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Toughest LFC Player Ever?
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"I have decided to escape, to defy the shogun. Today I will begin walking the road to hell. But you will choose your own path. So, soon you may be seeing heaven. Choose the sword, and you will join me. Choose the ball and you join your mother, in death. You don’t understand my words, but you must choose. So… come boy, choose life or death."
"You would've been happier if you'd chosen to join your mother in her world. " - Ogami Itto
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Ron Yeats & Larry Lloyd never shirked a tackle either.Originally posted by mick the click View PostGerry Byrne, then Tommy Smith, then possibly Sooey. Saw them all play!
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yt8DOcqCUcQ - 45 - Jimmy Case
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pk1QiHaqNfQ - 9 - Graeme SounessIt's my job to handle life and death situations on a daily basis. It's what I do, and I'm very good at it.
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Gerry Byrne and Tommy Smith, all the other so called hard men were like fairies compared to them. Tommy Smith would be sent off just for getting off the team bus these days, he was a recognised hard man in the days when there were lots of hard men playing (see norman Hunter, Chopper Harris, Paul madeley etc)
Vinnie Jones hard? compared with these guys he was a pussy cat..No matter how far back you seem, when you're blessed with class, anything is possible. Chris Bascombe Sep 21 2006

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Momo, Gerrard and Carragher are bloody wimps compared with Tommy Smith. Not only was he a fantastic player at RB or CB - he'd walk into the current team as he was vastly superior to Finnan, Carragher or Hyypia - he was has hard as nails. I saw his entire career and if you saw him play you'd realise that the aforementioned players weren't in the same "hardness" league. He'd have eaten Souness for his breakfast too. But he wasn't just a hard man clogger, he had an exquisite touch and was quite simply one of the best players to pull on the red shirt. In any best XI of the last 40 years he would be in it without a shadow of a doubt. Any other oldies will agree.Originally posted by Marky18 View PostWho would it be?
Who's the 'hardest nut' so to speak?
The that goes in all guns blazing, puts his head where some players
wouldn't put there feet.
Tommy Smith is by all acoounts up there, however he was before my time so maybe you oldies are better equipped to answer this one
Of recent times Momo, Gerrard and Carragher are all strong contenders,
Sami can put the boot in but i wouldn't say he's particularly 'tough', Lil Luis's got be up there as well
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Just to clarify this: He was from Garston, so it was Garston Docks in the south of the city rather than the tough inner city dockland areas. I lived in neighbouring Speke and went to senior school in south Liverpool (Hunts Cross/Woolton area) where Jimmy's younger brother Frank also went. A sound lad he was too and looked very like his older brother but a bit chubbierOriginally posted by puredale View PostJimmy Case (oldies will know who I mean)
Case was brought up on a tough Liverpool housing estate close to the docks. He graduated through the schools teams and then joined a tough dockers' side, Blue Union. The physical nature of these early games would have an impact on the rest of his football career.
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Was always up for a tussle with the old dirty, dirty Leeds, with Charlton, Hunter, Bremner, Madeley in their team, you had to be hard just to walk on the same pitch.Originally posted by Redspin View PostMomo, Gerrard and Carragher are bloody wimps compared with Tommy Smith. Not only was he a fantastic player at RB or CB - he'd walk into the current team as he was vastly superior to Finnan, Carragher or Hyypia - he was has hard as nails. I saw his entire career and if you saw him play you'd realise that the aforementioned players weren't in the same "hardness" league. He'd have eaten Souness for his breakfast too. But he wasn't just a hard man clogger, he had an exquisite touch and was quite simply one of the best players to pull on the red shirt. In any best XI of the last 40 years he would be in it without a shadow of a doubt. Any other oldies will agree.
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Gerry was a fine player but Tommy Smith was much, much harder. Saying that, Gerry played most of the 65 Cup Final with a broken collar bone, so he was no wimp. No subs in those days so he just soldiered onOriginally posted by Poker View PostSouness from my ERA ie 1971 to present day.
But I am told Gerry Byrne was the hardest player the planet has ever seen
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[QUOTE=Redspin;204546]That's true. Too many of the self-styled hardmen, both in the 70's and since, were nothing more than cynical dirty *******s whose only contribution was to destroy the opposition's more skilful players. I mean, come on - Ron Harris makes Titus Bramble look like Cruyff.But he wasn't just a hard man clogger, he had an exquisite touch and was quite simply one of the best players to pull on the red shirt.
Smith offered a lot more and could play anywhere across the defence and in midfield too. It's just that he was not to be tooled around with by anyone.
And any judgement of Norman Hunter ultimately rests on the fact that he ran away from Franny 'Mad Dog' Lee like a small girl with spiders in her bed.
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