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Shankly and was
The most successful period in Liverpool's history was the 1970s and ' 80s when Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley led the club to eleven league titles and seven European trophies.
Soon after Liverpool lost 2 – 1 to non-league Worcester City in the 1958 – 59 FA Cup, Bill Shankly was appointed manager.
Shankly retired soon afterwards and was replaced by his assistant, Bob Paisley.
In 1992, to commemorate the centennial of the club, a new badge was commissioned, including a resentation of the Shankly Gates.
William " Bill " Shankly OBE ( 2 September 1913 – 29 September 1981 ) was a Scottish footballer and manager who is best remembered for his management of Liverpool.
As a player, Shankly was a ball-winning right half who was capped twelve times for Scotland, including seven wartime internationals.
Shankly announced his surprise retirement from football a few weeks after Liverpool won the 1974 FA Cup Final, having managed the club for fifteen years, and was succeeded by his long-time assistant Bob Paisley.
Bill Shankly was born in the small Ayrshire coal mining village of Glenbuck, close to the Ayrshire-Lanarkshire border.
Shankly was the ninth child and the youngest boy.
Shankly wrote in his autobiography that times were hard during his upbringing and everyone was " hungry, especially in wintertime ".
Shankly admitted the act was wrong but it was " devilment more than badness " and the root cause was their constant hunger, but he insists that he and his friends learned from their mistakes and became " better people in the long run ".
Discipline at both home and school was strict but Shankly said it was " character-building ".
While Shankly was employed as a miner, he played football as often as possible and sometimes went to Glasgow to watch either Celtic or Rangers, sharing his allegiance between the two and ignoring the sectarianism that " divided Glasgow in two ".
Shankly developed his skills to the point that he was unemployed for only " a matter of months " before Carlisle United signed him.
Shankly's village team was called the Glenbuck Cherrypickers, a name probably derived from the 11th Hussars ( the " Cherry Pickers "), but Shankly said " the club was near extinction when I had a trial and I never actually played for them ".
Shankly was recommended by a scout called Peter Carruthers who had seen him playing for Cronberry.
At this stage of his career, Shankly was assessed as " a hard running, gritty right-half " whose displays brought him much praise and credit and he was " earmarked as a key young player capable of taking Carlisle on to greater things ".
Shankly was happy at Carlisle which was close to his home at Glenbuck and he had settled in well with almost a guarantee of first team football.

Shankly and tactician
Paisley's influence at Liverpool was " crucial " for, as Kelly puts it, Shankly was " the great motivating force behind Liverpool, but it was Paisley who was the tactician ".

Shankly and player
Shankly was a qualified masseur and had decided he wanted to become a coach so, when Carlisle United asked him to become their manager in March of that year, he retired as a player and accepted the job.
Another Preston player admired by Shankly was his Scottish international teammate Andy Beattie, with whom he would later work in management.
Shankly himself certainly had that spirit when playing for Scotland as confirmed by Alex James: " He is a real Scotland player who will fight until he drops ".
Shankly summed up the essential criteria for success in football management when he said: " I could speak common sense about the game and I could spot a player ".
In 1964, Jimmy Melia was transferred to Wolverhampton Wanderers ; and Shankly bought Arsenal utility player Geoff Strong for £ 40, 000 but this was Liverpool's last significant transfer activity until 1967.
Watching from the sidelines was another new player whom Shankly had recently signed from Scunthorpe United for £ 35, 000 on Twentyman's recommendation.
Shankly, a former player at Carlisle, later went on to manage local rivals Workington ( helping them finish above Carlisle for the first time ) before being appointed as manager of Liverpool in 1959 ; over the next 15 years he would guide the club to numerous trophy successes.
When Yeats was signed, Shankly was so impressed and proud of the physical presence of his new player that he told waiting journalists to " The man is a mountain, go into the dressing room and walk around him ".

Shankly and mind
The Liverpool secretary Peter Robinson was initially blasé in 1974 but, when he realised Shankly was serious this time, he tried and make him change his mind.
Liverpool did not win any honours in his first four seasons there but Hughes was seen as a demonstration of the future which Shankly had in mind.

Shankly and games
Shankly described it as " one of the most amazing games I have ever seen ".

Shankly and which
The song's title adorns the top of the Shankly Gates, which were unveiled on 2 August 1982 in memory of former manager Bill Shankly.
The Queen Is Dead reached number two in the UK charts, and consisted of a mixture of mordant bleakness ( e. g. " Never Had No One Ever ", which seemed to play up to stereotypes of the band ), dry humour ( e. g. " Frankly, Mr. Shankly ", allegedly a message to Rough Trade boss Geoff Travis disguised as a letter of resignation from a worker to his superior ), and synthesis of both, such as in " There Is a Light That Never Goes Out " and " Cemetry Gates ".
Shankly began his Preston career in the reserves, who played in the Central League which was a higher standard than the North Eastern League.
In his autobiography, Shankly wrote that Preston " more than held our own in the 1934 – 35 season " and the club was not relegated again until the end of the 1948 – 49 season in which he left them.
) Williams asked him if he would like to manage the " best club in the country ", to which Shankly replied: " Why, is Matt Busby packing up?
One particular routine designed to develop stamina, reflexes and ball skills was the " sweat box " which Shankly described as " using boards like the walls of a house with players playing the ball off one wall and on to the next ; the ball was played against the boards, you controlled it, turned around and took it again ".
But Shankly and Paisley had learned a great deal about European football which Liverpool would eventually turn into trophies.
Shankly made two controversial signings in this period which did not turn out as he had hoped.
Adding the new players to Tommy Smith, Ian Callaghan, Chris Lawler and Emlyn Hughes, Shankly formed the nucleus of a second great team which went on to dominate English and European football in the 1970s.
As always, Shankly kept things simple and Twentyman was told to look for a prospect's basic qualities which were the abilities to pass the ball and move into position to receive a pass.
In April 1973, when Shankly and the team were showing off the League Championship trophy to the fans on the Kop, he saw a policeman fling aside a Liverpool scarf which had been thrown in Shankly's direction.
Shankly saw the offer of the scarf as a mark of respect which deserved his respect in return.
Eventually, Paisley had to point out to Shankly that he didn't work there any more, that it was now Paisley's team and that he had things which he wanted to do with the team.
" The policeman peered through the window and said that he didn't recognise the man, to which Shankly replied: " No, but you will!
After Liverpool were humiliated by Second division side Watford in the quarter finals of the FA Cup, Shankly made a decision to clear out much of the ageing playing staff which had won two League Championship titles, an FA Cup and reached a European Cup Winners Cup final and recruit new, younger blood to take Liverpool back to the helm of the English game.
The success of Liverpool then dried up, and he was one of the high-profile victims of a massive cull of the older players which Shankly ruthlessly undertook in 1970 in an effort to rebuild the side for a new decade.
Hooton is a committee member of Spirit of Shankly, a Liverpool Football Club supporters union, which was created in 2008 with the aims of ousting the club's controversial owners Tom Hicks and George N. Gillett, Jr. and protecting the rights of Liverpool supporters.
Perhaps the most memorable moment in Walker's playing career came when lower division Watford knocked Bill Shankly's Liverpool out of the FA Cup in February 1970, in what was considered to be a major cup upset and a result which convinced Shankly of the need to dismantle his aging side and begin building a new team.

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