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LFC Old Photos


andybram
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I have amassed a collection of photos of past players, games, events etc.. I have 1000's in my collection and I have started a facebook group so I can share them with all Liverpool fans.

 

Some you will have seen, but literally tons you won't have seen and I hope they bring back memories long since forgotten of past players and games you may have attended over the years

 

If you would like to see them please Like the page and I hope you enjoy them, the page is literally less than an hour old so the pics will be coming thick and fast, thanks

 

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Liverpool-FC-Images-Through-The-Years/1377236892505017

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I have amassed a collection of photos of past players, games, events etc.. I have 1000's in my collection and I have started a facebook group so I can share them with all Liverpool fans.

 

Some you will have seen, but literally tons you won't have seen and I hope they bring back memories long since forgotten of past players and games you may have attended over the years

 

If you would like to see them please Like the page and I hope you enjoy them, the page is literally less than an hour old so the pics will be coming thick and fast, thanks

 

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Liverpool-FC-Images-Through-The-Years/1377236892505017

 

Linky doesnt seem to be working.

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This lady has some quality pics from yesteryear.

 

https://twitter.com/AngelJCake

 

The 1946/47 champions

 

B8nQiWmCMAAICEe.jpg

 

George Kay was ahead of his time even if he looks like one of those dodgy spies in Casablanca.  It is George Kay with the hat on in the centre, Stringvest?.

 

After the war, the club took the unusual decision to tour the United States and Canada. It was Kay's theory that the climate and diet in North America would be extremely beneficial to the players. The punishing schedule of 10 matches in less than a month meant that the Liverpool squad started the first post-war season in far better physical shape than many of their competitors.

 

George Kay was not a fan of silly goal celebrations, I wonder what he would make of the Sturridge dance.

 

But the Reds weathered the Yankee onslaught and left Massachusetts with a 3-2 victory. After the game, Kay mentioned his dissatisfaction with the prolonged celebrations of the New England men following their goals, relying on tired American stereotypes: “Joe and Ed flung their arms around each other, waited in the center circle, and it needed only a banjo to make it a real hill-billy show. The other players of their side gave individual step dances in their joy.” Just as football tours have a long history, so too does English condescension towards the American interpretation of the game.

 

http://8by8mag.com/fat-and-football-on-liverpools-1946-u-s-tour/

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She's posted this and said she's not sure who it is.

 

B8eLCE7IYAAVu7h.jpg

 

I reckon it's Joey Jones, but I don't know the other fella.  What do you think?

 

[Edit - I've just realised who it is, the gobby cunt.]

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This lady has some quality pics from yesteryear.

 

https://twitter.com/AngelJCake

 

The 1946/47 champions

 

B8nQiWmCMAAICEe.jpg

 

George Kay was ahead of his time even if he looks like one of those dodgy spies in Casablanca.  It is George Kay with the hat on in the centre, Stringvest?.

 

After the war, the club took the unusual decision to tour the United States and Canada. It was Kay's theory that the climate and diet in North America would be extremely beneficial to the players. The punishing schedule of 10 matches in less than a month meant that the Liverpool squad started the first post-war season in far better physical shape than many of their competitors.

 

George Kay was not a fan of silly goal celebrations, I wonder what he would make of the Sturridge dance.

 

But the Reds weathered the Yankee onslaught and left Massachusetts with a 3-2 victory. After the game, Kay mentioned his dissatisfaction with the prolonged celebrations of the New England men following their goals, relying on tired American stereotypes: “Joe and Ed flung their arms around each other, waited in the center circle, and it needed only a banjo to make it a real hill-billy show. The other players of their side gave individual step dances in their joy.” Just as football tours have a long history, so too does English condescension towards the American interpretation of the game.

 

http://8by8mag.com/fat-and-football-on-liverpools-1946-u-s-tour/

 

When did uncle Junior manage Liverpool?

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