Pat Crerand
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Patrick Timothy ("Paddy") Crerand (born February 19, 1939 in Glasgow) was a Scottish international football player who represented his country 16 times.
After six years at Celtic F.C. (120 appearances, 5 goals), he signed for Manchester United on 6 February 1963, the fifth anniversary of the Munich air disaster, making his debut against Blackpool. He was a hard tackling midfielder who, while known for his tenacity and tackling ability, was also an accurate passer, creating chances for attacking players such as Bobby Charlton and George Best. It was once said that while United had Best, Law and Charlton, an in-form Paddy was the heartbeat of the team.
He helped United to the league championship in 1965 and 1967 and won winners' medals in the 1963 FA Cup and 1968 European Cup finals. He retired in 1972, having appeared in 401 games, scoring 19 goals for United.
He was manager of Northampton Town in 1976-77 and covered United matches on local radio in the 1980s and early 1990's. Today, he appears regularly on MUTV, Manchester United's television channel, as a co-commentator alongside Steve Bower, as well as appearing as a pundit on the show Crerand and Bower...In Extra Time. Crerand is even fondly recognised by younger United fans today since his humorously biased commentary during United matches allows him to maintain his cult status amongst all connected to United at Old Trafford.
In 1995 Crerand broke mould in the football world by supporting Éric Cantona during the time of his infamous kung-fu kick on Crystal Palace fan Matthew Simmons.