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One of the most perceptive descriptions of Manchester City's play during their glory years was made by "Manchester Evening News" reporter Peter Gardner who said that 'When Youngy plays, City play'. For all the talk in the intervening years of greats such as Summerbee, Bell and Lee, it was the local lad made good who made most impact when it mattered. A tall, leggy striker with a venomous left-foot shot, Young scored in every significant game for City in the late 60s. Scorer of two goals in the 1968 Championship win up at Newcastle, the scorer of the 1969 FA Cup Final winner and the first goal in the 1970 Cup Winners' Cup final, Neil Young played as significant a role in the success and style of the Mercer-Allison partnership as anyone. Yet by 1972 he was allowed to leave the club as City began their now familiar relationship with underachievement and mismanagement. In "Catch a Falling Star", Neil Young explains what he has been up to in the years since his sizzling shots stung the hands of the country's finest goalkeepers. Here he frankly discusses the problem that faced footballers of the pre-Premiership era: 'When I left Rochdale for the last time one Friday afternoon I had a week's wages...about GBP60. I drove home and sat in my lounge for about two hours, wondering what the hell I was going to do. I had a car on HP, a mortgage, a wife and three children to feed. I was the provider who could no longer provide. I had no savings whatsoever and my wife didn't work. I didn't see it coming. It was a calamity waiting to happen'. Thus starts Neil's decline into illness and depression. During the next painful decade Neil suffered numerous illnesses, lost his family, his mother and survived a suicide attempt. Thankfully, he has emerged with his spirit intact thanks largely to the love of his third wife, Carmen. "Catch a Falling Star" is the moving tale of a how a star on the wane managed to mount a personal comeback as impressive as any achieved on the pitch by City's star-studded squad of the late 60s.
Packed with witty anecdotes, exclusive insights and glorious moments from City's illustrious past, 'My Blue Heaven' features the type of footballer that true blues have always identified with -- the terrace heroes who light up a dull Saturday afternoon with their style, passion and commitment to the cause. The concept of My Blue Heaven is simple -- interview the star names and ask them about their favourite games. So we hear from the striker who is still blamed for costing City a league title and the forward who helped City thrash United 5-0 at Old Trafford. Then there's the goalkeeper who put in two FA Cup Final Man of the Match performances but still ended up on the losing side and the veteran defender whose first goal for the Blues remains his most treasured memory. Players featured and interviewed in 'My Blue Heaven' are: Alan Oakes, Alex Williams, Clive Allen, Clive Wilson, David White, Ian Bishop, Joe Corrigan, Ken Barnes, Mark Lillis, Paddy Fagan, Paul Lake, Paul Power, Paul Walsh, Peter Barnes, Rodney Marsh, Roy Little, Tommy Booth and Uwe Rosler.
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