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SOCCER LEGENDS: LEE, BELL, SUMMERBEE
TITLE Soccer Legends: Lee, Bell, Summerbee
PUBLISHER BBC Sports Video (1990)
NUMBER BBCV 4418
RUNNING TIME 80 minutes
PRICE £9.99 (1990)
NARRATOR Tony Gubba
DEDICATED TO The memory of Joe Mercer (1914-1990)
I bought this video just after its release back in 1990, one criterion
being that videos are so cheap in the UK that you can almost afford to
throw them away if they are rubbish and not feel too bad afterwards! Well,
the risk was easily worth the money as this offering is a top quality
product, which isn't after all that surprising, as it is from the BBC.
Having said that, it does start off with some horrendously tacky music
reminiscent of some aged uncle attempting to play Vangelis on his Yamaha
organ as well as containing some truly embarassing scenes of Lee &
Summerbee doing Gilbert & Sullivan! Things get better and better though,
the format is basically a chronological story interspersed with action,
contemporary interviews and new interviews with Allison (alone) and Bell,
Lee & Summerbee slumped together in flashy pool-side chairs, presumably at
Frannie's place?
So, we start off with Allison recounting how he managed to pull off buying
the trio (modest as ever) and each one in turn shown scoring for the Blues
and for England (not much choice for Summerbee!). There is footage of the
Newcastle game with City winning 4-3 to take the league title. The quality
is very poor, looking like it has been filmed through a steamed up bus
window which is most likely due to film deterioration as I also recently
saw United's vs Benfica which was just as bad (same year). Still, it's
history and it's there. We progress through the next season with plenty of
interesting discussion on why they started so poorly, culminating in the FA
Cup Final which has the first colour footage and of course Neil Young's
goal. Before the match, we have a gem of a contemporary 'live' interview
which takes place on the touchline, revealing a long-gone amateurishness
and shows just how much interviewers and delivery style have changed in the
intervening 25 years! This use of old material (other than football) is
inspired (IMO) as it gives a unique insight into those times with wonderful
pearls such as Joe Mercer's prediction that Colin Bell would become City's
greatest player since Peter Docherty!
We continue in the same style through the League Cup and Cup Winners' Cup
with loads of footage from English and European games including the win
against Gornik Zabzre in the pouring rain in a half empty stadium. There is
also quite a bit on Frannie's participation in the '70 World Cup and a
claim from him that England were better than the '66 team but more unlucky!
What I liked about the video is the frank speaking involved, for instance,
Summerbee makes it absolutely clear that he thought the signing of Marsh in
'72 cost them the league title because he totally changed the way City
played the game by his mere presence. Additionally, there is mention of
Mercer's and Frannie's less than happy departures with Frannie claiming
that if he had been kept at Maine Road then City would have won the league
rather than his new team, Derby County! Summerbee is once again candid,
telling us that the administration handled things badly sending morale
downhill rapidly.
Bell's injury is covered in depth, with much poignant footage and
surprisingly, a not altogether convincing statement from the man himself as
to Buchan's innocence. Unfortunately, Swales rears his ugly head at this
point in a late '70's interview where he plays Mr Niceguy, desperately
concerned for Colin, this comes across today as totally and utterly
insincere!
This video is packed full of goals and moments to remember; Bell's famous
volley vs Chelsea, Stepney's attempted save of a Lee indirect free-kick,
Law's backheel, Tueart's overhead kick (B&W?) and bags from Neil Young to
mention a few. There were things I had totally forgotten: the difficulty of
watching football in Black & White; the terrible mid-70s fashions with Bell
in bell-bottoms (ho ho) plus what looks like a pageboy haircut; the truly
dreadful state of the pitches (and Derby's wasn't even shown) and above
all, the brilliance and ferocity of Lee's shooting.
I can recommend this to anybody who claims to be a football fan, the action
is relentless but it's much more than a catalogue of goals. The whole is
enriched with numerous anecdotes and I must sign off with my favourite
which was recounted by Mike Summerbee. He says that the City goalie Harry
Dowd was reknowned for his total lack of interest in football and would
have much rather been out plumbing than playing for City. He claims that
Allison used to say to the bored Dowd at the end of the team talk, "Harry,
we are playing Arsenal today and they're in red and white"!
All the above views are my own personal opinions.
Ashley Birch
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