[Originally published in Well Red magazine, February 2012]
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Some seasons
stick in the memory more than others. It
just depends which set of experiences you choose to fall back on.
As anyone
who followed Liverpool in the ‘70s and ‘80s
will tell you, it seemed that every campaign was a treasure trove of memorable
games and defining moments. Silverware
arrived with unprecedented regularity, icons were born and, when the time came,
were replaced by newer, shinier models.
The juggernaut kept on rolling, leaving the Uniteds, the Evertons, the
Arsenals – let’s face it, the whole of Europe
– crushed in our wake. It was a good
time to grow up a Red.
In the midst
of this glorious procession, it’s fair to say that I came of age as a Liverpool supporter.
From spending games perched on my Dad’s knee in the Main Stand as a
giddy 7 year old, to standing on a home-made stool in the Anny Road end,
craning to see anything other than the back of some oversized docker’s neck, to
my Kop apprenticeship (same spot each week - just to the side of the right-hand
stanchion), to the relative comfort of a Main Stand season ticket (relative to
the comfort enjoyed by, say, a hostage chained to a radiator), and back to the
sweaty, tobacco-fuelled embrace of the Kop.
A host of vivid memories to cling to in the wilderness years.
It was
whilst happily bathing in the warm glow of such reminiscences that I was struck
by a chilling, yet unavoidable realisation.
It is now 30 years since my first season as a fully-fledged regular
match-goer. 30 years. How did that
happen?
I’d been to
my fair share of matches prior to 1981/82, odd games here and there when the
opportunity arose, but this was different. I was 14 now, old enough to single-handedly navigate
the hazardous 3.6 mile journey from the mean streets of Orrell Park
to Anfield. Or, as was usually the case,
blag a lift off my Dad to the junction of Walton Lane and Anfield Road . The sense of independence, the thrill of the
new, was all-consuming. This was where I
belonged, these were my people. It was
like becoming part of an elite club, albeit one with questionable toilet
provisions and an admittedly lax dress code.
Now all that
remained was to settle back and wait for the LFC Class of ’81 to sweep all
before them, as tradition dictated they would.
Simple, really.
Except this
was to be a season unlike most others.
Alright, it culminated with Liverpool
cast once more as the country’s pre-eminent team, with both the League title
and League Cup safely tucked away. No
change there. But there were to be more
twists along the way than you’d get in an Eastenders Christmas special.
_____________________________
The remorseless
crushing machine of 78/79 was by now starting to show the inevitable signs of
ageing. Players who had scaled the ultimate heights at Anfield could no longer
produce the consistency or vitality needed to sustain yet another title
challenge. A staleness had crept into Liverpool ’s game.
Without rejuvenation, the squad would struggle to compete with the
vigour and drive of reigning champions Aston Villa (no, really) or UEFA Cup
holders Ipswich (yes, I know).
Naturally,
no-one was aware of this more than Bob Paisley. His immediate response was to bolster his
options with a trio of eye-catching signings. In Mark Lawrenson and Craig Johnston, Paisley saw players of immense promise, relative youth
and, above all, real pace. In Bruce
Grobbelaar, he had earmarked a potential long-term successor to the great Ray
Clemence. With prodigiously talented youngsters
like Ian Rush and Ronnie Whelan waiting hungrily in the wings, the foundations
were in place for a gradual transition.
As it transpired the need to rebuild soon became more urgent than even Paisley had envisioned.
Just two
weeks before the opening game of the season, Clemence decided to pursue the
fresh challenge offered by perennial dilettantes Tottenham. After more than a decade as Liverpool ’s
undisputed number one, his loss was a grievous blow. As a result, Grobbelaar’s credentials would be
tested a lot sooner than either he or Paisley
expected.
As the
campaign progressed, it quickly became apparent that all was not well. Just as the new boys struggled to impose
their identity on the team, so the old hands failed to recapture the
consistency and level of performance that we had become accustomed to. Seasoned internationals were making the kind
of mistakes more commonly found in the schoolyard; Anfield’s reputation as a
fortress was in danger of being undermined by a series of disappointing
displays and results; I began to fear that my presence on the terraces was
having some kind of adverse effect, an inverted Midas Touch, turning all I
surveyed to cack.
Clearly, the
transition was going to need a bit of gentle coercion.
_____________________
The tipping
point came on Boxing Day. A calamitous
home fixture against Manchester
City ended in a
thoroughly dismal 3-1 defeat in a game notable for a number of reasons. It was
already the third reversal Anfield had witnessed (along with three draws) in just
nine matches – by comparison, the previous decade as a whole had produced only
five home losses. It saw the erratic
Grobbelaar reach a nadir, his handling disastrous, his decision-making bizarre
and his confidence shot to pieces. It
marked Phil Thompson’s final game as Liverpool captain, with Paisley
handing the armband to Graeme Souness in the aftermath, an attempt to stem the
alarming dip in Thompson’s form (and a decision which was to sow seeds of
long-lasting personal resentment between the pair that has never been fully
resolved).
It meant
that Manchester City jumped to the top of the table, an
event considerably more noteworthy in the days of the Peter Swales comb-over
than it is in today’s cash-soaked times.
And it left Liverpool languishing in 12th
place, disjointed and off-the pace, our title chances seemingly in tatters.
But if we’ve learnt anything from this club’s
history, it’s surely to know not to write it off when the odds are stacked against
it.
The revival
began almost immediately. High-flying Swansea were clinically
dispatched, 4-0, on their own turf, in a one-sided FA Cup tie. The confidence and consistency flooded
back. The fledgling Dalglish – Rush
partnership began to flourish, the revitalising effect on Kenny’s career clear
to all; Whelan and Johnston brought some much-needed energy and directness to
the midfield; at the back Lawrenson and Hansen forged an understanding, based
on the kind of ball-playing ability rarely seen in defenders on these shores,
that would come to be unrivalled in the club’s history; even Brucie managed to
rein in some of his more damaging excesses.
The juggernaut
was back on the road. After the City
debacle, twenty of the next twenty four league games were won (including, in
one spell, eleven consecutive victories).
Devastating displays mixed with battling performances, full of character
and purpose. The League Cup was secured
after another belated comeback at Wembley against Ray Clemence’s
Tottenham. Villa, Everton, United and
City were blown away in front of their own supporters, the latter a 5-0
massacre that excised the pain of the Boxing Day disaster.
One by one,
the teams above us in the league were reeled in and overtaken. Until finally, in the season’s penultimate
game, with Spurs again the hapless victims, second half goals from Lawrenson,
Dalglish and Whelan confirmed Liverpool as
champions for the thirteenth time. Given
the circumstances, it’s easy to understand why Paisley ,
a man who knew a thing or two about championship success, saw this as his most
satisfying triumph.
____________________
As for me, my
debut season as an Anfield regular was a momentous one.
It included my first Wembley visit (which was
followed by accidentally jumping a taxi queue at Lime Street station in front
of an understandably miffed-looking Kenny Dalglish and Sammy Lee), my first Goodison
derby (smack in the middle of the Gwladys Street End, which made celebrating
Craig Johnston’s mis-hit clincher an exercise in failed restraint) and my first
exposure to the talents that would sustain a new era of success.
It ended
with the intense anti-climax of being locked out of the title-decider with
Tottenham, having arrived 90 minutes before kick-off, the very fact that such a
game was a ‘pay-on-the-gate’ affair acting as a stark reminder that these were
very different times.
There have
been lots of games, lots of trophies, lots of memories since then. I’ve grown
older, wiser, more cynical, more tolerant, more inclined to treat results, good
or bad, with a rationality I would have once thought impossible. I’ve seen our club at its highest and at its
lowest and realised that, sometimes, real life makes football seem irrelevant. Sorry, it just does.
Time passes,
things change, people move on. Even the
most treasured of memories eventually start to fade.
But, 30 years on, there’ll always be a part of me that’s
still back on the Kop in 1982.
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