| Lost In France |
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One of the reasons for this is highlighted in Spencer Vignes’s snappily written biography of Leigh Richmond Roose – the laws of the game. While cricket today looks much the same as it did in the era of Wilfred Rhodes and George Hirst, football in Edwardian times appears unfathomably strange. When Roose – aka “The Prince of Goalkeepers”, dubbed here “football’s first playboy” – was playing, for example, a keeper could handle the ball anywhere in his own half. The Welshman from Holt often took this to extreme lengths, gathering the ball in the penalty area and then running along bouncing it until he reached the halfway line, before punting or throwing it down the field. Vignes compares this tactic to those later employed by Howard Wilkinson, which perhaps is why the press complained that Roose’s antics were cutting out midfield play and spoiling the game. On the subject...
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The Remarkable Life and Death of Leigh Richmond Roose, Football's First Play Boy
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