When the news appeared that Dragan Šolak, the third richest Serb of Nedeljnik’s list of the richest, is the owner United Media Group, the new majority owner of Southamptom, the media paid attention to that acquisition and everything it entails. The question of why the “ethics commission” of the Premier League must approve the purchase was also questioned, so the films of the sudden coup and the attempt of the “big six” to go to the Super League were unrolled, as well as the process by which the Saudi royal family took over Newcastle.
Thus (unjustifiably) the story of the club that Šolak bought by separating with the group at which is headed by about 100 million pounds, according to British media.
He stayed near Southampton description that it is this season “14. Premier League club ”, but the club that plays at St. Mary’s Stadium is much more than that.
Unlike other island clubs that were most often established in factories, pubs and pubs that smelled of beer, fat and poverty, Southampton was founded in St. Mary’s Church. His path was not thorny, it was a gentle, very, very gentle ascent, from the third division, to the second in which they spent 31 consecutive years from 1921, all the way to a stable stay in the First Division of English football.
For all those years of Southampton’s history, and they were added up by 136 fans, they won one FA Cup – and that is bigger than life on the Island than all the Champions Cups – in the 1975/76 season and in the mid-1980s they were within reach of the championship title that Liverpool took away with three points more.
Fans have been shouting “Saints” for all 13 and a half decades, half of that time and with Armstrong’s verses “While Saints March”, creating an idea in a club that he has a small world around him in which no one will be left alone while the Saints are there.
several names that Southampton shaped and that shaped Southampton and the story of a club that smells different from many islands stood out
Vaseljena Ivana Golca
In a great interview he gave to the Weekly, Ivan Golac describes in detail his departure for Southampton and all that for him that departure meant.
He was the first foreigner on the Island.
“I am grateful to the Creator because everything I wanted as a child came true. And that desire arose while I was watching the England-Yugoslavia match at Wembley on television in 1960. I was less than ten years old, and my thinking, or more precisely my wish, was: “I will play at this stadium. I will play in this country. ” Then comes the time of rock and roll: The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, Kinks… All English bands and I absorbed everything. I learned the language through rock and roll, the Beatles and the Stones. Partizan was, of course, a childhood love. Even after Partizan, wonderful years in black and white, I experience what I wanted during the television broadcast – to run out of that tunnel in front of a crowded Wembley and play a game. And what happened from the book “When you want something badly, the whole universe conspired to make it happen”. My wish long ago told in front of the TV came true.
On June 15, 1978, I turned 28 year and according to our regulations I acquire the right to go abroad. Galatasaray came for me, I was their guest for five days and in those five days I had to decide. My wife calls me and says, “Southampton wants you to come.” In the morning at six o’clock I am on a plane, at eight o’clock I am in Belgrade, and at 10.20 I am already on my way to London. Already on July 29, I play for Southampton against Sunderland, we win, I sign a contract and become the first foreigner to come to the Island. The first foreign footballer in England. After about seven months, the Creator fulfilled what I wished on May 11, 1960. We are playing in front of 100,000 people at Wembley against the two-time European champions Nottingham Forest. Let’s lose, we just created a team, but for me it’s a game in everything because it’s at Wembley. After that match, the capacity of Wembley decreased.
And in 1980 from Hamburg in our team comes the great Kevin Keegan. He was a Liverpool legend and a European player for two years. The team includes Peter Shilton, Alan Ball, Kevin Keegan, Charlie George Y and me. A miracle of the team. In 1985, the 100th anniversary of the club is celebrated, the ideal team is chosen and I am in it. ”
Kevin is a saint
Reporters rushed to the Poters Heron Hotel in Romzi. Astonished, they talked about who the devil had summoned them on Monday, February 11, 1980, so unexpectedly and what was now on the mind of legendary Southampton manager Lori McMenamy.
Journalists were a little reluctant to attend the spontaneously convened conference, because Monday was a day off, and although the invitation was intriguing, many feared that the only topic could be the victory against Brighton with the result 5: 1, two days earlier.
However, McManamie’s call, even behind retired Alan Montgomery, and his insistence that he be present, as well as the announcement that he would talk about the “bright future of the saints”, were the reason they drew in the scheduled place.
And then, in a new suit, with his casual, disheveled haircut, the best player in the world at the time – Kevin Keegan – walked into the room. New Southampton player. And none of the journalists had a clue.
(Even if someone told them about it) , who would believe. Who would have thought that it was possible for one Kevin Keegan, the champion with Liverpool, the champion with HSV, a great player, a master of football, to come to Southampton. Who am I Kevin?
He wanted to come back. When they offered him a contract from Juventus, his wife was a little scared because at that time celebrities were often kidnapped in Italy and asked for fabulous ransoms, and nostalgia worked a little in Kevin. He wanted success to be generated around him. He wanted to make a big step in a team that was not called up. And so he returned to the Island and came to Del Stadium
And the result and nothing else it didn’t matter anymore.
(Man became a Saint)
Naked about Kigen says:
“He was a wonderful player. I was lucky to play with Kevin Keegan, Alan Ball, George Best during my career. The Southampton striker was Mike Shannon, Alan Ball and me. Amazing how we got along. When Kigen came, he stepped it up.
Kigen was a worker, no stalls, is constantly on the move, stamen, small in stature, and strong. We were machinery when he joined. And Liverpool were afraid of us. Graham Sunes from Liverpool told me that they were always afraid of our “Deed”.
) The Golden Boy of the Golden Age
Who in the world would think that the status quo is often dangerous, if he had heard about it from Matt Le Tissier?
He did not give it to anyone, not even for a living. And it’s a matter of genetics. The father and brothers of Matt Le Tissier, a player who marked the 1990s, long before he made his debut for Southampton in 1986, refused the same club’s offers to sign a contract because they did not want to leave their home, on Jersey Island, in the Channel. .
He decided to step out and then it seemed to everyone that he would break the family tradition, but Matt was just an exception to the rule. He left only to find it even harder not to leave again. And he didn’t.
He stayed in Southampton both when he played the best football on the Island and when was unstoppable even when he was called by Glen Hodl in Chelsea, his idol.
to a club that educated players “monastically”, with a firm hand and harsh discipline, Le Tissier was a man who did not fit in best. His dribbling was as free as prayer (of the fans), and his attitude relaxed as indifference to death. He was a Saint, of unusual posture and attitude, who did not dribble to humiliate or entertain, but only because he could.
“We would all gather, the whole family, every Monday night in front of the TV, to watch a half-hour review of the Premier League. And every week, it would be Mata le Tisie’s show. Amazing, sick goals. Right in the corner, when he crossed the back of Newcastle with his left foot and tore the net with his right foot, “Xavi said.
) There will be many more passages to be written, about the doom and resurrection, about the years when Dušan Tadić, one of the most neglected greats of today’s football, wore red and white after Novi Sad and the Island, and malicious stories about Southampton being a branch of Liverpool ( and even so, it would be logical and in all other ways logical that after that Kevin, Liverpool get something in return from Southampton).
There will be painful defeats, average seasons, even more painful sufferings, there will be one super German on the bench – and he is on it – who is very reminiscent of another super German both in behavior and knowledge.
And the world of Southampton will remain free from frequent crashes and sorrows and frequent and any other great joys.
For a peaceful life in a world where you can’t be lonely between Golac, Kigen and Le Tisie.
(“When the Saints March…”
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