laticsfanatic
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Posts posted by laticsfanatic
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To be honest, I really thought putting Joe Royle on the board was going to be the ace card in making sure we always had the right football men in charge of our club.
There surely can't be many other individuals, after all, who are better connected, have the same eye for talent or know more about the game in this country - so why he and Darren got it so wrong with Unsworth is bewildering. I just hope they have learned from that fiasco and deliver us something special with this next recruitment.
No more jobs for the boys. No more journeymen with multiple sackings on their CV. No more lacklustre compromises. Let's have a fresh and vital management team we can all believe in.
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18 minutes ago, Bobledgersheart said:
I fell asleep when it got near the halfway line !
Oh, I don't know, I could get used to a bit of Athletiki-taka
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Just in case you were wondering what Mike Williamson could bring to the table.
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24 minutes ago, Worcester Owl said:
I'm not having this.
Stainrod 1979-1980 69 games, 21 goals, 3.29 games/goal
Palmer 1980-1994 456 games, 141 goals, 3.23 games/goal
Ritchie (first spell) 1987-1995 250 games, 104 goals, 2.40games/goal
I admit I haven't allowed for sub appearances/being subbed in the above, but Palmer and Ritchie were better than Stainrod. They were here for longer and scored for us in the top flight, which Stainrod didn't.
It says a lot about Stainrod that he made the impression he did in such a short space of time. Proper flair player, with a real swagger. The idea of a Stainrod-Ritchie combo is truly the stuff of dreams.
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Two very different players who, together, made the perfect strike partnership. Wylde was a great finisher, but it was Stainrod who you'd pay your entrance money to go and see. He was just a mercurial entertainer akin to Stan Bowles or Rodney Marsh, and I was devastated when he left.
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In the introduction to his autobiography, Alex Ferguson talks generously about Joe Royle, saying his ''Oldham teams brought a freshness that would never be replaced. Oldham gave us some scary moments.''
When I read that, I instantly thought of this game. Fergie may have won two Champions League trophies and slugged it out with the best in Europe for 30 years, but he knew there was something about our team back then that was just unique, exhilarating and incredibly special.
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Fantastic post Andy. I've got to agree with Joe, this was Oldham Athletic at their absolute A1 peak. Remember Tricky Ricky's impudent throw in onto the back of a United player? Not many teams could have lived with us that day.
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The most disappointing for me will always be Billy Kenny. Everton fans still look back on him as their missed Gerrard and in his brief stint with us you could see the frightening potential. When he signed I genuinely felt Joe had unearthed an absolute diamond but, after just 4 games, the drugs took over and he was gone.
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It was unbelievable the effect that Stainrod had at Latics in just over 18 months. The day he was sold, a very white Jimmy Kirton who was my boss at the time came into the lunchroom and told me he had gone. I was equally devastated!
Then we signed Roger who? Roger :censored:ing who?
Stainrod was simply a great showman. You'd go to games just to see him, because he had a swagger and a touch of magic about his game that just seemed so alien at little old Boundary Park. We all knew we were on borrowed time having a mercurial talent like that playing for us, but wow, was that a fantastic 18 months! Pity because I would have loved to have seen him spearhead one of Joe Royle's great teams.
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Andy Ritchie
Dennis Irwin
Ricky Holden
They not only mixed it with the best in England but beat them, and with some style! To be honest, I've only seen 4 players you could genuinely call GREAT in my 40 years supporting Latics - the other being Simon Stainrod.
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Was lucky enough to play alongside Bryan Robson twice about five years ago.
Anyone remember him playing against us back in the 80's, when we took on United in a hastily arranged winter friendly? Games were being called off everywhere, but we had our undersoil heating. Robbo was at his peak then - played the first half as a sweeper and in his usual marauding midfield roll in the second. Absolute world class. Still rate it as the best performance I have seen from an opposition player at Boundary Park.
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First: Maurice Whittle - cracking left back with a shot like a mule!
All time: Simon Stainrod - just has the edge in flair and fantasy over Stitch.
Present: I'll say Harkins, but in all honesty he can't hold a light to the three aforementioned legends.
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When I first started to follow Latics in 1958 I remember one day asking my dad if he thought that Latics would ever play in the first division or play at wembley. He looked at me kindly and shook his head. Sadly he passed away before Latics achieved both and I must admit as Latics were led out by Joe Royle at the League Cup Final I thought of him and tears welled up in my eyes with pride at my little team. The result was immaterial to me.
Pete's post was the real tear jerker for me. Sheer class. United fans, you'll never experience euphoric, life-affirming emotions like these!!!
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1. First home game in the Prem. All seater stand. New grass pitch. Sun shining. And a 3-0 win against Chelsea to boot. Bliss.
2. The penalty. The tears. The pitch invasion. The Champions!
3. Maurice’s winner against United in ‘74
4. Ooh what a hat-trick! Roger’s third in the 4-1 destruction of City at Main Road in ’88.
5. Ricky’s second in the 3-0 Quarter Final win v Villa. They finished runners up in the top flight. We proved we could live with the best!
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It's great to see Alan Groves and Ian Wood still being remembered 40 years on. They wouldn't make the top 20 players I've seen at Latics, yet their very name oozes and evokes Oldham Athletic: true "legends". They're part of our mythology and were integral to us becoming a mainstay of the second tier (something we can only dream wistfully of now).
If it was a case of just choosing a great player then you'd be talking people like Stainrod, Barrett, Wylde and Warhurst too, but to be one of our 10 legends I just think you need to have something extra. Your name has to be synonymous with us and you need to define our history.
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Yep, John Ryan. For a brief period he looked the real deal. An overlapping left back with genuine power and pace. Formed a terrific partnership with Paul Heaton and won an England Under 21 cap before moving to Newcastle for around £250,000.
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I'm not knocking Dennis Irwin for a minute, who could with what he went on to achieve in the game. He may be a Manure legend but I still think Craig Fleming was the finest full back I ever saw in a Latics shirt.
Mind you, my favourite ever Latics player is Paul Rickers so i'm probably talking bollox ha ha.
I remember Craig Fleming as being a terrific man marker, whose best position with us was centre half. Accomplished but not exceptional.
Dennis Irwin though, was possibly the only player I've seen come through Latics who could later be talked about as "World Class". He might have only reached those dizzy heights whilst at United, but for us he was a real Rolls Rolls player - outstanding at either left back or right back, and a major part of our success.
He also played 167 games for Oldham, so I'd definitely say he was one of our legends.
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Neil Redfearn, for giving me the most gut wrenching and then mind blowing moment that I will ever experience at a game.
Bang on! For giving us that one unbelievable moment of ecstasy, Neil Redfearn nails on his status as a true Latics legend.
The only name on the list that jars with me is David Eyres. A Burnley and Blackpool great maybe, but Oldham? Really?
Give me Maurice Whittle, Ronnie Blair, Ricky Holden or Willy Donachie instead, any day.
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Simon Stainrod every time - there was fantasy and adventure in his play that was just intoxicating to watch. I can't imagine that we've had a better striking partnership than Stainrod and Wylde either.
Alan Groves never quite had the same vision or consistency to his game for me and, personally, Warhurst, Stitch and Rick have captured my imagination more.
The Next Oldham Manager
in The opinions4u Terraces - Latics Forum
Posted
OK, if Joe's instincts on managers can't be trusted, let's see him hold his hand up and get on the phone to those big name contacts he has, who have a history of getting it right. Sure, it might be wishful thinking on my part to think he's got Tony Bloom at Brighton or Dan Ashworth at Newcastle on speed dial. But I'd still like to believe he's got enough influence and connections within the game to find out who the best up and coming coaches are right now.