Not Andy Naylor
Well-known member
Not for me. For me, the only one in the current squad that comes close to legend status is Bruno. A couple of others have potential, and Murray is one of them, but he's not there yet.
Knockaert?
Not for me. For me, the only one in the current squad that comes close to legend status is Bruno. A couple of others have potential, and Murray is one of them, but he's not there yet.
Knockaert?
Until Murray scores 36 goals in a season, you should not speak of him in the same terms as Peter Ward.
Inigo Calderon??
Knockaert?
Murray is a fine player for us, but not for me as 'legendary' as the other two - and that's a completely subjective feeling - I can't produce any facts or arguments for it. Maybe in years to come, when I'm an (even older) man I may look back favourably on the Murray years and reminisce about them in the same way as with BZ and Wardy, but I'm just not quite there yet.
Indeed. And I don't blame him for it, it was more the club's fault than his, but whose fault it is doesn't matter, the fact is he went to Palace and scored against us.
Murray isn't even the biggest legend in the current squad. Zamora was a legend before he asked the club to come back and try and get us promoted.
What, the rivalry? It doesn't show signs of stopping any time soon.How long will this Palace nonsense go on for?
These things are entirely subjective.
I like Murray, he's a nice bloke.
I like how he loves Brighton and stayed living here even when he left the club.
I like that he didn't celebrate when he scored against us.
I like how he winds up opposition players.
I like his no nonsense style as a player.
I like that he's scored important goals for us.
I like the fact that he's played more games and scored more goals for us than any other club
I like how he's painfully shy off the pitch but is in peoples faces on it.
I like the story about when players have to sing in front of each other at dinner when they join, he sang "let it go" from Frozen as it was the only song he knew all of the words to.
Do those things make him a legend?
Dunno
Don't forget our football Genius.Jonny Crumplin
Just listened to this week's Albion Unlimited podcast and found Tommy Elphick's interview really interesting. He heaps a lot of praise onto Gus Poyet for transforming the Albion into a professional club. What I found even more enlightening was his comparison of Glenn Murray with Bobby Zamora and Peter Ward. I never regard Muzza in the same category as those two striking legends, but Elphick's words have really made me think and I'm starting to agree with him. Muzza fired us from League One to the Championship and then came back to fire us into the Premier League. In some ways, he's done more than Zamora as he's taken us into the country's top division.
Is Muzza as legendary as Zamo and Ward? Does his Palace spell rule him out? Or is it too early to say?
.......they are just another team......
Zamora and Ward never played for the scum. End of thread.