fowler being the perfect example), but at least they usually get the size of the head right!

I can think of several possible explanations for this travesty:

  • A balloon with his face on floated in front of the camera just as the picture was taken.
  • He'd been auditioning for Shrek 5 that morning and hadn't had time to unswell his head.
  • Eduardo was the inspiration for the Corinthian line of toys...never saw a penny though!

Some little known facts about the 1970 World Cup now...

The Brazil team all had to receive a blow to the stomach, just before their photo was taken...

...and El Salvador, following a shortage of available players, were allowed to field blow up dolls...




Finally, for the 1974 World Cup, West Germany was determined to escape its not so distant past and banish any ideas of racial stereotyping.

Panini however, were on hand to royally f*** that up for them...

Yes people...this happened...in 1974...


After They Were Famous: The Secret Lives of the World Cup Mascots

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World Cups come and go, some leaving behind a raft of fond memories and a lasting legacy for the host nation...others merely leave behind white elephant stadia and an increased national debt!

But what becomes of the World Cup Mascots? Their moment in the spotlight burns brightly, but is over quicker than a Girls Aloud reunion tour.

Chris & Rich asked this question and after some exhaustive research, invite you to take a look at the fates of some of those forgotten icons...and find that life after a World Cup rarely fits in with FIFA's family vision...

World Cup Willie (1966, England)

William Lion, as he was known before joining Equity, took on his first major acting role as the logo that appeared on UK-farmed eggs in the 1950’s. Annoyed by the continual battering of thousands of spoons across the country, Willie searched the small ads for a new job and eventually replied to an advert placed by the FA for a new football tournament mascot. With his only opposition being a humanised sparrow holding a football and a bulldog with a limp, Willie easily won the public vote.

After the triumph of a home victory for England at the 1966 World Cup, the excitement and interest in football slowly started to diminish, as did their hunger for World Cup Willie. The lion that had carried the hopes and earned the affection of the English fans was now yesterday’s man and there no longer seemed to be a part for him to play.

Willie 'scores'
Willie found the lack of adulation and attention difficult to cope with once the 1966 World Cup finished and he developed a strong dependency on anti-depressants. Having recovered with the help of other leonine friends, he became the figurehead and later the bouncer of an East London nightclub run by Derek and Dennis Crim, the notorious underworld heavies. Things went well until an unfortunate ‘misunderstanding’ led to Willie losing one of his paws and he vanished from the public gaze for over three decades.

Despite receiving many offers including an understudy role for the titles of MGM and an international ambassador for Peugeot, he finally re-emerged in Costa Rica in the 1990’s where he started the now famous 'Sweet Willie' sugar cane plantation. Now aged 71, Willie makes few public appearances and prefers not to talk about his time in the World Cup spotlight.

Tip and Tap (1974, West Germany)

Born Hans and Harald Topp, the cheeky pairing were twins despite Harald being a year older than Hans.Their early lives were not always happy and they both struggled at school, failing to earn any academic qualifications of note. Despite this, they applied for stage school and appeared together in a number of minor roles in children’s TV including ‘Grange Hügel’ and ‘Die Rote Hand Gang’.

By the start of 1974, there were few people in West Germany that weren’t getting caught up in the excitement ahead of that summer’s World Cup. The DFB were looking for a pair of young boys in their late-teens to act as mascots and Hans and Harald were deemed ideal for the role, but who ever heard of mascots called ‘Hans and Harald’? The solution was to brand them with new names that would come across as wacky and ‘of their time’, even if they would be dated before the tournament was over. Overnight they became ‘Tip and Tap.’

Throughout the competition they received huge acclaim across West Germany for their role in promoting WM’74. Afterwards, they were quickly snapped up by a TV company in their home country and presented many top mainstream shows including ‘Die Tip and Tap Show’, a comedy programme featuring skits and sketches performed in a style that would become popular to fans of Ant and Dec.

Sadly their light was not to burn brightly for much longer. Their corny delivery and old-fashioned schtick fell out of favour with audiences during the 1980’s, and off-the-screen tensions caused them to part with their agent of 14 years, Freddie Fuchs, in 1986.

Though they returned to prominence after appearing in a 1990 TV commercial for Kaffee Hit! (both improbably dressed as giant coffee cups), they ultimately failed to return to the heady days of 1974 when they were seen by a worldwide audience of 250 million. They now sell cheap kitchen utensils on the German TV station QWC.


Naranjito (1982, Spain)









Oh dear...







Pique (1986, Mexico)

Life looked good for Pique in 1986. Mexico 86 had been a huge success and he had undoubtedly been the star of the show. He knew this as he’d been told so by the head of Televisa, with whom he’d signed a huge contract to present a new sports / light entertainment show on Saturday nights called “Pique’s Pick Em Up!”

The day after Maradona lifted the trophy, he gave Televisa a call to see when they’d need him in. There came no response, so the cheery chilli made his way downtown to their offices. As he arrived, all the blinds quickly closed and the lights went off. Confused, he knocked repeatedly at the door, but no answer arrived. He went home, only slightly less cheery to find a message on his answer machine. A hurried, distracted voice informed him that his contract wasn’t to be... something about large sombreros and widescreen TV not being invented for another 20 years or so.

Pique had been sold a lie and finally his cheery facade crumbled. With a grief-soaked “Aye Caramba”, he reached for the Tequila and drank hard and fast. As the worm slipped down his impossibly thin neck, he started choking. He began to turn blue... I think... Hard to tell with dark green skin... He just about managed to grab the phone and dial 065.

He was rushed to Casualty - a considerable challenge as his sombrero kept jamming against the door frame - but soon he was being revived.

Hours later he arrived home and, sinking into his couch with a pitiful ‘aye aye aye’, he sat and took stock of everything; the failed deal, the buzz he’d got from performing, the roar of the crowd... His mind began to tick over...

During his visit to hospital, his shirt had been cut open and the cold Mexican night was drawing in, so he made his way to the washer drier to get his nice clean white one. As if the day couldn’t get any worse, he discovered a lone red sock at the bottom of the drum...and yes, his white shirt was now pink.

Cojones!

He sighed, put it on and looked dejectedly in the mirror. It was then his epiphany struck...

And so it turned out that for the last 27 years, Pique has been the star of the Mexican Mardi Gras, performing to adoring crowds and, most importantly, his adoring boyfriend, Pedro.

Larga vida y libre, Piqué!

Ciao (1990, Italy)

Ever since his conception, little Ciao had been troubled by his name. Whenever he met new people they’d often walk away muttering how there was “something wrong with that one” and questioning why he just keep saying hello.

Still, the 1980s had been a good time for him, what with that decade’s love of bright colours and boxy shapes. He was admired as a pinnacle of style and was feted by the fashion houses of Milan. His rise in society culminated in being chosen as the mascot for Italia 90. He had made it and what’s more, his name was finally something to be proud of. The posters bearing his name finally validated the duality of his moniker as he bid ‘hello’ to the competing nations.

Alas, far from being a celebration of football, Italia 90 was known for its unending cynicism that forced FIFA to change one of its oldest rules. Alongside this, there was the economic downturn and as the 90s took hold, the garish excess of the 80s gave way to a more organic feel as green issues came to the fore.

Suddenly, people didn’t like harsh geometry. Curves were in and boxiness was most definitely out. From style icon to fashion pariah in just a few short years, Ciao struggled in the new decade. What promised to be a lucrative contract representing a new Lego soccer game fell apart as Ciao was snapped by the paparazzi sharing a drink with some suits from Mega Bloks. It was Ciao’s low point.

The agency said it was support work...
Soon afterwards, he lost his house in an ill advised ponzi scheme and spent the remainder of the decade under a bridge... working as a support column. One night as he bedded down under yesterday’s paper, his eyes came to rest on an article in the technology section. It detailed a new game craze sweeping the internet called Minecraft.

Blocks were back!

He quit his job immediately, unknowingly causing the death of three motorists that happened to be crossing the bridge at that moment, and headed to Mojang’s headquarters where he was greeted like a long lost hero.

“CIAO” they all screamed as the king of square strolled into the foyer...and for once, it was his name they were calling!


So there you go...as Ronan Keating accurately pointed out, life is indeed a roller-coaster. 

We'll catch up with some more World Cup Mascots in future...if you can stand the misery...

Retro Round Up - March 22nd

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Continuing the weekly look at the best of the net, both Chris and I have been rather busy this week meaning we've hardly had chance to read anything :(

Here are the few things we've managed to spot this week...







The Goldstone Wrap brings us a Football League centenary sticker featuring a man who was playing when the league was formed - Frank Worthington...


If a World Cup was won on the quality of the players’ haircuts, who’d win? Old School Panini offers some suggestions for the 1990 tournament...


Got, Not Got brings us a tremendous long-forgotten Subbuteo advert...


Modern-day Subbuteo falls under the BBC spotlight due to a new project called In The Box...


Iain Macintosh delightfully picks apart the mess that is the Qatar 2022 World Cup


If you have anything you want to showcase on the Retro Roundup, please get in touch!

Attic Podcast 6 - Football on TV

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Hey y'all!

It's podcast time again! That means we're up to no.6 now...awwwww we're getting all growed up!

This time, we discuss the way that football on TV has changed over the years.

Warning, contains heavy use of the word "Lawro"

Also, apologies for the lower quality audio than usual...we've dropped the bit rate down to get the files below 50MB :)

Enjoy...

Subscribe on iTunes or download here

Highfield Road's Last Day

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Given what's happening with my club, Coventry City, today, I thought I'd post some pics from a happier time,   when we used to actually own our own ground.

So here are some of my collection from the day we said goodbye to our beloved old home, Highfield Road.





















Match of the Day Soccer Annual 1979

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Mike Channon’s favourite edition of Match of the Day was the one shown on the evening after the 1976 FA Cup Final. He was busy celebrating with his Southampton team-mates but, said Channon, “I cheated a bit and asked a friend to record both the match and the programme in the evening on a video tape recording machine I had just acquired.”

This, friends, was 1978, an era when VCRs were as rare as the hairs on Bruce Forsythe’s head, yet Mick Channon wasn't the only player to watch his favourite MOTD on tape. Colin Lee did likewise in 1977 after Tottenham’s 9-0 win over Bristol Rovers - a match in which Lee scored four:

“I can’t remember a great deal about the game itself, although a supporter taped Match of the Day and gave it me as a souvenir. I don’t have a recording machine myself, but I have a friend who has one and we've watched it a couple of times. It’s unbelievable.”

Ah, did we ever live in a world where VCRs were considered ‘new-fangled technology’...?

Further on in this Match of the Day Annual for 1979 (printed in 1978, stat fans), we find the article ‘Scotland The Brave’. Here, some education is provided for us English types about Sportscene. This was Scotland’s alternative to Match of the Day itself and, presented by Archie MacPherson, it had several differences that we Anglophiles wouldn't have been aware of.

According to the feature, a typical half-hour show would have contained “...fifteen minutes or so from the chosen [Scottish] Premier League fixture of the afternoon... the odd snatch from a rugby international or other non-soccer sporting event that Grandstand cameras might have conveniently collected during the day, and then ten minutes from the preferred English match out of Match of the Day’s clutch for the night.”

There were also technical limitations that restricted Sportscene’s ability to provide quality programming: “Slow-motion replays - such a feature of Match of the Day talk-ins - are as yet unknown in the north - for the simple reason that the BBC’s only slow-motion replay unit is safely locked up in London!”  Probably best to nip round to Mick Channon’s house: he’s got a VCR with a slow-motion function on it...

‘Goals of the Season’ needed no introduction and didn’t get one either - it was a feature that diagrammatically described all the winning goals in MOTD’s history up to that point, along with some incidental text to flesh the piece out. Another feature was ‘Short Passes’ in which we’re presented with interesting and amusing facts about BBC’s longest-running football show. Here’s an example:

“It was a woman who was responsible for Match of the Day including the manager’s name in their pre-match team line-up. Mrs Lillian Bruce from Harrow, Middlesex, wrote asking the production team to do it - and they latched onto her suggestion.” Tell that to your mates down at the pub the next time the conversation goes quiet....

After the sort of quiz that cropped up in virtually every football annual ever made, there was a feature called ‘Switched on Fans’ about celebrities that supported football clubs. Surely the biggest name of all back then was Eric Morecambe, a man who was never happier than when he was referring to his beloved Luton Town while on-screen with Ernie Wise. Right enough, he opened the piece:

“I always watch Match of the Day - every Sunday afternoon!” said Morecambe. “Officially it’s in my ITV contract that I've got to watch Star Soccer or The Big Match - but unofficially I sneak a look at Jimmy Hill. The last time I saw anything like that on Jimmy Hill’s chin the whole herd had to be destroyed.”

In ‘It started at Anfield’ we get a two-page article telling the story of how Match of the Day had developed from its early days on BBC2 (“watched by even fewer than had actually attended League club grounds during the afternoon”) to the Jimmy Hill-fronted programme on BBC1 seen on TV when this Annual was published.

Among the self-congratulatory text (“it is television’s most comprehensive football programme”), one small section proves to be of particular interest, namely that surrounding BBC TV’s competition in 1969 to find a new commentator. In a wonderful piece of never-in-this-day-and-age brilliance, the competition was ultimately won by the late Idwal Robling, a Welshman who played for Great Britain’s football team in the 1952 Olympics.

Here we see a picture from the MOTD annual showing all the participants in that search for a new commentator, among them Gerry Harrison (who went on to be ITV’s man behind the mic for the Anglia region), Ed Stewart (BBC Radio 1 disc jockey and Everton fan) and Ian St John, a former Liverpool and Scotland player who went on to be a more than capable co-commentator and front man for shows such as On The Ball and Saint and Greavsie.


After a pictorial palette cleanser showing various players ‘In Focus’, we hear the amazing story of Jimmy Hill’s life, such as it was in 1978. As we mentioned in our recent podcast, there’s much more to Hill than the stereotyped waffle everyone latches onto these days. In ‘My Role - Jimmy Hill’, we learn that the former Fulham player was acting as adviser for the World Soccer Academy in Saudi Arabia, an owner of the NASL franchise Detroit Express and Managing Director at Coventry City - all on top of his role as presenter of Match of the Day.

Some of his better known achievements at Highfield Road - changing the club strip to Sky Blue and giving the club its nickname accordingly - are mentioned, but his work beyond Coventry City was what particularly caught the eye. Running a company that “acted as advisors to the London based Sportsman Club” as well as performing a role as Chairman of Goaldiggers “an organisation that is linked with the National Playing Fields Association" was just the tip of the iceberg for the great man. He also raised money for several charities and wrote books and newspaper columns when time allowed too. To think that all that came about as a result of a serious knee injury as a player is a testament to his determination to succeed in the face of adversity.

In an age when football commentators barely last a minute without spouting one statistic or another, it’s interesting to read how much information Barry Davies compiled in the week leading up to one of his commentaries. Davies, who retired from MOTD in 2004, commented: “I have a newspaper cutting book on each season which goes back eight or nine seasons. I will get out the results sequences of the two teams and will go over their results this season, their scorers, their running league position, the crowds and full teams. I will try to keep it up-to-date myself but if I am not completely accurate I’ll give Jack Rollin a ring. He’s a freelance journalist who keeps a mountain of facts and figures.”

Having pored over all kinds of data from player cards to personal notes, Davies would then get the relevant clubs to send him their last two home programmes to fill any gaps on recent knowledge and would pay a visit early in the week to the managers of the teams he’d be commentating on the following Saturday. The key to Davies using all this information efficiently, however, was keeping it in his head rather than on paper: “Facts should come to you automatically while you are doing the commentary and you should not be trying to force your facts onto the viewer.” Modern-day commentators take note...

Finishing off the Annual was a feature on the footballers who appeared in the BBC’s Superstars series and an article on how Match of the Day is put together every Saturday thanks to the efforts of cameramen, Outside Broadcast teams, presenters and and many more people besides.

But it’s the item called ‘It began with Chairman Mao’ that provides great insight into a memorable piece of football nostalgia, namely the opening title sequence for Match of the Day in the late-1970s. Many of you will remember it for one reason and one reason alone, namely the sight of various pictures being made by a crowd of football fans in the fashion of an Olympic Games opening ceremony (see example below).



The titles were the idea of Pauline Talbot who said: “Whenever I think of crowds I think of China and the magnificent rallies held there. As I considered ideas for Match of the Day, I thought of a picture I had seen in a magazine years ago of 8,000 Chinese children holding up cards to form a picture of Chairman Mao. They call it card flashing.”

Within days, the children of Hammersmith County Girls’ School and Christopher Wren Boys’ School in West London were herded into Queens Park Rangers’ Loftus Road stadium and given numbered cards to form the eight different images seen during the opening title sequence. Over 2,000 separate cards were printed and cut in a “giant warehouse” and the large images were designed on a sheet of graph paper to help identify who was holding up which card.


“If a card representing, say, the tip of Jimmy Hill’s nose was out of position” said Talbot, “I was able to look on my graph, check the number at fault and call out that number through a microphone, asking if the person holding that card could please get it right.”

And so it was that on such meticulous organisation the Communist Party was founded - to say nothing of a fine football annual.

Videoblog 3: European Football Yearbook 95/96

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Chris O plucks another item from his personal football memorabilia collection. This time it's the European Football Yearbook 95/96, a thick, chunky book full of stats, information and most importantly, football kit illustrations...


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