What do our ex first team players do for a living nowadays?

Last time I heard he was still on the piss!
Can you blame him? Guy went from PL to Puebla, Mexico in a few years. Alchie's don't always make bad players. My hometown team the Timbers have a heavy drinker playing center mid who one of the best hard men in the league. I don't know how he does it.
 
Can you blame him? Guy went from PL to Puebla, Mexico in a few years. Alchie's don't always make bad players. My hometown team the Timbers have a heavy drinker playing center mid who one of the best hard men in the league. I don't know how he does it.
Didn't DM have a sneaky piss on the touchline several years ago? That is what I was referring to.
 
Wayne Biggins runs a pallet / packing business in the north Sheffield / Chapeltown area

A work mate was renting a room for a while in a boozer when we had a contract over there. Biggins was a regular
 
Can you blame him? Guy went from PL to Puebla, Mexico in a few years. Alchie's don't always make bad players. My hometown team the Timbers have a heavy drinker playing center mid who one of the best hard men in the league. I don't know how he does it.
I can recall George Best turning out for Hibs, on the few occasions he was sober enough to stand up on a Saturday afternoon. Someone once threw a half can of beer at him when playing. He picked it up, drank it and and threw the can back!
 
I recall that back in the day, Jack Dyson played Cricket for Lancashire, George Hannah ran a newsagent, Andy Black had a pub in Wythenshaw, Franny Lee was into waste paper and Harry Dowd was a plumber.

Mind you Lee and Dowd were doing that when they were playing for City.


During the match?
 
During the match?
No they just did a bit on moonlighting.

Prior to the big wages of recent years most players had a 'day job' as the £20 a week they would receive was not enough to secure a future.

With the maximum wage in operation until the early 1960s, it was not the best time to be a professional footballer. Some, like Tom Finney, continued their former trade (another plumber), others secured a future in Journalism such as Danny Blanchflower. It was a precarious life as a professional footballer. Jimmy Hill went on to become a trade union organiser with the PFA before moving into management and later broadcasting.

Many ex-United players suffered this after Munich when Busby sacked them as they were recovering from their injuries. Even worse, they were evicted from their club houses and found themselves Homeless and redundant.

A lot of ex-players ended up running pubs or scratching a living.
 
No they just did a bit on moonlighting.

Prior to the big wages of recent years most players had a 'day job' as the £20 a week they would receive was not enough to secure a future.

With the maximum wage in operation until the early 1960s, it was not the best time to be a professional footballer. Some, like Tom Finney, continued their former trade (another plumber), others secured a future in Journalism such as Danny Blanchflower. It was a precarious life as a professional footballer. Jimmy Hill went on to become a trade union organiser with the PFA before moving into management and later broadcasting.

Many ex-United players suffered this after Munich when Busby sacked them as they were recovering from their injuries. Even worse, they were evicted from their club houses and found themselves Homeless and redundant.

A lot of ex-players ended up running pubs or scratching a living.

Shhh people in the media might be reading and they don't like the truth
 
Michael Johnson owns I think its the George Charles In Didsbury
Paul Lake gave me a leaflet for a physio business he was working on before half marathon in Wilmslow last year/
 
I can't think of a younger player who was more loved by the fans, at least in Manchester. Nacho kind of brings out some of that same love. But Johnson was supposed to be the next Colin Bell, wasn't he?
Aside from Paul Lake, in my time I've not seen a more complete footballer come thru our ranks. The ends of each mens careers was tear inducing but for completely different reasons.
 
Aside from Paul Lake, in my time I've not seen a more complete footballer come thru our ranks. The ends of each mens careers was tear inducing but for completely different reasons.
Paul Lake must have been something special. I met an English guy who was hired by my firm, and off the cuff, mentioned I was a huge City fan. He was a Spurs supporter, but he'd seen Lake play for England's youth teams and he gushed about him. Just like what a loss it was and what could have been.... it made an impression.
 

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