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    Littlewoods sponsor Everton

    Isn't that company owned by the Moores family?. strange one indeed.
    http://www.eufootball.biz/Sponsorshi...w-sponsor.html
    Bill shankly to Tommy Smith after he'd turned up for training with a bandaged knee:
    'Take that poof bandage off, and what do you mean YOUR knee, it's LIVERPOOL'S knee !'

    "Sorry, boss, I should have kept my legs together," said Lawrence. "No, Tommy, your mother should have kept her legs together!," replied Shankly.

    * After Tommy Lawrence had let in a fluke goal between his legs

    #2
    they use to own it

    Comment


      #3
      How many sponsors have Everton had? They seem to have had loads over the years. Chang, one 2 one, D(W)ANKA, etc etc
      Dreams come true. Without that possibility, nature would not incite us to have them.
      John Updike

      My son Foster is a fan of soccer. He was a goaltender. His brother was a defenseman.
      George Gillett

      Comment


        #4
        Right O.
        A bit ironic all the same though.
        Bill shankly to Tommy Smith after he'd turned up for training with a bandaged knee:
        'Take that poof bandage off, and what do you mean YOUR knee, it's LIVERPOOL'S knee !'

        "Sorry, boss, I should have kept my legs together," said Lawrence. "No, Tommy, your mother should have kept her legs together!," replied Shankly.

        * After Tommy Lawrence had let in a fluke goal between his legs

        Comment


          #5
          Should be sponsored by RNIB
          up your bum

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by bazza76 View Post
            Right O.
            A bit ironic all the same though.
            Why? I thought old man Moores was a blue.
            I live with Steptoe.

            Comment


              #7
              like a smurf?

              Comment


                #8
                Are they taller than you?
                I live with Steptoe.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Just believe and you never know what will happen.

                  According to Benitez it's important not simply to go out to win but to go out prepared to win, which means players have to put in the same level of work on a daily basis. Anything else is unacceptable.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Mumsafan View Post
                    Why? I thought old man Moores was a blue.
                    He was the chairman and major shareholder in the 60's if my memory serves me right.
                    I like young women cos there stories are shorter!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by jonesie23 View Post
                      How many sponsors have Everton had? They seem to have had loads over the years. Chang, one 2 one, D(W)ANKA, etc etc
                      Amongst the many they've had are Chang, Kejian (?!), One-2-One, Hafnia (apparently a cooked meat company!), Danka (**** knows?) and NEC. Rumours circulated in the 1980s that they would sign a huge sponsorship deal with Tampax but the Everton Chairman at the time, Philip Carter, said there were too many strings attached...
                      There is a light that never goes out. RIP Alan "Mally" Johnston and the 96. YNWA.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Mumsafan View Post
                        Why? I thought old man Moores was a blue.
                        I didn't know that, but ya know what i mean
                        Bill shankly to Tommy Smith after he'd turned up for training with a bandaged knee:
                        'Take that poof bandage off, and what do you mean YOUR knee, it's LIVERPOOL'S knee !'

                        "Sorry, boss, I should have kept my legs together," said Lawrence. "No, Tommy, your mother should have kept her legs together!," replied Shankly.

                        * After Tommy Lawrence had let in a fluke goal between his legs

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Steve View Post
                          He was the chairman and major shareholder in the 60's if my memory serves me right.


                          From TLW's 'You Don't Wanna Know Your History'

                          After a very disappointing 1950s Everton were fortunate to attract the interest of the Moores family around the turn of the decade. Manager Johnny Carey was given as much cash as he needed and guided them to 5th in 1960-61. Yet John Moores was not satisfied with this progress and famously sacked Carey in the back of a London taxi on the way back from a meeting at the FA. He was replaced by Harry Catterick, a dour man who looked more like an undertaker than a football manager and made his players clock in at Bellefield every morning.

                          Catterick took Everton to 4th in 1961-2 and 1st in 1962-3. But they were one of the most unpopular title winning sides ever. Dubbed the ‘cheque book champions’, they effectively bought who they wanted, a bit like Chelsea today. A massive £175,000 was spent in 1961-62 alone, more than double what Bill Shankly had spent in two and a half seasons getting Liverpool out of the second division.

                          That season they made their European bow but didn’t even make it across the English Channel, losing 2-1 on aggregate to Dunfermline in the Fairs Cup. This remains the only occasion when a Scottish side has overturned a first leg deficit to beat an English side.

                          Everton’s lack of popularity wasn’t helped by the behaviour of their fans, who were developing a reputation for hooliganism a decade before it became a widespread problem. In 1961-2 there were several incidents when the Blues travelled to Burnley. Clarets keeper Adam Blacklaw was hit by a bottle and sixteen away fans were ejected from the ground, with many people in the town before the game said to be in terror.

                          This left such a scar that when Everton were drawn to play Burnley or Orient in the FA Cup, a local councillor called Cassidy said Burnley folk would rather they lose their replay than face the consequences of another Everton visit.

                          Back on the pitch, in 1963-4 the Mersey pendulum swung as Liverpool romped to the title in only their second season after promotion, leading to an unprecedented bout of blue bitterness. The Reds secured the championship with four games remaining by beating Arsenal 5-0 in their final home game. But there was to be no parading of the championship trophy at Anfield as Everton refused to hand it over to the Football League because the season’s fixtures hadn’t been completed.

                          Everton’s petulant behaviour probably began a week earlier when it was revealed that their star player Tony Kay was party to a betting scam whilst at Sheffield Wednesday. This led to him being suspended from football immediately and he later received a prison sentence and a life ban.

                          Everton spent the next five years in Liverpool’s shadow. They were never out of the top four in the league but the Reds would always upstage them. In 1964-5 they finished fourth, only for Liverpool to win the FA Cup. They did beat Liverpool 4-0 at Anfield that season, only for the Reds to win the fixture 5-0 in 1965-6.

                          The FA Cup remained on Merseyside as Everton won it in 1966, but Liverpool still held the upper hand by winning the league. Both sides were in Europe frequently, but whereas Liverpool reached the semi finals of the European Cup in 1965 and final of the Cup Winners Cup in 1966, Everton never made it past the third round.

                          Then as Shankly’s team began to age Everton won the title in 1969-70. They achieved 66 points, just one short of Leeds record that was set a year earlier. The destination of the championship trophy was never in doubt after they won fifteen out of their first eighteen games, but the Goodison derby still brought about embarrassment. Shankly’s team, which would be broken up less than three months later, beat Everton 3-0 in a game that will forever be remembered for Sandy Brown’s classic own goal.

                          They also failed to get the hang of competing in two competitions at the same time, as second division Sheffield United knocked them out of the FA Cup in the third round. They may have finished the decade as top dogs, but their stay at the top would be short lived.
                          Remember, we're only adding to the nonsense.

                          Walking a lonely road one night, Nasruddin saw riders approaching. His imagination ran riot: he saw himself robbed or killed, so he climbed a wall into a graveyard and hid. Puzzled at his behaviour, the riders, who were followers of the Mullah, followed. Finding him cowering behind a grave, they asked "Great Sage, why are you hiding here?". "It's more complicated than you think" he replied, "I'm here because of you - and you're here because of me"

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by kendoddsdadsdogsdead View Post
                            Should be sponsored by RNIB
                            Or Murphy's Bitter

                            Or Jif Lemon Juice

                            Comment

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