Some comments made earlier today on another thread brought a lot of memories back and a realisation of how the game and players have changed since I first went to Carrow Road in 1950. Can I first of all say that I fully accept that the stars of the 50's/60's /70's would not be stars in the modern game which is technically better, players are much fitter and tactics are far superior. Having said that were the old days bad? They were certainly different and the game was far more physical. If a GK caught a ball you could shoulder charge him as hard as you liked - even if you dislocated his shoulder- and if the GK and the ball ended up in the back of the net it was a goal. Before yellow and red cards you had your name taken by the Ref for a ' bookable ' offence or sent off for a serious offence but in those days a bookable offence equated to a criminal act and to get sent off you had to commit a crime against humanity. I remember Kevin Keelan getting sent off for the best left hook I have ever seen and us all being outraged because we did not think it was a sending off offence. Everybody understood the offside rule - 2 players between ball and goal line - if one of them was laying down injured it didn't matter - he still counted. Players like Trevor Hockey and Duncan Forbes would not have stayed on the pitch for 5 mins nowadays but how would some of todays Nancy's in their posh cars coped in the old days. Falling over or diving to get a penalty? Everybody - ref, players and supporters - would have laughed. You went for the ball in those days and if you got the player before, during or after then there was no problem as long as the ref thought you went for the ball. There was no shirt pulling etc because there was no close marking. You could tackle from the front, back or side - as long as you went for the ball. If a forward was shielding the ball and Big Dunc was behind him then he just went after the ball. His favourite trick was to try and kick the ball between the forwards legs. Most times the ball sailed 50 yars up the pitch but in the follow through his knee would either wedge up the forwards North Pole or divide his ging gangs!! As long as he wnt for the ball - no problems. Mind you, whether Trevor Hockey ever went for the ball is very much open to debate but how often did he ever get sent off? Brutal? - Perhaps but how many players were out injured in those days? Most players went through a season without missing a game - explain that!! Is the modern game a better spectacle? I would have to agree that it is but it is not as clear cut as some of the youngsters would have us believe and whilst our memories can be selective they certainly weren't the bad old days


Roy of the Rovers springs to mind.