Stand-out names to me: Charlie Webb (4 September 1886 – 13 June 1973), the Irishman who scored the goal against Aston Villa that kind of arguably made us champions of all England in 1910. (The winners of the Southern League used to play the winners of the Football League in the Charity Shield...
It would have been good to see what he would have achieved. Shame he never got the chance.
Interestingly he once said that his greatest regret was not taking the Brighton job more seriously.
In order to be able to see the whole pitch they'd have to position the camera lengthwise looking from goal to goal, whereupon they would be able to fit more of the field into the shot.
To be fair, he's shown he's quite decent at qualifying for tournaments.
And also good at getting through to the knockout stage and progressing thereafter, reaching finals and semifinals. I think he's probably got the best record of any England manager since Sir Alf Ramsey. Yet for all that...
In a way it is contrived to put radio commentary together with video footage. Perhaps that's what you picked up on, since we usually hear it together with the video, although it was originally broadcast on BBC radio, so it's going to be different from how TV commentary usually sounds.
Bryon Butler:
"Maradona, turns like a little eel, he comes away from trouble, little squat man comes inside Butcher, leaves him for dead, outside Fenwick, leaves him for dead, and puts the ball away, and that is why Maradona is the greatest player in the world! "
Probably had to be stopped somehow. What if it had injured someone? But there is such a thing as a rope. Might have been better than ramming it with a car.