Let's be honest: the traditional "hard man" has virtually disappeared from the top-level game. In the current low aggression climate a bloke like Mark van Bommel may be hailed as some sort of "hard tackling" ogre, but the so-called "enforcers" of today are pitifully tame in comparison to that which could be seen up to the tail end of the nineties. Van Bommel is a cream-puff wimp who dives the moment anyone touches
him...
Now, before anyone gets the wrong end of the stick, permit me to clarify that I'm not an advocate of dirty play nor do I condone on-field violence. However, to quote Graeme Souness, "intimidation is part of the game" and that aspect of the sport has largely been excised, especially in the last decade, through a combination of rule changes and the omnipresence of cameras which cover every blade of grass in the stadium leaving nothing that happens on the field unnoticed.
Regulations dictate that tackling is now far less ferocious than it once was: goalkeepers are highly protected from all manner of challenges, while the coddling of forwards has made life a lot more difficult for defenders. The sheer volume of cameras constantly focused on all angles of the ground mean that players can no longer unobtrusively sneak in an elbow, a head butt or a sly kick somewhere off the ball and safely out of the officials' view. If, for some reason, the cameras manage to miss such an incident, however trifling it may be, there are always plenty of digital devices in the crowd which quickly remedy this and bring the evidence to worldwide light. As recent events have amply illustrated, even
selected forms of verbal badinage come under microscopic scrutiny in this ultra-sanitised, made-for-television environment. After all, football is now primarily a form of money-generating mass entertainment, not the sport of old.
To further my point, it is interesting to note that some of the hardest players of the past weren't defenders of central midfielders, but
strikers.
Billy Whitehurst, whom I've mentioned in other threads, is universally regarded as the toughest player of the 1980s and early 1990s. Notorious football psychopath Vinnie Jones said that Whitehurst was definitely the hardest player he had ever encountered (they were briefly teammates at Sheffield United) - it was rumoured that Whitehurst fought bareknuckle bouts against gypsies to supplement his income from football (he sure as hell wouldn't have to do that if he played these days...).
Whitehurst looked (and still looks) like the kind of geezer one would expect to see grinning menacingly while slowly pulling a pair of pliers out of a brief case in preparation for a bit of sans anaesthetic non-National Health dental work on behalf of some over-Brilliantined East End loan shark. I could relate a few episodes about Whitehurst, but the following link pretty much sums him up:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2009/may/18/seven-deadly-sins-hard-man-billy-whitehurst
I like his final statement in which he says that he'd love 10 minutes against Rio Ferdinand...
Another noted 1980s / 1990s hard man was Scottish midfielder Chic Charnley. Everything You need to know is in the link below:
http://www.thesun.co.uk/scotsol/homepage/sport/leaguedivision1/2727596/Blade-runner.html
Here are a few other enforcers of days gone by, when the game was still played as it should be.
Julian Dicks:
[video=youtube;9dl9SlgSFlw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9dl9SlgSFlw[/video]
Note Dicks' comments (0:55 - 1:07) about the traits of a genuine hard man: the importance of having the ability to give it out
and to also take it.
Sorry frederic38, but this automatically rules out South Americans, who are all for kicking opponents yet instantly crumple in a heap and theatrically roll for metres when someone merely glances in their direction. How about Diego Simeone versus England in the 1998 World Cup?
[video=youtube;0Rsc-7TZ9T8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Rsc-7TZ9T8[/video]
Look at those scheming Argentine poofters swarming around the referee, pressuring him to send Beckham off. Batistuta's smug smirk at 1:03 typifies the perenially cheating, win-at-all-cost attitude of South American footballers who, despite their ubiquitous gold crucifixes and hypocritical gestures of religious piety, are bereft of all sense of honour.
Pardon the mini-rant, but this constant eulogising of South Americans is getting on my nerves. You do realise that up until comparatively recent times Uruguay was regarded as the dirtiest (in terms of diving and general cheating) national team on the planet, don't You? Oscar Tabarez himself admitted this prior to the 1990 World Cup. Anyway, back to the subject at hand...
"Psycho" Stuart Pearce. Here's a clip of the man in characteristically vertebrae-rattling action:
[video=youtube;dgzd7oHyeBY]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dgzd7oHyeBY[/video]
Note how Pearce walks straight off when shown the red card - no histrionics, no shouting at the referee, no bull****...
Graeme Souness - in this instance dishing out a bit of "retribution" against Steaua Bucharest:
[video=youtube;ygVgxYa3mlo]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ygVgxYa3mlo[/video]
Andoni Goikoetxea Olaskoaga, a.k.a. "The Butcher from Bilbao". Here we have his most famous exploit: breaking Maradona's ankle in 1983:
[video=youtube;N8_JYHtvTS8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N8_JYHtvTS8[/video]
As a "bonus", here is Goikoetxea cleaning up Bernd Schuster in 1981:
[video=youtube;PF5DmWQAyIQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PF5DmWQAyIQ[/video]
Despite all of his faults, Maradona displayed an admirably stoic attitude towards the constant threat posed by aggressive opponents. Maradona was the most kicked player of his era, taking enormous amounts of bone-crunching punishment, yet always maintained that "football is a man's game" and that tough defending was simply part of the package.
Tommy Smith, the "Anfield Iron":
As an interesting aside, Smith famously made derogatory comments about blacks when he was interviewed for a book about John Barnes.
Norman "Bites Yer Legs" Hunter, whose aggression ensured that he even managed to stand out in the infamously dirty Leeds United sides of the late 1960s and early 1970s. In this vdeo, Hunter flattens future Everton and Athletic Bilbao manager Howard Kendall:
[video=youtube;kbPPtca6ulY]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kbPPtca6ulY[/video]
Ron "Chopper" Harris. His very name and sobriquet are bywords for the legendary football thuggery of the 1960s and 1970s:
Dave Mackay, renowned hard nut of the 1950s and 1960s:
What better way of concluding this delightful parade of the goons of yesteryear than with a photo of Vinnie Jones doing his best to twist Gazza's goolies off...