| Behind The Glory |
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This compelling and fascinating analysis demonstrates how from 1900 to 1971 professional footballers remained, as Jimmy Guthrie, the union’s firebrand socialist Scottish chairman famously announced to the 1955 TUC conference, “the last bonded men in Britain”. At the turn of the century footballers found themselves squeezed between the prejudices of the FA, a patrician group which despised professionalism, and the Football League, businessmen and the like, which, unable to stomach the idea of sharing out gate receipts, opted instead for a wage cap and the retain-and-transfer system. Those who set up the first incarnations of the players’ union were further hamstrung by the “special” nature of the footballer’s contract, which meant that it was not bound by industrial legislation. On the subject...
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100 Years of the PFA
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