Happy_Martian
Well-Known Member
There has been a notable amount of discussion of Vik's pending departure (what happens if he fails the medical? Do we have to send Simms back ? ). And some posters have commented on whether Vik was a legend and have raised the names of past players to compare.
But the PFA, FA, EFL doesn't have a checklist to identify what criteria makes a club legend. So this question goes out to the greater unwashed and (probably still) drunk SBT community.
What makes a player a "club legend" in your eyes ?
To give context to the term, can you please give an example of who you think meets this status ? And what have they done to qualify for the recognition this moniker infers.
As an example, I'll say Dave Busst. Not one you'd think of, no showboating, exciting fans with his rampaging runs or clattering tackles. Just an average/good player during our Premier League days. Fans knew he was a solid defender and safe. But after his terrible injury, he hasn't turned his back on football or become callous about losing his chosen profession. Rather than disappear into the shadows, he's worked his way back to health within the same organisation and is now the centre-point of the club's community interaction, a role he seems to take with great enthusiasm. A person committed to CCFC for all the right reasons.
But the PFA, FA, EFL doesn't have a checklist to identify what criteria makes a club legend. So this question goes out to the greater unwashed and (probably still) drunk SBT community.
What makes a player a "club legend" in your eyes ?
To give context to the term, can you please give an example of who you think meets this status ? And what have they done to qualify for the recognition this moniker infers.
As an example, I'll say Dave Busst. Not one you'd think of, no showboating, exciting fans with his rampaging runs or clattering tackles. Just an average/good player during our Premier League days. Fans knew he was a solid defender and safe. But after his terrible injury, he hasn't turned his back on football or become callous about losing his chosen profession. Rather than disappear into the shadows, he's worked his way back to health within the same organisation and is now the centre-point of the club's community interaction, a role he seems to take with great enthusiasm. A person committed to CCFC for all the right reasons.
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