Ah but it's all just a legend though
It's not like any of that ever happened
Sixty goals in a season, 500 in a glittering career, all for a lousy eight quid a week. Remember the great Everton and England centre forward with pride as the 100th anniversary of his birth approaches.
When I was a kid we always knew when we were going to visit Uncle Tom. Dad would make me and my brothers put on the blue-and-white striped ties that were kept in the sideboard drawer for that sole purpose.
Uncle Tom was a Liverpool supporter. We supported Everton. Our home was a museum of Everton iconography. In addition to the ties, our mother knitted tea cosies and hot-water bottle covers in royal blue and white.
In a nearby cupboard – it was too big for the drawer – was a gigantic rattle that I could barely lift, let alone turn. Festooned with blue-and-white ribbons, it was, like the fading blue-and-white rosette beside it, a souvenir of dad’s greatest moment, his trip to Wembley in 1933 with his brother - my Uncle Bert - to see Everton win the FA Cup. (In the 1901 census, their address reads “Everton Road, Everton”; I suppose they had little choice.)
Everton’s star at the time was a centre forward – they weren’t called strikers in those days – called William Ralph Dean. If Everton was our faith, 'Dixie' Dean, as we called him, was our spiritual leader. Although I was too young to go to the match, the scoreline is engraved on my mind, Everton 3, Manchester City 0. Scorers: Stein, Dean, Dunn.
Dixie was a goalscoring genius, less famed for dribbling finesse than for raw courage, skill in the air (half his phenomenal haul of goals were from headers) and instinctive positioning. The earliest reading matter I can remember were crumpled clips from the Liverpool Echo recording Dixie’s greatest performance, achieved in the 1927-1928 season, when, at the age of 21, he scored more League goals in a season than anyone before or since, taking Everton to the League Championship in the process.
With three matches of that season still to go, only the most committed Dean fans believed that he could reach, let alone beat, the 59-goal record of Middlesbrough’s George Camsell. With only three matches left, he still had 'only' 51 to his name. But after hitting six goals in the next two games, two against Aston Villa and four against Burnley, he needed a hat-trick in the last match against Arsenal to take the record.
On May 5, 1928, supporters packed Goodison Park, despite the fact that the Championship was already in the bag, to see Dixie’s bid for a place in the record books. He scored in the first five minutes, then, midway through the first half, Everton were awarded a penalty, which was converted by you know who.
But with eight minutes to go, the score at 2-2 and 60,000 people looking anxiously at the clock, it began to look as though Dixie wouldn’t make it. Then left winger Alec Troup sent in a corner with Dean’s name on it. Dixie soared above the Arsenal defence, and when he came down, the ball was in the net and football history had been made. Even Arsenal’s late equaliser couldn’t dampen the spirits of the ecstatic Goodison Park crowd.
I had heard so much about that match as a child it that I used to believe that I was actually there. Later, dad would point himself out in a sea of faces, in sepia newspaper photographs of the open-topped bus that carried the team through the Liverpool suburbs.
Those 60 goals in 39 matches, plus the 40 he scored in internationals, Cup-ties and friendlies in the same season, brought his total to an amazing 100, a figure that is unlikely ever to be beaten, despite today’s crowded football schedules, longer seasons and additional European and domestic championships.
Dixie Dean scored almost 500 goals in his career, including 37 hat-tricks, before retiring to run a pub in Chester. The pub, the Dublin Packet, became a Mecca for former fans; my Uncle Bert was one of the many who made the pilgrimage from Liverpool.
After a long retirement, Dixie died in 1980, appropriately watching the Blues play their historic rivals from the other side of Stanley Park (Liverpool won 2-1.) At his funeral, huge crowds lined the streets of Liverpool in silent tribute. Bill Shankly, the Liverpool manager and football’s king of the one-liners, remarked that Dixie, dead, could draw a bigger crowd than today’s Everton, live.
In a series of postage stamps commemorating the 2000 European Cup, the 19p stamp featured a typical Dean header, and was captioned “Dixie Dean, 1907-1980” -- long-overdue recognition of the football legend who transferred to Everton from Tranmere Rovers at the age of 18 for £3,000, and at the peak of his career earned £8 a week.
On January 22, the football world will celebrate the centenary of Dixie’s birth on January 22, 1907. I, my son and grandson, Everton supporters all – will be wearing blue
Ah but it's all just a legend though
It's not like any of that ever happened
Very good Anto. You should provide a link to where you got it though out of courtesy.
Top Breeders recommend drinkfeckarse....
Are you suggesting that he didn't write it himself?
Ceci n'est pas une signature
Don't worry, I was being sarcastic. AS DFA said, next time at least credit the author.
Ceci n'est pas une signature
i read a great book about him when i was young and there was an anecdote about how he had a part time job as a kid doing repairs in a hall. the place was rat infested and when a rat ran across the hall floor he'd give chase and then kick it against the wall and kill it!! that was how he got such a hard shot ! ( ok probably not true but a great read!)
Was he crazy!! Yeah , in a very special way , an Irishman.
I slept, and dreamed that life was Beauty;
I woke, and found that life was Duty.
Doesn't mention Dixie's brief spell with Sligo Rovers.
Legend.
TO TELL THE TRUTH IS REVOLUTIONARY
The ONLY foot.ie user with a type of logic named after them!
All of this has happened before. All of it will happen again.
Not surprising as the streets of Liverpool have a much bigger capacity than Goodison. You could just as easilly say that George Best attracted more punters in Death than the current Man Utd Team!
TO TELL THE TRUTH IS REVOLUTIONARY
The ONLY foot.ie user with a type of logic named after them!
All of this has happened before. All of it will happen again.
By all account an amazing player. Shanks even paid a tribute to him so he must have been exceptional cos he really hated Everton.
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Pity his statue was vandalised a few years ago before the derby, that red scarf wrapped around it must have caused serious damage!!
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