Most first team appearances
Ian Callaghan (857)
Most League appearances
Ian Callaghan (640)
Most FA Cup appearances
Ian Callaghan (79)
Most League Cup appearances
Ian Rush (78)
Most European appearances
Ian Callaghan (89)
Oldest player
Ted Doig, 41 yrs & 165 days v Newcastle United (A), 11 April 1908
Youngest player
Max Thompson, 17 yrs & 129 days v Tottenham Hotspur (a) 8 May 1974
Most seasons as an ever-present
Phil Neal (9)
Most consecutive appearances
Phil Neal (417) 23 October 1976 to 24 September 1983
Longest serving player
Elisha Scott – 21 yrs & 52 days: 1913 to 1934
Oldest debutant
Ted Doig, 37 yrs & 307 days v Burton U (H) 1 September 1904
Most first team goals
Ian Rush (346)
Most League goals
Roger Hunt (245)
Most FA Cup goals
Ian Rush (39)
Most League Cup goals
Ian Rush (48)
Most European goals
Michael Owen (22)
Highest scoring substitute
David Fairclough (18)
Most hat-tricks
Gordon Hodgson (17)
Most hat-tricks in a season
Roger Hunt (5 in 1961-62)
Most penalties scored
Jan Molby (42)
Most games without scoring
Ephraim Longworth (371)
Youngest goalscorer
Michael Owen, 17 yrs & 144 days v Wimbledon (a) 6 May 1997
Oldest goalscorer
Billy Liddell, 38 yrs & 55 days V Stoke City (h) 5 March 1960
Saturday, December 30, 2006
continue
The fledgling Everton played in a number of locations but settled in a greenfield site between Anfield Road and Walton Breck Road. So was born one of the great names in world football - Anfield. The team prospered and became financially sound with astute guidance from their President Mr John Houlding. John Houlding was a brewer, local council member and later Mayor of Liverpool.
Despite this he has become a largely forgotten figure in the city, although a bronze plaque outside the Directors' Lounge in Anfield and a fine oil portrait hanging within the Club museum preserve his likeness.
For a man responsible for the development of Everton and the creation of Liverpool Football Club, it is amazing how little he is remembered. There are however a few landmarks in the area where Houlding was known as "King John of Everton". The very short 'Houlding Street' has on it's corner the 'Sandon' pub. This pub was once owned by Houlding and he led many meetings of Everton Football Club from here in the bowls pavilion that existed to the rear. The place was also used as a dressing room by the players for many years. Both Everton and later Liverpool football teams were first photographed in front of this bowls pavilion.
Despite this he has become a largely forgotten figure in the city, although a bronze plaque outside the Directors' Lounge in Anfield and a fine oil portrait hanging within the Club museum preserve his likeness.
For a man responsible for the development of Everton and the creation of Liverpool Football Club, it is amazing how little he is remembered. There are however a few landmarks in the area where Houlding was known as "King John of Everton". The very short 'Houlding Street' has on it's corner the 'Sandon' pub. This pub was once owned by Houlding and he led many meetings of Everton Football Club from here in the bowls pavilion that existed to the rear. The place was also used as a dressing room by the players for many years. Both Everton and later Liverpool football teams were first photographed in front of this bowls pavilion.
Friday, December 29, 2006
Football Lengend
you know I like footall. People who like foot all have their own favorite football club. For me, my dear football club is Liverpool. I have been supporting Liverpool since I was young, when I was about 13 years old. I want to watch every Liverpool game if possible. There is one time I wass in Had-Yai and there was a big game for Liverpool and It's really mandatory for me to e infront of TV watching They play. But I can find place to watch so I drove home which is 600 Kms. just to watch the game. I love liverpool. I adore Liverpool players. I Love Everything that is Liverpol.
For anyone who don't know Liverpool, I going to give some club's history.
If it wasn't for one man, Liverpool Football Club would never have been born. When Everton left Anfield in a dispute over rent in 1892, club chairman John Houlding stayed behind along with a handful of supporters and just three first-team players. But he was determined to see football continue at the ground. He formed a new club from scratch, chose the name Liverpool… and created a legend.
Even John Houlding couldn't have predicted how successful it would become. More than 100 years on, no English club can match the LiverpoolFC roll of honour; League Champions 18 times, FA Cup winners seven times, League Cup winners seven times, European Cup winners five times and UEFA Cup winners three times.
When the Football League was founded in 1888, Anfield was one of League's original grounds. On September 8th 1888 the very first Saturday of League football, Anfield welcomed as visitors Accrington to play not against the 'Reds', but the 'Blues' of Everton Football Club.
The blue and white quartered shirts of Everton FC made quite a name for themselves at Anfield winning the League Championship in 1891, but this is to run ahead slightly. Both teams owe their existence to a Reverend Chambers of the then newly constructed and now, totally demolished, church - St Domingo, and to John Houlding - Tory MP and Mayor of Liverpool who ultimately caused Everton FC to leave Anfield and who created Liverpool Football Club.
St Domingo's football team was a strictly amateur affair created amid the belief that young lads could better be kept on the path of religious well-being through a healthy passion for competitive team games. After only a year or so of enthusiastic play in Stanley Park, they renamed themselves Everton Football Club in honour of the location of their founding church.
The St Domingo's team met however not at Church, but the Queen's Head Hotel in Village Street adjacent to "Ye Anciente Everton Toffee House". From this Everton F.C. gained their curious nickname of "The Toffees". In adopting the name Everton, the team ensured that they would permanently struggle to be located with confidence by those from outside of the city and lead to Royalty asking "Tell me, from which part of the country is the city of Everton?" nearly a century later.
I'm going to launch now. I'll be back later.
For anyone who don't know Liverpool, I going to give some club's history.
If it wasn't for one man, Liverpool Football Club would never have been born. When Everton left Anfield in a dispute over rent in 1892, club chairman John Houlding stayed behind along with a handful of supporters and just three first-team players. But he was determined to see football continue at the ground. He formed a new club from scratch, chose the name Liverpool… and created a legend.
Even John Houlding couldn't have predicted how successful it would become. More than 100 years on, no English club can match the LiverpoolFC roll of honour; League Champions 18 times, FA Cup winners seven times, League Cup winners seven times, European Cup winners five times and UEFA Cup winners three times.
When the Football League was founded in 1888, Anfield was one of League's original grounds. On September 8th 1888 the very first Saturday of League football, Anfield welcomed as visitors Accrington to play not against the 'Reds', but the 'Blues' of Everton Football Club.
The blue and white quartered shirts of Everton FC made quite a name for themselves at Anfield winning the League Championship in 1891, but this is to run ahead slightly. Both teams owe their existence to a Reverend Chambers of the then newly constructed and now, totally demolished, church - St Domingo, and to John Houlding - Tory MP and Mayor of Liverpool who ultimately caused Everton FC to leave Anfield and who created Liverpool Football Club.
St Domingo's football team was a strictly amateur affair created amid the belief that young lads could better be kept on the path of religious well-being through a healthy passion for competitive team games. After only a year or so of enthusiastic play in Stanley Park, they renamed themselves Everton Football Club in honour of the location of their founding church.
The St Domingo's team met however not at Church, but the Queen's Head Hotel in Village Street adjacent to "Ye Anciente Everton Toffee House". From this Everton F.C. gained their curious nickname of "The Toffees". In adopting the name Everton, the team ensured that they would permanently struggle to be located with confidence by those from outside of the city and lead to Royalty asking "Tell me, from which part of the country is the city of Everton?" nearly a century later.
I'm going to launch now. I'll be back later.
Done
Okay. I'm done talking about my music. I'm sick of it. Now, let me talk about someting else that I equally like or more. I mentioned it. I said I play and watch all the time. I'll be an angry man if i miss a match. Ahh!! A match. What Match? Of course, it's FOOTBALL. Football is the kind of sport that most thai males can play not concerning bad or good. Some are magnificent in football whlie the others are not. That's not important. The importance is to play together and have fun. Bluild up new relationship with new people.
Where was Football born? A sport similar to football was played 3000 years ago in Japan. Chinese text from 50 BC mentions football-type games between teams from Japan and China. A text dating from 611 AD confirms that football was played in Kyoto, the ancient capital of Japan.
Ancient Greeks and Romans also played a game that resembled football - although the Greeks permitted carrying of the ball. Olympic games in ancient Rome featured a 50-minute football game with twenty-seven men on a side.
How the sport spread from the East to Europe is not clear but England became the home of modern football. At first the game had a bad reputation among English royalty - possibly because of the noise the fans made - by whose insistence the government passed laws against it. King Edward (1307-1327) proclaimed, "For as much as there is a great noise in the city caused by hustling over large balls, from which many evils may arise, which God forbid, we forbid on behalf of the King, on pain of imprisonment, such game to be used in the city." In 1365 King Edward III banned football because of its excessive violence and for military reasons playing took time away from archery practice the game had become too popular to be curtailed. King Henry IV and Henry VIII passed laws against the sport, and Queen Elizabeth I "had football players jailed for a week, with follow-up church penance"
Laws failed to slow the popularity of football and by 1681 it received official sanction in England. The games were still ruff and noisy, with players hardly ever leaving the field without broken bones or even being spiked. There was no standard set for the size of teams or the field; the earliest organised games, usually bitter confrontations between teams from two or three parishes, had goals as far as 5 km (3 miles) apart. It was only by 1801 that it was (somewhat) agreed that teams should have an equal number of players and that the playing area should be about 91 metres (100 yards). Records show that Eton college drew up the first written rules of football in 1815. (The modern standardised rules are known as the Cambridge rules.)
Until the mid-1800s football rules still varied across regions. Team sizes ranged from 15 to 21. The 11-player team was standardised in 1870. The crossbar between two goalposts became mandatory in 1875. The goalkeeper was formally distinguished in the 1880s.
F I F AThe first football club was formed in Sheffield, England in 1857. The Football Association was founded on 26 October 1863 by 11 clubs meeting in London. (The word association was abbreviated to assoc., which became "soccer.")
Where does the word "soccer" come from? In the 1880s students of Oxford university abbreviated words by adding "er" to the end; for instance, breakfast became "brekkers" and "rugby rules" was referred to as "rugger." When one student, Charles Wreford Brown, was asked if he'd like to play rugger, he was the first to abbreviate "association rules" (Football Association rules) by answering, "No, soccer." Brown later bacame an England international and Football Association vice-president.
Where was Football born? A sport similar to football was played 3000 years ago in Japan. Chinese text from 50 BC mentions football-type games between teams from Japan and China. A text dating from 611 AD confirms that football was played in Kyoto, the ancient capital of Japan.
Ancient Greeks and Romans also played a game that resembled football - although the Greeks permitted carrying of the ball. Olympic games in ancient Rome featured a 50-minute football game with twenty-seven men on a side.
How the sport spread from the East to Europe is not clear but England became the home of modern football. At first the game had a bad reputation among English royalty - possibly because of the noise the fans made - by whose insistence the government passed laws against it. King Edward (1307-1327) proclaimed, "For as much as there is a great noise in the city caused by hustling over large balls, from which many evils may arise, which God forbid, we forbid on behalf of the King, on pain of imprisonment, such game to be used in the city." In 1365 King Edward III banned football because of its excessive violence and for military reasons playing took time away from archery practice the game had become too popular to be curtailed. King Henry IV and Henry VIII passed laws against the sport, and Queen Elizabeth I "had football players jailed for a week, with follow-up church penance"
Laws failed to slow the popularity of football and by 1681 it received official sanction in England. The games were still ruff and noisy, with players hardly ever leaving the field without broken bones or even being spiked. There was no standard set for the size of teams or the field; the earliest organised games, usually bitter confrontations between teams from two or three parishes, had goals as far as 5 km (3 miles) apart. It was only by 1801 that it was (somewhat) agreed that teams should have an equal number of players and that the playing area should be about 91 metres (100 yards). Records show that Eton college drew up the first written rules of football in 1815. (The modern standardised rules are known as the Cambridge rules.)
Until the mid-1800s football rules still varied across regions. Team sizes ranged from 15 to 21. The 11-player team was standardised in 1870. The crossbar between two goalposts became mandatory in 1875. The goalkeeper was formally distinguished in the 1880s.
F I F AThe first football club was formed in Sheffield, England in 1857. The Football Association was founded on 26 October 1863 by 11 clubs meeting in London. (The word association was abbreviated to assoc., which became "soccer.")
Where does the word "soccer" come from? In the 1880s students of Oxford university abbreviated words by adding "er" to the end; for instance, breakfast became "brekkers" and "rugby rules" was referred to as "rugger." When one student, Charles Wreford Brown, was asked if he'd like to play rugger, he was the first to abbreviate "association rules" (Football Association rules) by answering, "No, soccer." Brown later bacame an England international and Football Association vice-president.
I'm B-O-R-E-D
Hmmmmm............. I'm getting sick of blogging. It's really a pain in the neck. Should I have started it since Jasper gave me, I should have done with it by now. Oh Angle, come and stay with my soul, comfort me now cuz I'm going down, save me, help me through this damned work.
C'mon c'mon c'mon i said save me, get me the hell out of hear, save me, too young to die and my dear you can't, if you can hear me just walk away an take me!!!!!!!!
I want to play games. i want to listen to music. i wan to read my books. Oh Mr. Jasper, i can't. I have to do this blogging thing until the sun rise. Let her light shine on my shoulders and i could go to sleep. even then, this work will not be finish yet. all I'm doing is typing. All I'm thinking is things to type. How painful this is can you imagine. But who shoul i blame if i's not myself. I let the time past doing nothing. Just sitting around. Wasting my time for pleasure.
Please be one soon my dear homwork.
C'mon c'mon c'mon i said save me, get me the hell out of hear, save me, too young to die and my dear you can't, if you can hear me just walk away an take me!!!!!!!!
I want to play games. i want to listen to music. i wan to read my books. Oh Mr. Jasper, i can't. I have to do this blogging thing until the sun rise. Let her light shine on my shoulders and i could go to sleep. even then, this work will not be finish yet. all I'm doing is typing. All I'm thinking is things to type. How painful this is can you imagine. But who shoul i blame if i's not myself. I let the time past doing nothing. Just sitting around. Wasting my time for pleasure.
Please be one soon my dear homwork.
Hot Hot Heat
I Hated this band so much at first. I thought they were a group of shit. Well, i like them now. I listen for the first time was in 2004 and i listened again in late 2006 the I begun to like this kind of music.They Combined ‘60s mod rock, ‘70s prog and ‘80s new wave/punk, these four have created their own style of danceable pop oddities. And, more to the point, Hot Hot Heat are genuinely fun, with a capital F-U-N. They really are. Their songs are fast, however, melodic. It contains some wierd stuffs.I don't have much to say about this band. you have to listen by yourself.These are the songs that i like
Good night, Good night.
Elavator
Jingle, Jangle
These are the members
Steve Bays - vocals
keyboardsDante DeCaro - guitar
Paul Hawley - drums
Dustin Hawthorne - bass
Good night, Good night.
Elavator
Jingle, Jangle
These are the members
Steve Bays - vocals
keyboardsDante DeCaro - guitar
Paul Hawley - drums
Dustin Hawthorne - bass
Bands and Albums
Members of this Band are
Kris Coombs-Roberts
Gareth Davies
Matt Davies
Ryan Richards
Darran Smith
There are also others who left the ban earlier
Matthew Evans
Andi Morris
Johnny Phillips
Kerry Robert
They have two albums that I have heard of
Casually Dressed and Deep in Conversation
On October 20, 2003, after recording for the duration of the summer, Funeral for a Friend's full-length debut album was released. Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation was released to critical acclaim in the UK. The album did not see a concurrent release in the US (eventually released there on July 13, 2004); instead, a seven-track "mini-album," entitled Seven Ways t Scream Your Name, was released, and featured songs from the band's Between Order & Model and Four Ways to Scream Your Name EPs.
Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation saw three top-twenty singles including "Juneau" (#19), "She Drove Me to Daytime Television" (#20) and "Escape Artists Never Die" (#19).
Funeral for a Friend toured feverishly to promote Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation, including a series of European dates in which they opened for their idols, Iron Maiden. This was met with a mixed reception, however, as their style and fanbase bore little resemblance to the Heavy Metal background of Iron Maiden. In 2004, the band headlined the second stage of the Reading and Leeds Festivals.
Hours (2005-)
On June 14, 2005, the band released their second album and first for Atlantic Records. Entitled Hours, the album was produced by Terry Date and was recorded in two studios owned by the grunge band Pearl Jam. The album featured unusual methods of recording, for example Matt Davies' vocals were recorded whilst in a moving car and on a crowded Seattle, WA street.
Kris Coombs-Roberts
Gareth Davies
Matt Davies
Ryan Richards
Darran Smith
There are also others who left the ban earlier
Matthew Evans
Andi Morris
Johnny Phillips
Kerry Robert
They have two albums that I have heard of
Casually Dressed and Deep in Conversation
On October 20, 2003, after recording for the duration of the summer, Funeral for a Friend's full-length debut album was released. Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation was released to critical acclaim in the UK. The album did not see a concurrent release in the US (eventually released there on July 13, 2004); instead, a seven-track "mini-album," entitled Seven Ways t Scream Your Name, was released, and featured songs from the band's Between Order & Model and Four Ways to Scream Your Name EPs.
Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation saw three top-twenty singles including "Juneau" (#19), "She Drove Me to Daytime Television" (#20) and "Escape Artists Never Die" (#19).
Funeral for a Friend toured feverishly to promote Casually Dressed & Deep in Conversation, including a series of European dates in which they opened for their idols, Iron Maiden. This was met with a mixed reception, however, as their style and fanbase bore little resemblance to the Heavy Metal background of Iron Maiden. In 2004, the band headlined the second stage of the Reading and Leeds Festivals.
Hours (2005-)
On June 14, 2005, the band released their second album and first for Atlantic Records. Entitled Hours, the album was produced by Terry Date and was recorded in two studios owned by the grunge band Pearl Jam. The album featured unusual methods of recording, for example Matt Davies' vocals were recorded whilst in a moving car and on a crowded Seattle, WA street.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)