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February 6th, 1958

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 25,953 ✭✭✭✭kryogen


    Flowers of Manchester

    R.I.P.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 40,898 ✭✭✭✭Xavi6


    R.I.P. to all involved in crash both United and City. Frank Swift was a City legend. Most appearances list -

    1 Alan Oakes 680
    2 Joe Corrigan 603
    3 Mike Doyle 570
    4 Bert Trautman 545
    5 FRANK SWIFT 511
    6 Colin Bell 501
    7= Billy Meredith 500
    7= Eric Brook 500

    Read a very good article today -

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/premier_league/manchester_united/article3300283.ece
    Survivors who felt left behind by club’s rise from the ashes
    Matthew Syed

    One of the unspoken truths about Wednesday’s anniversary is that, for many, it will be tainted by the perception that Manchester United have built their financial success by exploiting the memory of Munich while failing to pay proper recompense to those whose lives were blighted by the tragedy.

    It is a perception that poisons the memories of the families whose lives were devastated by Munich, a perception that has left some fans feeling that the soul of the club was lost amid the wreckage of Flight 609 ZU, a perception that has been sharpened by the knowledge that while some of the survivors and families live in poverty, the present crop of players and directors drink Cristal by the crateful.

    Albert Scanlon, the winger who fractured his skull in Munich and who lives in a nursing home, has views that typify the resentment that has festered since the tragedy. “Munich killed not only a lot of the players who were on that flight, but some of the survivors, too,” he said in The Lost Babes, Jeff Connor’s fascinating memoir. “Things changed for all time at Munich and United didn’t come up to par. They have never really done ’owt for me.”

    Much of the bitterness relates to the months after the disaster and the treatment of the survivors and families by the club. Dennis Viollet, Bobby Charlton and Bill Foulkes were retained by Matt Busby, but Scanlon was off-loaded within a season and Kenny Morgans not long after. Johnny Berry, who was unable to play again because of the injuries he suffered in the crash,

    Related Links
    Death of Busby Babes, birth of football legend
    was asked to leave his grace-and-favour home off Davyhulme Road within 12 months of the crash to make way for Shay Brennan, a new player.

    Jackie Blanchflower, another survivor whose injuries were such that he never played again, was given employment by Louis Edwards, later the club’s chairman, loading meat pies on to lorries, but Munich was the beginning of a downward spiral into poverty. “Mum used to say that he used up the family’s luck surviving Munich,” Blanchflower’s daughter, Laurie, said. “He was always being made redundant.”

    Given the incalculable grief caused by the tragedy, it is difficult not to empathise with the bitterness directed at the club, but it is important to place United’s actions in the context of an institution that was itself fighting for survival in the aftermath of a calamity that had so damaged its team and staff. If Busby had kept players on the books in a way that could not be justified in footballing terms, or if the club had continued to offer homes and wages in perpetuity, Manchester United would have been bankrupted.

    It is also not strictly true to say that the survivors and their families were neglected. United were underinsured, but the payout of £200,000 was shared equally by the club and the families of the players who lost their lives.

    The club have also made gestures to survivors and families that have caused friction. Roger Byrne’s widow, Joy, and their young son were allowed to stay indefinitely at a club house for a peppercorn rent, while Viollet’s second wife, Helen, received a cheque from the club when he faced huge medical bills after the diagnosis of a brain tumour in 1998. Some who were aware of this generosity wondered why it had not been given to them.

    The moral ambiguities that have marred the aftermath of Munich are, perhaps, most powerfully exemplified by the testimonial match played at Old Trafford in 1998 to mark the 40-year anniversary of the disaster (the match also doubled as a farewell to Eric Cantona, who had left the club the previous season).

    When the committee organising the match said one share from the proceeds would go to each player still living and one to surviving relatives of the dead, it was bombarded by relatives of the airline crew and of the journalists who felt that they were also entitled to recompense. Others argued that Charlton and the Busby family should not be given a share because of their relative wealth.

    “What has always hurt me is that not one of those players I played with took the trouble to pick up the phone or just drop me a card to say thank you,” John Doherty, the former player who helped to organise the match, said. “By the end I was sick of it.” Harry Gregg, the former goalkeeper, who was particularly scathing of the testimonial, said: “It has been so much PR bulls***.” He did, however, bank a cheque for £47,283.89.

    Despite the bitterness directed towards the club, there are many who view United’s actions with equanimity. The family of Liam Whelan, the young Dublin forward who died in the crash, said: “All the money in the world couldn’t bring Liam back to us. We have never asked anything of Manchester United and never would.”

    Perhaps the nub of the resentment derives from the niggling perception among victims that United have grown into financial giants by exploiting the memory of the tragedy. It is true that United’s rise from the ashes of Munich is central to the club’s mythology, but it cannot be sensibly argued that the disaster provides the primary explanation for their success.

    However one views the actions of the club, it is undeniable that the air crash has given rise to a separate and, in some ways, more disquieting tragedy, reflected in the enduring bitterness towards United that many will take to their graves. Fifty years on, the trauma of Munich shows no signs of abating.


  • Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 35,945 Mod ✭✭✭✭dr.bollocko


    Good article. Good points. The memory of these lost players, and the outpouring of grief that came after the disaster has definitely played a huge part in shaping man utd and where they are now. I think they adopted black as a 3rd club colour because of this disaster. I hope that all minute silences go well. I certainly know there are still a lot of insults flying about this disaster.Leeds fans still call Utd. fans "Munichs" and make plane signs from the stands. Fairly sickening stuff.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 45,630 ✭✭✭✭Mr.Nice Guy


    Interesting read. There were also two excellent back-to-back half-hour documentaries on BBC Four this past Monday night. Don't know if anyone caught them but one of them will be repeated on Wednesday night at 10pm. It featured footage of the players which Sir Bobby Charlton had not seen before. Harry Gregg also gave his thoughts. It was a moving documentary and I'd urge anyone to catch it if they can.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 46,276 ✭✭✭✭Mitch Connor


    RIP.

    Read that piece by TAClare before, a few times now - great piece.

    Saw the documentaries on BBC4 Monday night too - both excellent program, wish they had been longer though.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 41,926 ✭✭✭✭_blank_


    The Flowers of Manchester


    One cold and bitter Thursday in Munich, Germany,
    Eight great football stalwarts conceded victory,
    Eight men who will never play again who met destruction there,
    The flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester

    Matt Busby's boys were flying, returning from Belgrade,
    This great United family, all masters of their trade,
    The Pilot of the aircraft, the skipper Captain Thain,
    Three times they tried to take off and twice turned back again.

    The third time down the runaway, disaster followed close,
    There was a slush upon that runaway and the aircraft never rose,
    It ploughed into the marshy ground, it broke, it overturned.
    And eight of the team were killed as the blazing wreckage burned.

    Roger Byrne and Tommy Taylor who were capped for England's side.
    And Ireland's Billy Whelan and England's Geoff Bent died,
    Mark Jones and Eddie Colman, and David Pegg also,
    They all lost their lives as it ploughed on through the snow.

    Big Duncan he went to, with an injury to his frame,
    And Ireland's brave Jack Blanchflower will never play again,
    The great Matt Busby lay there, the father of his team
    Three long months passed by before he saw his team again.

    The trainer, coach and secretary, and a member of the crew,
    Also eight sporting journalists who with United flew,
    and one of them was Big Swifty, who we'll ne'er forget,
    the finest English 'keeper that ever graced the net.

    Oh, England's finest football team its record truly great,
    its proud successes mocked by a cruel turn of fate.
    Eight men will never play again, who met destruction there,
    the flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester

    Rest in Peace.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,305 ✭✭✭jobonar


    Rip


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,625 ✭✭✭✭BaZmO*


    Xavi6 wrote: »
    Good article. Shows that you can damned if you do and damned if don't. It also shows that a lot of the time it's in a players interest to look after their interests while at a club as you can so quickly and easily become surplus to requirements.

    I hope that all minute silences go well
    I somehow seriously doubt that they will.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,346 ✭✭✭✭homerjay2005


    BaZmO* wrote: »
    I somehow seriously doubt that they will.

    i expect that this will be run off peacefully.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,658 ✭✭✭✭Peyton Manning


    There will be a small few who will disresect it - but I expect it to go off relatively trouble free bar the odd whistle and yell.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,625 ✭✭✭✭BaZmO*


    i expect that this will be run off peacefully.
    It will at most of the matches but I'd be extremely surprised if it's completely respected at the England game. Sure haven't they given up on minute silences in favour minute applauses at games now do to idiots shouting and whistling during them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,688 ✭✭✭Nailz


    UNITED they were... UNITED they stand...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,451 ✭✭✭blastman


    The book mentioned in that article by Jeff Connor is an excellent read, I'd recommend it to anyone who loves the game.

    One Love.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 16,658 ✭✭✭✭Peyton Manning


    The following is a poem by Manchester poet Mike Garry about the commemorations of the fiftieth anniversary of the disaster. The last verse is especially touching:

    Sixty Seconds of Silence

    Hold your tongue
    Speak not ill of the dead
    Find your own silence inside
    Seeking only the truth
    That boys in their prime perished that night
    And the very heart of this city stopped beating
    Manchester flowers
    Scattered across a foreign field of powder white snow

    News hissed through
    Like the gas on a cooker whose flame had blown out
    Freckled faced paperboys on Peter St and Piccadilly
    Crying louder than they had ever cried before

    Sons were lost
    Mothers sisters and wives deep sighed
    Dads and brothers died inside
    And red and blue stood side by side by side
    In silence
    Because silence is so much louder than applause


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,117 ✭✭✭✭MrJoeSoap


    The "minutes" silence in Croker last night lasted about 15 seconds. Surely Brazillians can understand that when the players gather around the centre circle and the Irish fans stop making noise that something is happening?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,772 ✭✭✭jameshayes


    MrJoeSoap wrote: »
    The "minutes" silence in Croker last night lasted about 15 seconds. Surely Brazillians can understand that when the players gather around the centre circle and the Irish fans stop making noise that something is happening?

    It was very rude to be honest.


  • Moderators, Regional North East Moderators Posts: 12,739 Mod ✭✭✭✭cournioni


    Read a pull out in one of the tabloids yesterday on the Munich air disaster and I have to say I was almost in tears reading it. Such a tragedy for young and talented people to lose their lives. Not only that but the bravery of Harry Gregg and German locals (only a decade after the World War) who were heroic in rescuing as many people as they could.

    RIP The Busby Babes.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,625 ✭✭✭✭BaZmO*


    It wasn't announced in Portuguese so it took them a while to realise what was happening.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,688 ✭✭✭Nailz


    PORNAPSTER wrote: »
    Not only that but the bravery of Harry Gregg and German locals (only a decade after the World War) who were heroic in rescuing as many people as they could.
    Yeah seen a documentry on BBC on monday on Harry Gregg, what a hero. A wounded man getting up from the reckage, dare not he run, but save peoples lives, team mates and others. He saved a pregnant woman aswell she had the baby 3 months later. In the show he met the mother and the son for the first time since, it was very touching... many people owe him their lives.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,496 ✭✭✭Mr. Presentable


    BaZmO* wrote: »
    It wasn't announced in Portuguese so it took them a while to realise what was happening.

    Agreed. To be fair this is not such a big deal outside the British Isles. There have been other, more tragic and significant football losses than this. So you can understand their WTF?, particularly as they were in Ireland.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,117 ✭✭✭✭MrJoeSoap


    nipplenuts wrote: »
    Agreed. To be fair this is not such a big deal outside the British Isles. There have been other, more tragic and significant football losses than this. So you can understand their WTF?, particularly as they were in Ireland.

    That shouldn't make a difference, nor should the fact that it was "samba time" in the hill. It was clear to the Polish lads sitting beside me, and the Brazillians next to them what was going on, they all stood respectfully. As a comment on the Indo site says...

    A minutes silence is self explanatory. It was shown on the Big Screen and every irish fan and all personnel on the field went quiet. You dont need to speak the same language to understand that. Minutes silence are worldwide and speak for themselves. I think it was a disgrace and came across very badly on tv. On sky sports coverage you couldnt really tell it was the Brazilians therefore anyone watching it might well have got the impression that it was the Irish fans. I feel it should have been highlighted on tv as saying "the brazilians didnt understand what was going on" doesnt wash with me.

    I know if I was in Rio for a game (hopefully some day!) and there was a minutes silence I'd cop on fairly quick and keep quiet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,688 ✭✭✭Nailz


    MrJoeSoap wrote: »
    I know if I was in Rio for a game (hopefully some day!) and there was a minutes silence I'd cop on fairly quick and keep quiet.
    Or do exactly what they did just to show them how it feels and then potentialy get shot at!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 29,346 ✭✭✭✭homerjay2005


    Nailz wrote: »
    Yeah seen a documentry on BBC on monday on Harry Gregg, what a hero. A wounded man getting up from the reckage, dare not he run, but save peoples lives, team mates and others. He saved a pregnant woman aswell she had the baby 3 months later. In the show he met the mother and the son for the first time since, it was very touching... many people owe him their lives.



    harry gregg, what a true legend. that word gets branded about too much, but in this case, totally deserved. as the song goes," they deserve to be knighted"


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