Memories of Cantona, Speed and many more Leeds United heroes shared in new book – sportsjournalists.co.uk 13/10/23
Dave Tomlinson’s ‘Leeds United in the 1980s and 1990s: From Wilderness Years to Wilko’ charts the eventful end to the Yorkshire club’s exploits in the 20th century, writes Eric Brown…
By ERIC BROWN
He retired from football in his native country
after racking up a series of misdemeanours longer than an EastEnders cast
list’s rap sheet.
These
included throwing boots at a team-mate, aiming various items of kit at
team-mates, abusing match officials, rows with club managers and screaming
“idiot” in each of the faces of disciplinary committee officials who had just
banned him.
Eric
Cantona’s indiscretions were not forgotten in France even after he emerged from
retirement to help win the title. A marked man in France, he eventually decided
to try his luck in England and the rest, as they say, is history.
Leeds United in the 1980s and 1990s: From Wilderness Years to Wilkoby @DaveMightyLeeds
— Amberley Publishing (@amberleybooks) October 13, 2023
Our #NewBook is the captivating story of two dramatic decades in the incredible history of #LeedsUnited A tale of burning and rebirth. @FourFourTwohttps://t.co/WGifF4BW24 #Leeds pic.twitter.com/mqC4VFs24t
First
Sheffield Wednesday offered an escape route by giving the France international
a trial. Manager Trevor Francis wanted him to sign but Wednesday baulked at the
£1million fee, allowing Howard Wilkinson to pounce for one of Leeds’ most
significant signings.
Within
months, Cantona had another title medal after several match-winning displays
helped bring the last Football League crown to Elland Road.
Cantona’s
important role in reviving Leeds is central to a new book ‘Leeds United in the 1980s and 1990s’ by
fan Dave Tomlinson.
It’s
a rollicking tale featuring a host of half-forgotten players and some of the
greatest performers ever seen in English football as the Yorkshire club hurtled
from relegation fights to qualifying for the European Cup.
It
starts with Don Revie’s paradise lost and the club in despair. As Tomlinson
puts it: “Leeds United was a club going nowhere but down. The stench of urine
from neglected toilets at Elland Road was a symbol of a club that offered
little but a depressing and dangerous place to waste away a bleak Saturday
afternoon.
“It
was not a club in crisis. No one cared enough any more for it to be a crisis.”
As
the 80s arrived, Leeds was a place to avoid, with the Yorkshire Ripper on his
killing spree, unemployment rife, and buildings blackened by years of emissions
from vehicles and factories.
At
Elland Road, a similar sense of decay persisted. Manager Jimmy Adamson faced
terrace rebellion with “Adamson out” chants heard far more often than roars of
team support.
How
this sad state of affairs was transformed into glory by Cantona, Gordon
Strachan, David Batty, Gary McAllister, Gary Speed and others under Wilkinson
makes absorbing reading, even for non-Leeds fans.
Tomlinson
has produced a worthy successor to his earlier histories ‘Leeds United’ and
‘Leeds United in the 20th century’. Strangely though, there’s not a single
illustration of Cantona in the picture section, while the author features four
times.
From
Adamson to O’Leary, from Kevin Hird, Wayne Entwhistle and Aidan Butterworth to
Jonathan Woodgate, Harry Kewell and Alan Smith, this is an absorbing tale of
Leeds’ helter-skelter existence over a couple of eventful decades.