Daily Mail

Farewell to The Saint

- IAN St JOHN 1938-2021

sir Kenny Dalglish last night led the tributes to fellow liverpool and scotland legend ian st John, who has died at the age of 82.

st John made 425 appearance­s for liverpool and scored 118 goals as a key member of Bill shankly’s famous side of the 1960s. He died on Monday evening after a long illness.

‘i think it’s right to use the word “icon”,’ said liverpool great Dalglish.

‘it’s because of what he did in those early days, shanks especially, the saint and Big Yeatsey (ron Yeats), his big mucker, and it’s because of them this football club is where it is at this particular moment in time.

‘We should be eternally grateful for what he did for the club.’

IAN St JOHN arrived at Anfield from Scotland in May 1961 in a Rolls-Royce. Once he set foot on the field 72 hours later he immediatel­y began to play like one.

His debut was against Everton at Goodison Park in front of 70,000 in the final of the Liverpool Senior Cup. Everton won 4-3 but Liverpool’s new forward scored all his team’s goals on the back of a single training session.

As for the Rolls, St John had been the passenger. Behind the wheel was Bill Shankly, the Liverpool manager, who wanted to sign the young Scot from Motherwell so badly he borrowed the car from a club director to fetch him. The fee was £37,500 — more than twice a club ub record — and the Liverpool ol board were unsure they y could afford a player who was still only 22.

‘Gentlemen,’ said aid Shankly. ‘ We cannot no afford not to have him.’ And d with that familiar r directness, one e of the most t important signings -- in Liverpool’s s history was made. e.

Shankly’s team m were in the old Division iviTwo and St John was part of the rebuild ebuild that also included ed the signing of defender nder Ron Yeats that summer. er.

St John, who died ied at the age of 82 on Monday night, is remembered by a generation of television viewers for his place behind a desk on the Saint and Greavsie show. A Saturday lunchtime staple for seven years, it commanded five million viewers at its peak. It was, at the time, groundbrea­king sports broadcasti­ng.

But on Merseyside, St John is remembered today for what he really was, a granite tough forward of standing. He scored 118 Liverpool goals in 425 appearance­s. He helped the club back into the top division in his first season a and to two F First Division t titles in 1964 a and 1966. In 19 1965, meanwhile, wh he scored the winner again against Leeds to bring L Liverpool their first FA C Cup. St John ha had been born and raised in the th Motherwell tenements. There were eight of them in the house. The toilet was at the bottom of the yard. He soon knew what real life was about. His father Alex, a steel worker, died from pleurisy at the age of 36. ‘The borders in my life threatened to be no wider than the shadow of a factory,’ wrote St John in his autobiogra­phy. Football changed things. More than 100 league games and 80 goals for Motherwell. A decade at Anfield. Twenty-one games for Scotland. But his innate toughness never left him.

He tussled with Denis Law in front of the Kop, he could be fractious with team-mates. ‘I was not frightened of anybody and I think that helped me,’ he once said.

For sure, St John understood football and came to understand Liverpool. In an interview in these pages just two and half years ago, he spoke of the importance of the Anfield crowd. ‘Always raucous,’ he said. ‘They made you play harder, run harder. Don’t let them down.’

He was part of Shankly’s first great Liverpool team, a side subsequent­ly described by Sir Bobby Charlton as ‘ the most relentless in English football’.

St John was eventually moved on bluntly. It was often the way at Liverpool and an FA Cup defeat at Division Two Watford in 1970 prompted Shankly to break up his team. St John was never formally told, merely walking into the dressing room for a subsequent game against Newcastle

to find someone else’s boots sitting beneath the No 9 shirt. But his relationsh­ip with his manager never soured. He was a pall- bearer at Shankly’s funeral in 1981.

Briefly, St John was a manager. He was close to getting the Leeds job when Brian Clough succeeded Don Revie in 1974. Ultimately, spells at Motherwell and Portsmouth were as high as he climbed and it was television that became an unexpected new home.

His partnershi­p with Greaves began in 1985. Both had appeared as pundits on ITV’s World of Sport before being offered their own show. St John — always in jacket and tie — was happy to play stooge to Greaves’ spontaneou­s and rather unpredicta­ble foolishnes­s. It was an unlikely and irreverent recipe and looked at now, some of the outtakes were very much of their time. But its success was extraordin­ary.

‘We were just two old players playing off the cuff,’ St John told the Times last year. ‘Jimmy played it more off the cuff than I did. I had to listen to the count in my ear...’

The duo were immortalis­ed by Spitting Image puppets. When Greaves was unwell at Christmas 1990, his puppet took his place — worked from beneath the desk by commentato­r Peter Brackley. In 1992, with the duo in New York for a World Cup function, they held the draw for the Rumbelows Cup in a nearby hotel. Donald Trump pulled out the numbers.

Greaves’ descent into ill health has been well- chronicled. His friend, meanwhile, revealed his own cancer diagnosis in 2014.

St John did not mellow greatly, mind. His opinions remained as strong and deep as his love for the club where he made his name.

A fact not largely known is that it was St John who, in conversati­on with Shankly, first floated the idea of Liverpool playing in all red. Previously the shorts and socks had been white. The change was made for a European game against Anderlecht in 1964 and St John scored the opening goal. It was typical.

‘Success in football isn’t everything,’ St John once said. ‘But it’s a long way ahead of what comes next.’

 ??  ?? Liverpool legend: St John celebrates winning the FA Cup at Wembley in 1965 PA
Liverpool legend: St John celebrates winning the FA Cup at Wembley in 1965 PA
 ??  ?? On the ball: showing his prowess in the air
REX
GETTY IMAGES
On the ball: showing his prowess in the air REX GETTY IMAGES
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 ??  ?? Wembley wonder: St John scores a header in extra time against Leeds in 1965 to win Liverpool’s first FA Cup and (inset) in 2018
Wembley wonder: St John scores a header in extra time against Leeds in 1965 to win Liverpool’s first FA Cup and (inset) in 2018
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Cup hero: leading the celebratio­ns in 1965
GETTY IMAGES Cup hero: leading the celebratio­ns in 1965
 ??  ?? Snow storm: in testing conditions at Anfield
OFFSIDE
Snow storm: in testing conditions at Anfield OFFSIDE
 ??  ?? The joker: St John with fellow Scot Denis Law
The joker: St John with fellow Scot Denis Law
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 ?? LWT ?? Fun and games: in tartan with ‘Pearly King’ Greaves
LWT Fun and games: in tartan with ‘Pearly King’ Greaves
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 ?? ITV/GETTY IMAGES ?? TV star: St John and Jimmy Greaves in a Frank Bruno headlock on SaintandGr­eavsie and (below) on the train home with the FA Cup in 1965
ITV/GETTY IMAGES TV star: St John and Jimmy Greaves in a Frank Bruno headlock on SaintandGr­eavsie and (below) on the train home with the FA Cup in 1965
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GETTY IMAGES

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