Kenny Dalglish Portrait Of A Natural Footballer





From being rejected by Glasgow Rangers as a teenager to becoming manager


of the mighty Liverpool, this programme charts Kenny Dalglish's football career



from such an unlikely start to the peak of soccer stardom. 


There can only ever be one King and the man who's earned the right to sit on Anfield's throne is Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish.


With a delicate touch and the ultimate football brain, King Kenny is regarded by the majority of Liverpudlians as the club's greatest ever player.


When he joined in August 1977, it was hard to see how Bob Paisley's side could top their first European Cup triumph of the previous season. But, with the highly influential Dalglish in the team, the next 13 years brought untold riches.









































































Bio :


http://www.celticglasgow.fr/spip.php?article80




http://kennydalglish.tripod.com/


http://www.lfchistory.net/player_profile.asp?player_id=287






















Birthdate:   04.03.1951

Birthplace:  Glasgow, Scotland

Other clubs:  Celtic, Cumbernauld United (loan)

Bought from:  Celtic

Signed for LFC:  £440000 10.08.1977

International debut:  10.11.1971 vs. Belgium

International caps:  102/30 (55/14 at LFC) - 12.11.1986

Liverpool debut:  13.08.1977

Last appearance: 01.05.1990

Debut goal:  20.08.1977

Last goal: 18.04.1987

Contract expiry:  1990

LFC league games/goals:  355 / 118

Total LFC games/goals:  515 / 172









Unlike many Liverpool signings of the era, the Scotland international was already a household name when he made the switch from Parkhead to Anfield. His deeds in the green and white hoops of Celtic had made him one of the most sought-after figures in British football and it required a record £440,000 fee to secure his services.




Dalglish was brought in to replace Kop idol Kevin Keegan, who'd moved to Hamburg earlier that summer, though any fears he couldn't fill those illustrious boots were quickly laid to rest.




The Glasgow-born forward found the net seven minutes into his league debut against Middlesbrough at Ayresome Park, and followed that with a goal on his first appearance in front of the Kop as Newcastle were beaten 2-0.




Dalglish slipped seamlessly into Paisley's all-conquering red machine and the new King of the Kop crowned his first season by topping the club's goalscoring charts. The most memorable of his 31 strikes came in the 1978 European Cup final against FC Bruges at Wembley, a delicate dink over the keeper that clinched a 1-0 victory.




The move south increased his profile dramatically, though Dalglish was never one to seek the limelight and remained typically modest despite his new found superstar status.




In 1979, his talent was recognised by the football writers of England, who voted the canny Scotsman their Footballer of the Year. The award was just desserts for a player whose every touch made Kopites purr with delight.




A selfless team player who brought others into play, Dalglish was an on-the-field visionary who could spot openings that few, if any, of his contemporaries could see.




David Johnson was the first grateful recipient of this in the late Seventies but it was the King's strike partnership with Ian Rush that was to fire the Reds to greater glory during the Eighties.




The club may have had a new chief goalscorer, but Dalglish remained the man pulling all the strings. If assists were recorded back then, he'd have been the first name on everyone's Fantasy Football teamsheet.




A double Footballer of the Year in 1983, he was without doubt the finest British-born player of his generation and was rightly spoken about in the same breath as Maradona, Zico, Platini and Rummenigge.






With the ball at his feet, he was a pure genius - a contention backed up by footage of just about every one of his 172 Liverpool goals. There's the aforementioned European Cup winner, his sublime curlers at Highbury, Portman Road and Goodison, a mazy dribble through the Man United defence at Maine Road, his stretching volley in the League Cup final versus West Ham and title clinchers against Tottenham and Chelsea.




Everyone has their own particular favourite but the one common denominator in all the above was the famous Kenny celebration: a quick turn with arms aloft and a beaming smile that would have lit up even the murkiest Mersey sky.




The Kop hero-worshipped him like no other. Dalglish was the first name they sang and many a bed sheet was converted into a homemade banner paying homage.




In the aftermath of the Heysel Stadium disaster, the playmaker was a surprising but popular appointment as player/manager.




Fears his new role would result in more time on the touchline and less on the pitch were initially unfounded. It was on his return to the side during the 1985-86 run-in that Liverpool embarked on a winning streak that would see them clinch a coveted league and FA Cup double. How fitting it was at Stamford Bridge when Dalglish 'the player' scored the goal that secured the title.




Inevitably, his appearances became fewer and fewer over the next few years but there was still the odd flash of brilliance as the master sought to teach his apprentices.




What Dalglish went on to achieve as Liverpool manager cemented his legendary status.




His double in 1986 was followed by league titles in 1988 and 1990, with another all-Merseyside Cup triumph in 1989.




Who knows how many European trophies would have found their way back to Anfield during this period had English clubs not been barred from continental competition?




It could be argued that it took a decade for the club to recover from his shock resignation in February 1991.(liverpoolfc.tv)