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[Albion] Would this team beat our current best eleven?







The football back then was much more physical, the pitches were poor to today's standards whereas today's football is a lot faster and of course the Premier league is full of world class players. The skill today would hammer the old boys but they'd win the physical side of it hands down.
 


dazzer6666

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Mar 27, 2013
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Burgess Hill
Lawro was Virgil. At Virgil's peak. Only difference is today's training, nutrition etc

….but that ‘only’ difference is huge.

The football back then was much more physical, the pitches were poor to today's standards whereas today's football is a lot faster and of course the Premier league is full of world class players. The skill today would hammer the old boys but they'd win the physical side of it hands down.

Raises a fair point about who would be reffing this ‘then v now’ game. Use one of the current refs and the ‘then’ team will be down to 7 after 20 minutes :lol:
 




Jimmy Grimble

Well-known member
Nov 10, 2007
10,109
Starting a revolution from my bed
The idea that the old team would win a physical battle doesn’t add up either.

Unless by physical battle people mean tackling like thugs and not getting sent off?

Modern players are 90-95% muscle, ridiculous levels of core strength and insanely balanced. They wouldn’t lose a shoulder to shoulder to an 80s style player just because the 80s player is/was a tough bloke.

The best example that would resonate is Solly March. He looks like a smaller framed timid guy, but would win the vast majority of duels against any 80s player because he has mastered how to use the weight of his body with a significant help from sports physiologists over many years.

Honestly it’s not far off comparing two different sports.
 




Shropshire Seagull

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Nov 5, 2004
8,822
Telford
There really is.

You might as well pretend we don't know who'd win between Allan Wells and the current 100m runners.
On track runners, I vaguely recall a documentary years ago about Seb Coe and he revealed both his running spikes he used to win Olympic gold weighed less than one of Roger Banisters running shoes used in that first four minute mile.

Technology gives all sports a big advantage these days.

5-1 to the newbies so long as 5 subs are allowed.
 


Herr Tubthumper

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Jul 11, 2003
63,058
The Fatherland
This.

If the players of old were trained today, then you've got a match on, but if you just played today's side against an old side, it would be a drubbing.
If the players of old were trained today, there’s every likelihood they’d be needing @Lenny Rider ’s professional services as opposed to needing their boots to play a football match.
 


The Optimist

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Apr 6, 2008
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Lewisham
The best league finish the team from the early 80s achieved was 13th. We’d probably be disappointed with 13th this season and there is no way that the standard of football in the Premier League now is not miles above the early 80s.
 






Blues Guitarist

Well-known member
Oct 19, 2020
618
St Johann in Tirol
These were people who's training mostly consisted of crosscountry running and who spent the evening after a match drinking and even smoking. Totally unrealistic to think they'd compete.
I remember watching a Scottish 1st division game when I was a lad. The substitute (note, not one of the substitutes but THE substitute) chain-smoked his way through the game. Changed times.
 






Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,624
Goldstone
On track runners, I vaguely recall a documentary years ago about Seb Coe and he revealed both his running spikes he used to win Olympic gold weighed less than one of Roger Banisters running shoes used in that first four minute mile.

I don't think my athletics comparison was great because athletes of 1980 trained hard, not that dissimilar to athletes of today. They wouldn't have been drinking and smoking after a run like a lot of the footballers.
 


Triggaaar

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Oct 24, 2005
53,624
Goldstone
I remember watching a Scottish 1st division game when I was a lad. The substitute (note, not one of the substitutes but THE substitute) chain-smoked his way through the game. Changed times.

Well it's changed down here but I think it's still the same in Scotland.
 


Triggaaar

Well-known member
Oct 24, 2005
53,624
Goldstone
I suspect the defence would be the deciding factor.... our current best defence would probably crumble faced with that lot...either us or Forest.

You think Dunk would crumble? Don't be daft.
 




Cheshire Cat

The most curious thing..
How many of these would still be on the pitch by the end, with modern referees and VAR?

 


Han Solo

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May 25, 2024
2,970
You have to be 200 years old and allergic to development to believe any 1980s side would have had a chance against any modern side.

Now, I know the concept of "education" is considered tinpot by sports people (athletes and supporters) because its an audience that traditionally has very limited education.

But education works, so clubs and football associations has spent infinite money improving the education of coaches and players. Most likely whoever is in charge of Albions youngest youth groups today has had more education than the manager of any Division 1 side in the 1980s.

Old time romantics think that the days of some scouting lad travelling through your country to see if players were wearing gloves when it was cold or not was "the way to do it". That somehow the old environment, in which there was little to no sports science and little to no data available, would create equally good players as today when clubs are measuring the velocity of a fart (warning; exaggeration) to see if they should change food habits to become better footballers.

Its like asking if Galileo Galilei would be able to beat Stephen Hawking in a scientific quiz.
 


Han Solo

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May 25, 2024
2,970
How many of these would still be on the pitch by the end, with modern referees and VAR?


Not many.

And if they played against a team coached with modern methods, most of them would probably end up injured. A lot of the duels we see today and think "meh, wasn't that bad" would have been a broken leg if it wasn't for having leg muscles like a buffalo.
 


Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
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Oct 8, 2003
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Faversham
No. Three or four not up to our current standard. McNab, Horton and Williams stand out, and probably not Wardy either.

Runs for cover.
Correct.

Also by 60 minutes the 80s team would have run out of puff.

And if they tried playing according to the mores of the time they'd be down to 8 men after 15 minutes.

In other news, questions have been asked whether if my old mum had had a cock and balls, would she of been my dad?
 






Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
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Oct 8, 2003
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Faversham


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