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The
more that the years go by, it seems the more that the fella thats
driving times winged chariot is sticking his foot down, dashing
through the gears, and generally is in too much of a hurry to get
to wherever it is that hes going. Weeks blur into months,
months into years and before you know it, you dont know what
day it is after all, it was only 1993 last week, wasnt
it?
But to those of us of a certain age, the realisation that next week,
March 8th, would have seen Laurie Cunningham reach his 50th birthday
is like an alarm call from Big Ben. Tempus fugit? Youve said
a mouthful.
Any thoughts of Laurie Cunningham are inevitably bittersweet, tinged
with the sadness of his tragically premature death and with a hint
of disappointment over magnificent potential that went ultimately
unfulfilled. Yet in barely a couple of years at The Hawthorns, Laurie
filled more pages in the mental scrapbooks of those who watched
him than dozens upon dozens of other perfectly worthy Albion, even
England, stars.
To see Laurie Cunningham in full flow was to see a sorcerer making
the game of football look the easiest, most natural thing in the
world.
Yet to see Laurie Cunningham in full flight back in 1978 was to
unleash some of the most poisonous forces that football has ever
harboured or been exposed to. Lauries greatness wasnt
simply founded in the fact that he had absolute mastery of the football,
that he could do anything with it, at any speed he chose, that spellbound
a raft of football goers up and down the country.
His greatest achievement was to do all that even while he was the
subject of vicious racial attacks, while he stood alone on a hostile
touchline beneath a hail of bananas, while he could hear the massed
ranks of the South Bank and elsewhere chanting Nigger, nigger,
lick my boots and Pull that trigger, shoot that nigger.
Lauries greatness, like Cyrilles, like Brendons,
like Viv Andersons, like George Berrys, was to go out
on the field and face the cowardly, brain dead racists down. Call
him what you liked, you werent going to stop Laurie ripping
your team to shreds. The final solution? Sticking a goal past your
whiter than white goalkeeper. Wheres your racial supremacy
now?
Laurie pitched up at The Hawthorns in the tail end of Johnny Giles
first spell as manager, coming up from Orient in a deal valued at
around £110,000, a hefty sum for a young man who had only
ever played in the lower leagues, but in fact, Giles and Albion
chairman might as well have snuck him out of Brisbane Road slung
over their shoulders in a bag marked swag, for it was a fee so risibly
small that it bordered on grand larceny. As soon as Cunningham donned
the stripes, his place in folklore was secure.
Its hard to say just what his greatest contribution to the
Albion and to the game really was, for his pioneering role in smashing
racial barriers and stereotypes sometimes leads you to forget just
what a genius he was and thats no mere hyperbole for
genius he really was with the ball at his feet. But for all
that football is the lifeblood of many of us, its still only
a game when alls said and done. Laurie made a contribution
at a time when bricks and bottles were being hurled simply because
of skin pigmentation. And he helped, in some way, to turn that tide.
Thats a legacy to be proud of isnt it, an epitaph to
carve on a tombstone.
Laurie was placed beneath that stone far, far too early. Laurie
Cunninghams world stopped spinning at the age of 33 and 1/3,
somehow appropriate for a man who started a revolution. When news
reached this country, it chilled the bones of those who had seen
him play, particularly his contemporaries who suddenly lost a part
of their youth and were slapped in the face by a taste of their
own mortality, as Cyrille Regis well remembers.
We stayed in touch after he left the Albion. Wed talk
regularly on the phone, I went out to Spain to see him a few times,
wed have holidays together and he was always great company.
I think the last couple of years hed started enjoying his
football to the full again because those pressures had fallen away
and he could just play, so it was even more tragic to hear that
hed gone.
Id been talking to him two or three days before it happened,
then on the Saturday morning, when I got back home after pre-season
training, I got a phone call to say hed died in a car crash.
It was a body blow, those sort of things are very hard to comprehend
at the time they happen.
His death had a huge impact on me because wed been close,
close friends and to a degree, wed had parallel lives up to
that point, in terms of breaking down racial barriers, playing at
the top level and I reassessed my own life from there and I went
through some important changes of my own.
It was sadly ironic that Cunningham should be stolen away at a point
when he had escaped most of the pressures that had besieged him
throughout his football career, just as he was embarking on a final
few seasons where he could simply get back to the simple enjoyment
that had characterised his early performances for Orient and, initially,
Albion.
Life was rarely that simple for Laurie because he was always a symbol
of something, right from the moment he became the first player to
represent England at under-21 level in 1977. That inspired a generation,
including a young Londoner called Kevin Campbell: Laurie was
a player that I always admired as a kid.
He was so smooth, so quick across the ground. Hes always going
to be one of the greats, one of the idols from that era, a part
of the Three Degrees at West Brom, and he did a lot to break down
barriers for black players, because he really was part of the first
big wave coming into the game. And he was so exciting, that was
what made it special. He could do anything with the ball and he
made defenders look stupid.
He was the kind of player everybody wanted to be.Life on the
crest of that wave was not always a bowl of cherries, though there
was plenty of fruit to be had as crowds bated him with bananas and
monkey chants such sophistication. In truth, the fruit bowl
was more a goldfish bowl, and it was a lonely existence, particularly
for one who felt his responsibilities keenly and who wore those
responsibilities on his sleeve.
The fact that perhaps his greatest football was played at The Hawthorns
is in no small part because it was here that he enjoyed support
from his colleagues, not least two men who were in Lauries
boat Brendon Batson and Cyrille Regis.
I was very lucky, remembers Cyrille. I had a very
close relationship with Laurie, mainly because we went through a
lot of the same things together. For two years at the Albion we
were inseparable, both young boys, having just come up from London,
single lads and we stuck together through what was a very exciting
period but also a time where we were suddenly in the public eye,
from nowhere.
There was such a lot of focus on us, and then Brendon too, the whole
Three Degrees thing, the fact that we were at the forefront of that
first generation of black players, and I think we were all lucky
that we had one another, we had somebody else who understood what
we were going through. Back then, there wasnt the support
network that players have now, the way you have agents and people
around you, so we acted as our own support network if you like.
And you have to pay credit to the rest of the team as well, the
manager too, because they were always behind us, they were always
supportive and that was very important.
Bryan Robson was part of that dressing room, and he has fond memories
of Laurie. Laurie was a very good friend of mine and I spent
a lot of time with him and Cyrille when we were players here. He
was a smashing player, he had incredible touch on the ball, total
control of it, a very good athlete, terrific pace, quick enough
to get out of trouble.
The performance he gave in Valencia is one that everyone who saw
it will remember or a long, long time. To get a move to Real Madrid
says it all about him really, because to go there, at that time
when they werent buying players from this country, youve
got to be something special.
Yes. It always comes back to Valencia and to Real Madrid, Spanish
sides from a nation where his destiny was made and his fate sealed.
When Albion were pitted against Valencia in the 1978/79 UEFA Cup,
it was like playing Barcelona today - great draw, big experience,
inevitable beating.
Valencia were led by Mario Kempes, the man who had won the World
Cup for Argentina the previous summer. But out in Spain, Laurie
eclipsed him as he played Kempes and his team off the park with
a compelling display of virtuosity, as Cyrille recalls: The
abiding memory of Laurie as a footballer still has to be that game.
He gave a near perfect right wingers performance that night.
Everything he touched came off, he made the right decisions time
and again for 90 minutes, took people on at the right time, played
one touch at the right time, scored a goal, he had a real ten out
of ten game, and that was the night that changed his life
Real Madrid saw him and they wanted him from there.
I wish hed stayed at the Albion a little bit longer
because that side we had in 1978/79 never got the chance to mature
that bit further. But when Real Madrid come to sign you, you cant
turn them down. Hed just turned 23, he was on his own in a
new country, because back then there werent any agents or
advisors to help him out, and he found it difficult at times.
He started well but then he had a bad injury to his foot which really
hampered him and from there on, he was never quite the same again
because in trying to get back, he picked up one injury after another.
Nowadays, thered be a whole lot of people telling him not
to rush back, hed have an interpreter, a lawyer dealing with
the club on his behalf, helping things go smoothly. But back then,
it was Laurie on his own, at a club whod paid a lot of money
for him and wanted him out on the pitch. Football has moved on,
theres a much better understanding of the difficulties that
players face when they move abroad. That wasnt around then
and Laurie had to fend for himself.
Legend has it that Lauries spell in Spain was catastrophic,
but thats simply not true. He won the Spanish league and cup
double in his first season, played against Liverpool in a European
Cup Final the following year and was a cup winner again in 1982.
Injury problems exacerbated by Laurie, a devoted dancer,
being caught on the dance floor of a Madrid disco while he was supposed
to be convalescing with a toe injury caused Reals patience
to run out and Laurie embarked on a few seasons of confusion, veering
from one club to another, even having a brief spell under his former
Albion boss Ron Atkinson at Old Trafford. Atkinson is rapturous
in his appreciation of Laurie Cunningham, calling him A wonderful,
wonderful player. My saying about him was that he could run on snow
and he wouldnt make an imprint. He never quite made the most
of that talent for various reasons which was sad.
Whatever the final statistics, they matter little. Laurie was a
prodigious talent and he was generous enough to share the best of
it with us, here at The Hawthorns. Like a lot of flair players,
some short-sighted managers tried to shackle him, trying to shoehorn
him into a system, madness for a player to whom systems meant nothing.
Get him fit, get him ready, get him the ball and get him going.
That was all you had to do with Laurie Cunningham and we knew it.
Even Cyrille Regis, a man who scored more unbelievable goals than
most for the Baggies, still wonders at some of the things Laurie
could do.
He was an incredible player, graceful, balletic in his movement,
so stylish, so easy on the eye, great control of the ball, pace,
everything you need. He was definitely one of the most watchable
players in terms of the way he moved, the things he tried to do,
his touch, his awareness. He was very exciting, he had people out
of their seats all the time. He had such huge potential and its
sad to think that he never quite reached the full extent of what
he could have achieved. Hes still one of the very best players
you could ever have wished to see but if hed really done everything
he could in the game, he would have touched some incredible heights.
If Laurie were around now, he would be at Arsenal or Chelsea.
Thierry Henry is the closest thing we have to him nowadays. You
watch him run, hes so graceful, there doesnt seem to
be any effort. That was Laurie, he looked like he was floating above
the ground.
Close your eyes and you can see him still, floating above the ground.
Rest easy, Laurie.
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