
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Jun 2007 10:20
by Salford Royal » 19 Jun 2007 10:49
by Dirk Gently » 19 Jun 2007 10:50
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Jun 2007 10:52
Salford Royal Theres only one Michael Meaker.
by wolsey » 19 Jun 2007 10:58
SpaceCruiser Cool, we're on the last position to decide our greatest XI. Just thought I'd trot it out while the voting for the two forward positions was ongoing. Personally I think there's only one man for this position, step forward one Michael Gilkes. I welcome any argument if you disagree.
by Behindu » 19 Jun 2007 11:00
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Jun 2007 11:03
by Fred Sharpe's Nose » 19 Jun 2007 11:07
by wolsey » 19 Jun 2007 11:16
Fred Sharpe's Nose Hunt and Convey can rightly wear the shirt with pride, but in my humble opinion no single Reading player has ever approached Michael Gilkes' ability to excite the crowd. The whole of Elm Park was electrified (including the away end, with fear) whenever he had the ball at his feet and started a run at goal.
Only one winner here - Michael Gilkes
by Dirk Gently » 19 Jun 2007 11:19
wolseyFred Sharpe's Nose Hunt and Convey can rightly wear the shirt with pride, but in my humble opinion no single Reading player has ever approached Michael Gilkes' ability to excite the crowd. The whole of Elm Park was electrified (including the away end, with fear) whenever he had the ball at his feet and started a run at goal.
Only one winner here - Michael Gilkes
In the absence of any real alternative, I agree
But, perhaps I'm being jaundiced here, and I know I am in an overwhelming minority, my over-riding memories of Gilkes will always be the excitement when he picked up the ball by the Southbank near the half way line, push the ball ten yards down the line, zoom past the defenders who generally had 5 yard head starts, only to see him deliver the cross nearer the programme shop than the six yard box.
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Jun 2007 11:20
Dirk GentlywolseyFred Sharpe's Nose Hunt and Convey can rightly wear the shirt with pride, but in my humble opinion no single Reading player has ever approached Michael Gilkes' ability to excite the crowd. The whole of Elm Park was electrified (including the away end, with fear) whenever he had the ball at his feet and started a run at goal.
Only one winner here - Michael Gilkes
In the absence of any real alternative, I agree
But, perhaps I'm being jaundiced here, and I know I am in an overwhelming minority, my over-riding memories of Gilkes will always be the excitement when he picked up the ball by the Southbank near the half way line, push the ball ten yards down the line, zoom past the defenders who generally had 5 yard head starts, only to see him deliver the cross nearer the programme shop than the six yard box.
Nope you.re right - that sums Gilksey up in a nutshell. Blinding pace, great excitement, but very rarely a worthwhile end-product.
by Behindu » 19 Jun 2007 11:23
SpaceCruiser I was lucky to see some of Paul Canoville, great player, shame he couldn't play more games. I'd nominate him, but not sure if it's appropriate seeing that I've discounted loanees (because they didn't play enough games and weren't owned by Reading......)
by Behindu » 19 Jun 2007 11:24
SpaceCruiserSalford Royal Theres only one Michael Meaker.
He played on the right, not on the left.
by wolsey » 19 Jun 2007 11:25
BehinduSpaceCruiser I was lucky to see some of Paul Canoville, great player, shame he couldn't play more games. I'd nominate him, but not sure if it's appropriate seeing that I've discounted loanees (because they didn't play enough games and weren't owned by Reading......)
Cannovile wasn't a loanee, so no reason to exclude him
by SpaceCruiser » 19 Jun 2007 11:27
BehinduSpaceCruiser I was lucky to see some of Paul Canoville, great player, shame he couldn't play more games. I'd nominate him, but not sure if it's appropriate seeing that I've discounted loanees (because they didn't play enough games and weren't owned by Reading......)
Cannovile wasn't a loanee, so no reason to exclude him
by Behindu » 19 Jun 2007 11:31
by Skyline » 19 Jun 2007 11:53
Dirk GentlywolseyFred Sharpe's Nose Hunt and Convey can rightly wear the shirt with pride, but in my humble opinion no single Reading player has ever approached Michael Gilkes' ability to excite the crowd. The whole of Elm Park was electrified (including the away end, with fear) whenever he had the ball at his feet and started a run at goal.
Only one winner here - Michael Gilkes
In the absence of any real alternative, I agree
But, perhaps I'm being jaundiced here, and I know I am in an overwhelming minority, my over-riding memories of Gilkes will always be the excitement when he picked up the ball by the Southbank near the half way line, push the ball ten yards down the line, zoom past the defenders who generally had 5 yard head starts, only to see him deliver the cross nearer the programme shop than the six yard box.
Nope you.re right - that sums Gilksey up in a nutshell. Blinding pace, great excitement, but very rarely a worthwhile end-product.
by knights_1990 » 19 Jun 2007 11:57
by wolsey » 19 Jun 2007 12:05
knights_1990 Stevey hunt is the obvious choice here. He has proven it at top flight.
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