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Sir Alex Ferguson: 25 Years
Topic Started: Nov 2 2011, 06:21 PM (1,771 Views)
mercedes
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Old Hag
Fergie's Best Buys:

RUUD VAN NISTELROOY - £19m from PSV - 1/7/01
Hardly one from the bargain basement, but Fergie's willingness to bust the British transfer record for van Nistelrooy is one of the best examples of the Scot's unshakable faith in his own judgement. Tracked from the age of 16, van Nistelrooy had apparently been bagged at long last by the United boss when a knee injury forced the cancellation of his 2000 transfer hours before a planned press call. Undeterred, the striker ploughed on in his attempts to make Holland's Euro 2000 squad, and days later his damaged knee gave way altogether. Fergie was not about to give up the chase, taking on the role of pen pal during van Nistelrooy's rehabilitation and even once showing up at his front door. "That did it for me," the player would later remark, and late interest from Arsenal was inevitably rebuffed. Van Nistelrooy netted twice on his league debut, was named PFA Player of the Year in his first season and became the second-fastest post-war United player to 100 goals. That was one record Denis Law kept, but van Nistelrooy soon eclipsed him as the club's top European scorer. By the time he became a casualty of Fergie's search for a new system after two trophyless seasons, van Nistelrooy had netted 150 times in 215 appearances.

DWIGHT YORKE - £12.6m from ASTON VILLA - 20/8/98

Ashley Young's flying start to Old Trafford life is proof of Ferguson's enduring ability to buy a proven Premier League player at just the right time, and his judgement was never more astute than in the case of Yorke. Prised from the midlands just as Villa were emerging as outside title hopefuls, the Tobagan's United career burned out quickly but blazed brightly while lit. Tripped up by the emergence of Arsene Wenger's Arsenal the previous season, Fergie sought a striker to supplement the talents of Andy Cole, Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. Yorke quickly made himself indispensible, forming a friendship with Cole which brought rich on-field success if a few off-field headaches for the manager. Between them the pair found the net 53 times during the most glorious season in the club's history, one slickly-fashioned strike in a 3-3 draw at Barcelona summing up their symbiosis. Yorke scored 20 league goals in the following season's title success and, though his penchant for partying had started to grate with Fergie in 2001, a third winners' medal followed. "The boy who's given me all this grey hair," is how the Scot refers to Yorke now, but to this day Fergie holds up the partnership with Cole as an example for others to follow.

GARY PALLISTER - £2.3m from MIDDLESBROUGH - 29/8/89

Steve Bruce is often suggested as the best player of the modern-era never to win an England cap, but equally baffling is the failure of his erstwhile United partner to earn more than 22 international appearances. Fergie persuaded his board to pay more for Pallister than any British club had previously forked out on a defender but the Scot - who would make a profit on the player even nine years later - knew United's hard-earned was being spent on a partnership rather than a single signing. Pallister's fleet-footed grace was a perfect fit for bruiser Bruce's head-in-where-it-hurts bravery and, after a season spent honing their chemistry, the pair were at the heart of United's defence during a six-year spell which brought eight major trophies. Recognised by his peers with the PFA Player of the Year award in '92, the Teessider went on to win a further title following Bruce's exit and had a handy habit of contributing key goals - including two against Liverpool in the '97 run-in. Pallister made 437 appearances and, according to Fergie, was quicker than any player of his Old Trafford era over 100 metres.

WAYNE ROONEY - £20m from EVERTON - 31/8/04
Rooney's arrival represents a classic instance of both Fergie's pulling power and his willingness to put United's money where other clubs' mouths are. Back in 2004 you would have gone far to find a top manager dissenting from Fergie's view that Everton's 18-year-old man-boy Rooney was "the best young player this country has seen in the past 30 years". Yet while interest from everywhere bar Newcastle failed to manifest itself in the form of an offer, United bid £20m up front and a possible £7m to come. Not for the first time, once Fergie had shown his hand the rest folded - and for good reason. A wage packet worth way more than the reported £12,000-a-week on the Toffees' table doubtless had its attraction to a teenage Rooney, but perhaps only Fergie possessed the sure-footedness to persuade the youngster to ditch his lifelong allegiance to Everton at the drop of a red-and-black hat. The rewards were instant. Rooney scored a hat-trick on his debut against Fenerbahce and, though it took two seasons for United to escape a torpor unparalleled in the Fergie era, at the time of writing the England star's 158 goals have helped him amass seven major honours and a string of personal awards.

ROY KEANE - £3.75m from NOTTM FOREST - 22/7/9
3
Why ignore the obvious? Signing highly-regarded Keane was hardly a stroke of maverick genius, but persuading the Irishman to abort an all-but-done move to Blackburn not only bagged Fergie the most sought-after midfielder of the day and prevented him joining a title rival; it had the added bonus of riling old sparring partner Kenny Dalglish to such an extent that this grizzled Glaswegian was driven to talk about himself in the third person, ranting at Keane: 'Nobody does this to Kenny Dalglish'. More than just a new Bryan Robson, in Keane Fergie found an on-pitch extension of his own iron will, and the cantankerous Corkman often broke taboos the Scot - as United's mouthpiece - could not. Keane's insistence on breaching the club's wage barrier, a withering attack on the corporate quarter of Old Trafford and unforgiving assessments of emerging youngsters' complacent attitudes were all met with the manager's blind eye. Eventually, of course, Keane's mouth outlasted his legs and his exit came with indecent haste in the autumn of 2005 following a notorious MUTV interview. By then, he had amassed 12 major titles - nine as captain.

NEMANJA VIDIC - £7m from SPARTAK MOSCOW - 4/1/06
"Good defenders win you things", was Ferguson's understated choice of words to explain his signing of the Serbia centre-half. Sixteen months later United were celebrating a first title since 2003, and Vidic had proved his manager's point. Personnel-wise, there was little between the squad which finished the 2005/6 season trailing in Chelsea's wake and the one which thumped Fulham on the opening weekend of the following campaign. But Vidic and Patrice Evra had been bought in January and given an at-times uncomfortable four months to get up to speed, and Fergie's foresight paid handsome dividends. Fiorentina were United's only real rivals for the granite-jawed defender, but by the summer of 2007 he was so highly-prized a new five-year deal was in the offing and Vidic and Ferdinand had formed as effective a pairing since the days of Bruce and Pallister. A fearlessness at either end appealed to supporters, and the fact that Vidic's occasional fallibility resulted in a rash of red cards against Liverpool only added to his cult status. Four league titles, three League Cups and a European Cup later, the Serb remains United's key defender.

OLE GUNNAR SOLSKJAER - £1.5m from MOLDE - 23/7/96
Few could have anticipated the little-known Norwegian's impact when he arrived through the back door even as Old Trafford's red carpet was being rolled out the front for Alan Shearer. The Geordie's second - and final - snub forced Fergie into fielding Solskjaer sooner than he might have wished, but the striker's eye for goal was immediately obvious. Six minutes after making his debut as a substitute against Blackburn, the then 23-year-old gave a tantalising glimpse of cameos to come with his first United goal. In fact the caricature of Solskjaer as impact player does him a disservice - just 29 of his 126 goals came from the bench - but Fergie had found a player with a killer combination of qualities: a natural ability to finish, and the temperament to approach just the same an FA Cup final start and a half-hour outing against Leicester. And the player's greatest moments - four goals in 12 minutes at Nottingham Forest in 1999, the Nou Camp winner just months later - will forever mark him as United's supersub.

DENIS IRWIN - £625,000 from OLDHAM - 8/6/90
In the days of rigid 4-4-2 formations, the full-back's brief was a simple one: support your winger, don't do anything silly, give us 6/10 week in-week out. Irwin, signed after impressing Fergie during Oldham's FA Cup semi-final double-header against United in the spring of 1990, rewrote the rule-book. Seen and not heard, he may have been, but the son of Cork regularly produced performances a couple of notches up from the expected without compromising on consistency. At home on either flank, Irwin could pass, tackle and cross with both feet and was a trusted dead-ball specialist even in sides featuring the likes of Eric Cantona and David Beckham. In keeping with a man whose demeanour was more rural priest than Premier League star, Irwin was not one to sing his own praises. So let his statistics tell a story: 529 appearances, 33 goals, 7 league titles, 3 FA Cups, 1 League Cup, 1 European Cup, 1 Cup Winners' Cup.

ERIC CANTONA - £1.2m from LEEDS - 27/11/92
If you don't ask, you don't get. Fergie's off-the-cuff inquiry about Cantona's availability came after he bristled at an approach from Leeds for Denis Irwin. Whatever the truth about the then-champions' decision to sell, rarely can the Scot's chutzpah have been so richly-rewarded. Prior to signing Cantona the United boss had pinned his hopes of salvaging his side's latest faltering title challenge on Sheffield Wednesday's David Hirst, only for the Owls' obstinacy to scupper a deal. Instead of an old-school English No 9 Fergie stumbled on a ready-made hero in search of his own story, and in Manchester the nomadic Cantona found a home. The Frenchman immersed himself in the city's "insane love of football, of celebration and of music" and, on the pitch, justified the indulgence of his ego by leading United to a first title in 26 years. A first double followed 12 months later and, after an eye-boggling assault on a Crystal Palace fan cost United his services on the '95 run-in, Cantona returned to inspire another double - winning goals against title rivals Newcastle and FA Cup final opponents Liverpool cementing his status as a man for the grand occasion. Legend written, Cantona was not about to ruin it, and after a fourth title in '97 he sauntered off into the sunset - collar-up - at the age of 31 having scored 82 times in 185 appearances.

PETER SCHMEICHEL - £550,000 from BRONDBY - 1/7/91
The Dane's haul of major honours during eight years at Old Trafford runs into double figures, but his true worth is often measured against the mix-and-match collection of failed replacements identified and swiftly jettisoned by Sir Alex: 15 goalkeepers have appeared in the Premier League for United since Schmeichel departed with a treble in his trusty grasp back in '99, and only Edwin van der Sar has come close to filling the great man's tailor-made XXXL jersey. Signed 12 months before shooting to wider prominence during Denmark's shock Euro 92 success, Schmeichel soon became the foundation on which United's re-emergence as a major force was built. As adept at one-on-ones as sprawling stops, and with a javelin-throwers' arm which set his team-mates away on countless counter-attacks, he even managed to become one of...one?...keepers to patent a personal move - the Schmeichel star jump. An undignified late-career fling with Manchester City may have dulled United fans' affections for a forthright character, but few would quibble with Fergie's assessment: " At his best, I don't believe a better keeper has played the game. A giant figure in the history of United and our debt to him will never be forgotten."

anymore for anymore? I'd put Ronaldo in there for the amount we paid, the type of player he became, what he did for us and how much we sold him for.

some of those prices are crazy though and just goes to show how far football has come in terms of money. half a mil for schmeichal :o
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InWengerWeTrust
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GOAT.
Rio Ferdinand. Yes he cost a lot but he has almost been there a decade now and for 3/4 years he was world class. Rio 07/08 is one of the best seasons i've seen a defender have.
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The Derry Pele
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Tbf though merc inflation has to be taken into account, half a million could have been a lot back then in comparasion to other transfers
F**k Damien Duff
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mercedes
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Old Hag
of course! like i said it goes to show how far football has come in terms of money
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mercedes
Nov 4 2011, 11:46 AM
Fergie's Best Buys:

RUUD VAN NISTELROOY - £19m from PSV - 1/7/01
Hardly one from the bargain basement, but Fergie's willingness to bust the British transfer record for van Nistelrooy is one of the best examples of the Scot's unshakable faith in his own judgement. Tracked from the age of 16, van Nistelrooy had apparently been bagged at long last by the United boss when a knee injury forced the cancellation of his 2000 transfer hours before a planned press call. Undeterred, the striker ploughed on in his attempts to make Holland's Euro 2000 squad, and days later his damaged knee gave way altogether. Fergie was not about to give up the chase, taking on the role of pen pal during van Nistelrooy's rehabilitation and even once showing up at his front door. "That did it for me," the player would later remark, and late interest from Arsenal was inevitably rebuffed. Van Nistelrooy netted twice on his league debut, was named PFA Player of the Year in his first season and became the second-fastest post-war United player to 100 goals. That was one record Denis Law kept, but van Nistelrooy soon eclipsed him as the club's top European scorer. By the time he became a casualty of Fergie's search for a new system after two trophyless seasons, van Nistelrooy had netted 150 times in 215 appearances.

DWIGHT YORKE - £12.6m from ASTON VILLA - 20/8/98

Ashley Young's flying start to Old Trafford life is proof of Ferguson's enduring ability to buy a proven Premier League player at just the right time, and his judgement was never more astute than in the case of Yorke. Prised from the midlands just as Villa were emerging as outside title hopefuls, the Tobagan's United career burned out quickly but blazed brightly while lit. Tripped up by the emergence of Arsene Wenger's Arsenal the previous season, Fergie sought a striker to supplement the talents of Andy Cole, Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. Yorke quickly made himself indispensible, forming a friendship with Cole which brought rich on-field success if a few off-field headaches for the manager. Between them the pair found the net 53 times during the most glorious season in the club's history, one slickly-fashioned strike in a 3-3 draw at Barcelona summing up their symbiosis. Yorke scored 20 league goals in the following season's title success and, though his penchant for partying had started to grate with Fergie in 2001, a third winners' medal followed. "The boy who's given me all this grey hair," is how the Scot refers to Yorke now, but to this day Fergie holds up the partnership with Cole as an example for others to follow.

GARY PALLISTER - £2.3m from MIDDLESBROUGH - 29/8/89

Steve Bruce is often suggested as the best player of the modern-era never to win an England cap, but equally baffling is the failure of his erstwhile United partner to earn more than 22 international appearances. Fergie persuaded his board to pay more for Pallister than any British club had previously forked out on a defender but the Scot - who would make a profit on the player even nine years later - knew United's hard-earned was being spent on a partnership rather than a single signing. Pallister's fleet-footed grace was a perfect fit for bruiser Bruce's head-in-where-it-hurts bravery and, after a season spent honing their chemistry, the pair were at the heart of United's defence during a six-year spell which brought eight major trophies. Recognised by his peers with the PFA Player of the Year award in '92, the Teessider went on to win a further title following Bruce's exit and had a handy habit of contributing key goals - including two against Liverpool in the '97 run-in. Pallister made 437 appearances and, according to Fergie, was quicker than any player of his Old Trafford era over 100 metres.

WAYNE ROONEY - £20m from EVERTON - 31/8/04
Rooney's arrival represents a classic instance of both Fergie's pulling power and his willingness to put United's money where other clubs' mouths are. Back in 2004 you would have gone far to find a top manager dissenting from Fergie's view that Everton's 18-year-old man-boy Rooney was "the best young player this country has seen in the past 30 years". Yet while interest from everywhere bar Newcastle failed to manifest itself in the form of an offer, United bid £20m up front and a possible £7m to come. Not for the first time, once Fergie had shown his hand the rest folded - and for good reason. A wage packet worth way more than the reported £12,000-a-week on the Toffees' table doubtless had its attraction to a teenage Rooney, but perhaps only Fergie possessed the sure-footedness to persuade the youngster to ditch his lifelong allegiance to Everton at the drop of a red-and-black hat. The rewards were instant. Rooney scored a hat-trick on his debut against Fenerbahce and, though it took two seasons for United to escape a torpor unparalleled in the Fergie era, at the time of writing the England star's 158 goals have helped him amass seven major honours and a string of personal awards.

ROY KEANE - £3.75m from NOTTM FOREST - 22/7/9
3
Why ignore the obvious? Signing highly-regarded Keane was hardly a stroke of maverick genius, but persuading the Irishman to abort an all-but-done move to Blackburn not only bagged Fergie the most sought-after midfielder of the day and prevented him joining a title rival; it had the added bonus of riling old sparring partner Kenny Dalglish to such an extent that this grizzled Glaswegian was driven to talk about himself in the third person, ranting at Keane: 'Nobody does this to Kenny Dalglish'. More than just a new Bryan Robson, in Keane Fergie found an on-pitch extension of his own iron will, and the cantankerous Corkman often broke taboos the Scot - as United's mouthpiece - could not. Keane's insistence on breaching the club's wage barrier, a withering attack on the corporate quarter of Old Trafford and unforgiving assessments of emerging youngsters' complacent attitudes were all met with the manager's blind eye. Eventually, of course, Keane's mouth outlasted his legs and his exit came with indecent haste in the autumn of 2005 following a notorious MUTV interview. By then, he had amassed 12 major titles - nine as captain.

NEMANJA VIDIC - £7m from SPARTAK MOSCOW - 4/1/06
"Good defenders win you things", was Ferguson's understated choice of words to explain his signing of the Serbia centre-half. Sixteen months later United were celebrating a first title since 2003, and Vidic had proved his manager's point. Personnel-wise, there was little between the squad which finished the 2005/6 season trailing in Chelsea's wake and the one which thumped Fulham on the opening weekend of the following campaign. But Vidic and Patrice Evra had been bought in January and given an at-times uncomfortable four months to get up to speed, and Fergie's foresight paid handsome dividends. Fiorentina were United's only real rivals for the granite-jawed defender, but by the summer of 2007 he was so highly-prized a new five-year deal was in the offing and Vidic and Ferdinand had formed as effective a pairing since the days of Bruce and Pallister. A fearlessness at either end appealed to supporters, and the fact that Vidic's occasional fallibility resulted in a rash of red cards against Liverpool only added to his cult status. Four league titles, three League Cups and a European Cup later, the Serb remains United's key defender.

OLE GUNNAR SOLSKJAER - £1.5m from MOLDE - 23/7/96
Few could have anticipated the little-known Norwegian's impact when he arrived through the back door even as Old Trafford's red carpet was being rolled out the front for Alan Shearer. The Geordie's second - and final - snub forced Fergie into fielding Solskjaer sooner than he might have wished, but the striker's eye for goal was immediately obvious. Six minutes after making his debut as a substitute against Blackburn, the then 23-year-old gave a tantalising glimpse of cameos to come with his first United goal. In fact the caricature of Solskjaer as impact player does him a disservice - just 29 of his 126 goals came from the bench - but Fergie had found a player with a killer combination of qualities: a natural ability to finish, and the temperament to approach just the same an FA Cup final start and a half-hour outing against Leicester. And the player's greatest moments - four goals in 12 minutes at Nottingham Forest in 1999, the Nou Camp winner just months later - will forever mark him as United's supersub.

DENIS IRWIN - £625,000 from OLDHAM - 8/6/90
In the days of rigid 4-4-2 formations, the full-back's brief was a simple one: support your winger, don't do anything silly, give us 6/10 week in-week out. Irwin, signed after impressing Fergie during Oldham's FA Cup semi-final double-header against United in the spring of 1990, rewrote the rule-book. Seen and not heard, he may have been, but the son of Cork regularly produced performances a couple of notches up from the expected without compromising on consistency. At home on either flank, Irwin could pass, tackle and cross with both feet and was a trusted dead-ball specialist even in sides featuring the likes of Eric Cantona and David Beckham. In keeping with a man whose demeanour was more rural priest than Premier League star, Irwin was not one to sing his own praises. So let his statistics tell a story: 529 appearances, 33 goals, 7 league titles, 3 FA Cups, 1 League Cup, 1 European Cup, 1 Cup Winners' Cup.

ERIC CANTONA - £1.2m from LEEDS - 27/11/92
If you don't ask, you don't get. Fergie's off-the-cuff inquiry about Cantona's availability came after he bristled at an approach from Leeds for Denis Irwin. Whatever the truth about the then-champions' decision to sell, rarely can the Scot's chutzpah have been so richly-rewarded. Prior to signing Cantona the United boss had pinned his hopes of salvaging his side's latest faltering title challenge on Sheffield Wednesday's David Hirst, only for the Owls' obstinacy to scupper a deal. Instead of an old-school English No 9 Fergie stumbled on a ready-made hero in search of his own story, and in Manchester the nomadic Cantona found a home. The Frenchman immersed himself in the city's "insane love of football, of celebration and of music" and, on the pitch, justified the indulgence of his ego by leading United to a first title in 26 years. A first double followed 12 months later and, after an eye-boggling assault on a Crystal Palace fan cost United his services on the '95 run-in, Cantona returned to inspire another double - winning goals against title rivals Newcastle and FA Cup final opponents Liverpool cementing his status as a man for the grand occasion. Legend written, Cantona was not about to ruin it, and after a fourth title in '97 he sauntered off into the sunset - collar-up - at the age of 31 having scored 82 times in 185 appearances.

PETER SCHMEICHEL - £550,000 from BRONDBY - 1/7/91
The Dane's haul of major honours during eight years at Old Trafford runs into double figures, but his true worth is often measured against the mix-and-match collection of failed replacements identified and swiftly jettisoned by Sir Alex: 15 goalkeepers have appeared in the Premier League for United since Schmeichel departed with a treble in his trusty grasp back in '99, and only Edwin van der Sar has come close to filling the great man's tailor-made XXXL jersey. Signed 12 months before shooting to wider prominence during Denmark's shock Euro 92 success, Schmeichel soon became the foundation on which United's re-emergence as a major force was built. As adept at one-on-ones as sprawling stops, and with a javelin-throwers' arm which set his team-mates away on countless counter-attacks, he even managed to become one of...one?...keepers to patent a personal move - the Schmeichel star jump. An undignified late-career fling with Manchester City may have dulled United fans' affections for a forthright character, but few would quibble with Fergie's assessment: " At his best, I don't believe a better keeper has played the game. A giant figure in the history of United and our debt to him will never be forgotten."

anymore for anymore? I'd put Ronaldo in there for the amount we paid, the type of player he became, what he did for us and how much we sold him for.

some of those prices are crazy though and just goes to show how far football has come in terms of money. half a mil for schmeichal :o
Van der sar must be up there. Only cost £2million
Man Utd's 2017/18 club sponsors:
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ZeeZoo
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Such a shame that his tactical ability has been so dire.
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The Sicilian
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Going To Make You An Offer You Cant Refuse.
Yup, really held him back.
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ZeeZoo
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The Sicilian
Nov 5 2011, 02:03 PM
Yup, really held him back.
2 European Cups, should have been a lot more.
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The Sicilian
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Going To Make You An Offer You Cant Refuse.
Not doubting that, the early days was the foreign rule. His tactics ain't perfect and I've have liked a more tactical assistant brought in than Phelan but don't think you can say he in any aspect of management is dire. 25 years at the top and records mand and then broken says so.
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footyfan000
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Changing my tune since 2008.
Best signings... Phil Jones will be up there too given time, £17m was a complete pish take!
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Devil Nikky
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Boggle-eyed Goblin
Schmeichel

Gary Neville
Stam
Bruce
Irwin

Beckham
Scholes
Keane
Giggs

van Nistelrooy
Ronaldo

Subs: Cantona, Rooney, Solskjaer, Sheringham

I've just realised I've got no defensive players on the bench :rofl:
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RubberToe
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Chewbacca Lookalike
And you've only picked 4 players
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Devil Nikky
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Boggle-eyed Goblin
Nicky Butt is missing from my bench.
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Chelsea Rent Boy
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Jose is God
IMO the best manager ever in football, a complete class act!

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Monty
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I'm a naughty boy
David Gill announces the North Stand at Old Trafford to be renamed 'the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand' #MUFC
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