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Jim.Greav.St.Thewildbunch22.01.mkv
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His finest hour came in the fixture that matters most to Milanisti. In October 1961, the San Siro was the setting for the first Milanese derby between two coaches who would become legends for their respective clubs. Rocco was in the red-and-black corner, and Helenio Herrera, the architect of the Grande Inter side, in the black-and-blue. The teams were in such contrasting form that fans of the Nerazzurri joked that the only thing in doubt was how many goals they would win by. Greaves played his part in delivering the perfect riposte. The Englishman scored one of the goals in a famous 3-1 victory that is credited with turning the Rossoneri’s season around and setting them on course for the league title. He would play no part, however, in the Scudetto celebrations. The Italian press kept producing stories about his wild lifestyle – which Greaves maintains were fabricated – while the relationship with the authoritarian Rocco never improved. He jumped at the chance to return to England to Spurs in December 1961 in a deal agreed at £99,000 to avoid making him the nation’s first £100,000 player. “When we docked in Dover, I was so grateful to be home,” he said in a later autobiography. “I felt like falling to my knees and kissing the jetty.” In Italy, he would be known as a “meteor” – a player who shone brightly but all too briefly. It would turn out to be typical of many English players who would try their luck in Serie A in years to come. (Giancarlo Rinaldi)
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