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Питър Биърдсли


Гост S.Gerrard

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Гост S.Gerrard

http://i44.tinypic.com/28tj3wn.jpg

 

Birthdate: 18 January 1961

Birthplace: Newcastle upon Tyne, England

Other clubs: Carlisle United (1977-81), Vancouver Whitecaps (1981-82), Carlisle United (loan 1981-82), Manchester United (1982-83), Vancouver Whitecaps (2 / 1983), Newcastle United (1983-87), Everton (1991-93), Newcastle United (2 / 1993-97), Bolton Wanderers (1997-98), Manchester City (loan 1998), Fulham (1998), Hartlepool United (1998-99), Melbourne Knights (1999)

Bought from: Newcastle United

Signed for LFC: £1.9m, 14.07.1987

International debut: 29.01.1986 vs. Egypt

International caps: 59/9 (34/6 at LFC) - 23.05.1996

Liverpool debut: 15.08.1987

Last appearance: 11.05.1991

Debut goal: 29.08.1987

Last goal: 20.02.1991

Contract expiry: 05.08.1991

Win ratio: 60.57% W: 106 D: 43 L: 26

Games/goals ratio: 2.97

Honours: League Championship 1987/88, 1989/90; FA Cup 1989

Total games/goals opposite LFC: 22 / 2

LFC league games/goals: 131 / 46

Total LFC games/goals: 175 / 59

 

http://www.lfchistor...yer/Profile/264

http://int.soccerway...ardsley/106333/

http://en.wikipedia....Peter_Beardsley

 

Player profile

 

Beardsley established himself at third division Carlisle United in the 1979/80 season having been rejected by Newcastle as well as a host of other clubs that didn't believe in the talents of this quiet and unassuming lad. In February 1981 he was presented with a £250 cheque by Jackie Charlton for winning the North East's Most Promising Newcomer trophy, in a competition organised by the Evening Chronicle. Beardsley made an audacious move to Canadian Vancouver Whitecaps where he impressed Manchester United manager Ron Atkinson in a friendly in Canada and joined United in September 1982. He only featured in a single League Cup game before moving back to the Whitecaps after six months. In September 1983 22-year-old Beardsley was on the move again, this time to his hometown club, Newcastle United, for only £150,000 which is arguably the best business the North-East club has ever done! Kevin Keegan's leadership in his final season as a player inspired Chris Waddle and Beardsley to greater heights and the diminutive forward scored 20 goals as Newcastle were promoted to the First Division after a six-year absence. The Magpies remained in the lower half of the top-flight during the rest of Beardsley's tenure at the club.

 

Beardsley's international career blossomed in the World Cup in Mexico in 1986 when he eventually started in England's third game of the finals against Poland after the team had struggled for goals in its first two games. He had only made his international debut five months earlier. Beardsley was a perfect partner for goalscorer supreme Gary Lineker who scored a hat-trick against the Poles. Paraguay was beaten 3-0 in the following game with a Lineker brace and a Beardsley goal. England finally succumbed in the quarter-finals to a Maradona double. Beardsley also featured in the disastrous 1988 European Championships and in the 1990 World Cup finals in which England lost to West-Germany in the semi-finals.

 

In 1987 Beardsley had twelve months of his contract to run and manager Willie McFaul said unless he signed a new three-year deal the club was ready to let him go. Liverpool had sold Ian Rush to Juventus for £3.2million and wanted to spend more than half of that on the Geordie. "Kenny was the one who told me to ask for more money when I was ­negotiating my move to Liverpool. I was going to ask for less than I eventually got. He told me I was the club's record signing at the time and so I should be asking for wages that reflected that. I would do anything for that man. The man is a genius." Beardsley agreed terms with Liverpool inside an hour and the club paid a British record fee of £1.9million for his services.

 

The Reds destroyed the opposition with the attacking trio of Barnes, Beardsley and Aldridge in the 1987/88 season going 29 games unbeaten on their way to the title which Liverpool clinched with Beardsley's goal at Anfield against Spurs with four rounds to go. Beardsley, who had by his own admittance struggled and felt like an "expensive passenger" for the first half of the season, had scored 18 goals in 48 appearances by his debut campaign's end and earned rave reviews. He was a true wizard with the ball and his dip of the shoulder to fool the opposition became a favourite among the fans. In the 1988/89 season Beardsley contributed 12 goals but a final-day 2-0 defeat to Arsenal robbed the Reds of the title a few weeks after the Hillsborough tragedy. The League Championship was reclaimed in 1989/90 with Beardsley playing an important role but he missed the last seven matches of the season due to a stress fracture of the knee diagnosed following the astounding 4-3 defeat to Crystal Palace in the FA Cup semi-finals. The genial Geordie was taken by surprise in the summer when Dalglish told him that Marseille had made a £3.6million offer for his services. Beardsley was concerned because he felt Liverpool were ready to do business but he didn't want to uproot his young family.

 

Beardsley was dropped on occasion and substituted once too often for his own liking in the 1990/91 season but he didn't let his standards drop and kept his disappointment to himself. He made the ideal start to the season by scoring the winner against Arsenal in the Charity Shield. He scored a memorable hat-trick against Manchester United at Anfield on 16 September and a brace at Goodison Park six days later. Beardsley was out for six weeks after he tore ligaments in his ankle in Steve McManaman's senior debut against Sheffield United on 15 December 1990. He had been a substitute four games running when he was finally back into the starting line-up following his injury and scored two goals in a thrilling 4-4 FA Cup draw at Goodison Park which turned out to be Dalglish's final game as manager in his first spell at the club. Rumours of a great rift between Kenny and Beardsley in the 1990/91 season were later put to rest: "I never fell out with Kenny other than being devastated at being left out of the team," Beardsley said in 1999. "Kenny is a good friend. I got involved in his wife Marina's charity last year, we played in a charity game together against Celtic and Kenny played in my testimonial. If I had any problem with him I wouldn't have invited him. It is wrong for people to say we fell out."

 

Graeme Souness took over and it soon became apparent Beardsley wasn't to his likingþ Souness spent a then-record £2.9million fee on Dean Saunders from Derby County in July 1991 which prompted Everton, who intended to sign Saunders, to go for their second choice, Peter Beardsley, for one-third of Saunders' fee. Everton cherished Beardsley for two years where he played 95 games and scored 32 goals and proved that Liverpool sure could have used his talents in Souness' regime. A personal highlight for Beardsley was when he returned to Anfield for his first game in a Blues' shirt on 31 August 1991: "Just before the game the Kop chanted my name and I don't suppose that's happened too many times, an Everton player getting his name chanted by the Kop. But during the game, with Liverpool winning, the crowd started to chant, 'What a waste of talent!' The Kop were a bit special to me on that day and I won't ever forget it."

 

In July 1993 Beardsley rejoined his beloved Newcastle where manager Kevin Keegan was a big admirer of his considerable talents. Newcastle had just been promoted to the Premier League after winning the First Division. Beardsley played brilliantly and scored 25 goals in all competitions to go along with Andy Cole's 41 as the Magpies finished third. Newcastle finished sixth the following year and were pipped to the title by Manchester United after dropping a twelve-point lead in the 1995/96 season. Beardsley's disappointment was made even greater when he was axed from England's European Championship squad. Dalglish took over at Newcastle mid-season and the club had to settle again for second best in the League. Beardsley brought his second spell at St James' Park to an end in August 1997, at 36 years of age, having added 157 games and 56 goals to bring his total for Newcastle to 321 games and 117 goals.

 

Beardsley went from one club to another desperate to lengthen his career even rejoining Keegan at Fulham but after a single season at Hartlepool United during which he just escaped the drop to the Conference, he ended his sensational League career. Beardsley was awarded a testimonial by Newcastle in January 1999. He has been part of Newcastle's coaching staff in two spells and was promoted to reserve team coach in July 2010. In October 2011 Beardsley was appointed as football development manager at Newcastle having signed a five-year deal in a role that will see him help drive recruitment on a global, local and national scale and fly the flag for the Magpies around the world.

 

]CAREER HIGHLIGHT[/b]

 

World Cup '86

 

There are enough quirky facts about Peter Beardsley to keep a pub quiz team happy for weeks. The only man to play for both Liverpool and Everton, Manchester United and City; the man who was turned down by his boyhood club before going onto to spend three spells there and become a local hero; he made his name in Canada; he played in goal in an 8-1 defeat; he once scored four for England - against Aylesbury; the list goes on.

 

Yet beneath the quirky trivia and the quirkier appearance, there is a true legend of the game, a man universally regarded with warmth and affection in England, and a player in whom many English fans would like to think they see their own love for the sport and its traditions mirrored.

 

Born in Longbenton, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Beardsley was actually released from a boyhood trial with the Magpies and began his professional career at Carlisle United. The slightly built playmaking forward was a hit in the Border City, making 104 appearances and scoring 22 goals in three seasons .

 

His success in the lower tiers of English football prompted interest from abroad and he joined North American Soccer League outfit Vancouver Whitecaps in 1982, spending three summers there and playing 73 games in total.

 

It was then that he came to the attention of Manchester United. Manager Ron Atkinson signed Beardsley on a five month trial, only for the young Geordie to make one subsitiute appearance for the Red Devils, against Bournemouth in 1982. It was then time to go home.

 

Arthur Cox brought Beardsley back to Newcastle and his forward partnership with Kevin Keegan took the Toon back into the top flight in 1983. He matured and developed in the First Division, and his creativity and livewire footballing intelligence took him to the World Cup in Mexico in 1986, where his partnership with Gary Lineker helped take the Three Lions to a controversial quarter-final exit at the hands of Argentina.

 

In 1987, Kenny Dalglish paid £1.9 million (an English record at the time) to take Beardsley to Liverpool, who at the time were the dominant force in English football. His enthusiasm and skill made him a hit with the Kop, and his 59 goals in 175 matches helped the Reds win two league titles and an FA Cup before he left in 1991 - for Everton, of all places.

 

New Anfield boss, Graeme Souness, had embarked on his own attempt to re-model the club at the time, and Beardsley found himself surplus to requirements. He won over the Goodison Park faithful, though, and became one of only two men ever to have scored for both the Reds and the Blues in a Merseyside derby. He also retained the affection of the Liverpool support, who blamed Souness for his unwanted departure.

 

He returned to Newcastle in 1993 and, with Kevin Keegan at the helm at St James' Park, helped to forge a place in history as the creative fulcrum of Keegan's team of entertainers, who lit up the Premier League with their buccaneering brand of attacking football, but sadly just did not end up 'loving it' quite enough and never won a trophy to show for their gloriously entertaining play. Beardsley cemented his place in local folklore, though, and stirred a chord in the hearts of many supporters when he celebrated netting a penalty kick by running over to celebrate with his son, who was a Newcastle ball-boy at the time, thus reinforcing the family ethos that underpins so much of footballing life in the north east of England.

 

 

Although many would have expected his career to fizzle out, Beardsley's impish love for the game meant that he just couldn't stop playing, and he turned out for a whole host of clubs as his career ended, with a loan spell at Manchester City making him the only man to have played for both the blue and red halves of Merseyside and Manchester. He even found time to give a bit back to his native north east by turning out 22 times for Hartlepool United in 1999, before a brief spell in Australia finished things off.

 

A true fans' favourite, Beardsley is now coaching in the Newcastle academy set-up and he remains the Geordies' most capped England international, a true local hero.

 

HONOURS

 

Football League First Division Champion (Liverpool): 1987/88 & 1990

FA Cup Winner (Liverpool) 1989

Football League Second Division (Newcastle United): promoted 1984, Champions 1992/93.

Awarded MBE 1995

 

DID YOU KNOW...There could have been a hundred of these for 'Pedro', but one of the best is that he appeared in an episode of long-running BBC Television soap opera 'Eastenders' in 1998. He was in the background at Terry and Irene's wedding, for those with the video tapes...

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Нюкасъл отстрани легенда, тормозел тъмнокожите в школата

 

Една от легендите на английския футбол от 80-те години Питър Биърдсли подаде оставка като треньор на отбора до 23 години на Нюкасъл заради обвинения в тормоз и расизъм. Биърдо, както му казват феновете, е разследван от ръководството на клуба след въпросните твърдения.

 

В понеделник той е бил привикан в клубния офис, а до края на седмицата трябва да бъдат предоставени и доказателствата. Бившето крило е треньор на тима до 23 години вече 9 сезона.

 

Според Mirror той направил забележка на двама тъмнокожи от школата, че се бавни при катеренето на шведска стена: "Какво ви отнема толкова време? Хора като вас би трябвало да сте добри в това".

 

“След като разговаряхме с Питър Биърдсли, ние взехме решение, че в момента най-доброто за всички е той да напусне, поне временно. През това време ние ще се запознаем с всички обвинения, ще изчакаме доказателствата, за да видим какво има срещу него”, се казва в анонса на Джордитата.

 

Според “Би Би Си” един от обвиняващите е 22-годишният продукт на школата на клуба Ясин бен Ел Маани. Родителите на момчето са мароканци, а той самият е в клуба от 2016-а година. Съотборниците му подкрепят неговите твърдения, че е бил тормозен и унижаван.

 

Биърдсли, който е играл за Ливърпул, Евертън и Някасъл с доста сериозен успех, беше изправен пред подобно обвинение и през 2003-а година. Двама млади футболисти от школата на Нюкасъл го бяха обвинили в тормоз и психонатиск, но в крайна сметка не се стигна до наказание за легендата.

 

В момента някогашното крило е на 59 години, а за клуба от Североизтока има 119 гола в 326 мача в два периода. За националния отбор на Англия е изиграл 59 мача, в това число и на две Световни първенства- през 1986-а и през 1990-а година.

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  • 9 months later...

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