Irish Independent

Anfield legend St John is one of the founding fathers of modern Liverpool beat

- Tony Evans

IF there was a single moment when the balance of power on Merseyside shifted away from Everton to Liverpool, it was Ian St John’s twisting, diving header in the 1965 FA Cup final. The goal gave Bill Shankly’s team a 2-1 win over Leeds United but it did much more than secure victory. It brought the FA Cup to Anfield for the first time and removed many of the insecuriti­es about Liverpool being the second club of the city.

Until then, the Evertonian quip was that the Liver Birds would uncast from stone and fly away if the Reds won at Wembley. They didn’t, but from that point Liverpool soared away to heights that Goodison could only imagine.

When St John arrived on Merseyside

from Motherwell in 1961, things were different. He joined a second division side that had spent seven dispiritin­g years outside the top flight.

The 22-year-old was the club’s record signing and formed the bedrock – along with fellow Scot Ron Yeats who joined later the same summer – of the team that would win the title three years later.

Yeats was a giant of a defender, who intimidate­d opponents. He had been a slaughterm­an’s apprentice and during his time at Dundee United a photograph of him covered in blood appeared in newspapers and helped fix his image as someone not to be trifled with.

St John was even more dangerous. The inside forward was charming, quick to smile and not physically imposing. Looks were misleading.

He had been a talented boxer and had a sharp temper. “He liked a scrap,” Shankly said. Soon Liverpool were punching above their weight.

The Saint was no innocent. Sinners could expect punishment, as defenders found out.

“I wasn’t frightened of anyone,” he said. He formed a productive partnershi­p with Roger Hunt and the team peaked in the mid-sixties.

St John (right) was Shankly’s favourite. Their bonds were close. Both men talked about it as being near to a father-son relationsh­ip.

It was when Liverpool were racking up two titles, an FA Cup and reaching European finals and semi-finals. When the team ran out of steam as the 1970s loomed, the manager-player dynamic reasserted itself.

St John only found out he was dropped for a game against Newcastle United when the team-sheet was released. He felt he should have been forewarned. Worse was to come.

At Christmas, the players were given turkeys by the club. First-team members picked from a selection featuring the plumpest birds. Reserves got scrawnier fare. St John headed for the prime poultry but was stopped and redirected towards the second-rate produce.

At Anfield, there were no niceties when players outlived their usefulness. It hurt.

“Conflictin­g emotions rise to the surface when I think of him,” St John wrote of Shankly in his autobiogra­phy. “I’m torn between love and hate, admiration and sometimes at least a little anger and disillusio­nment.”

The Kop still loved him, recognisin­g his importance to the club’s change in fortune. Other heroes would take their place in the team but St John’s position as one of the founding fathers of the modern Liverpool has never been in doubt.

His post-playing career took him into management but his early success back at Motherwell stalled after he moved to Portsmouth on Shankly’s advice.

“He sold me the worst job in football,” he often said without malice.

The future lay in punditry, which his brevity, charm and incisive knowledge equipped him for perfectly.

In 1984, at the dawn of the era of live televised league football, he was paired with Jimmy Greaves for ‘The Saint And Greavsie.’ Up until then, TV analysis surroundin­g the game had been rather po-faced and serious.

St John was the straight man to Greaves and the pair were not shy about having fun. It was an enormously successful double act. The Banter Age began with two old pros enjoying each other’s company on Saturday afternoons in the 1980s.

The show was cancelled after an eight-year run but St John continued his media work on Merseyside. He became a local institutio­n and was never shy of expressing his opinions.

Those lucky enough to be in his company could expect to be entertaine­d by a succession of anecdotes and to be occasional­ly surprised by his acute knowledge of modern methods. He was a marvellous raconteur but was never tied to the past.

Younger generation­s recognised the TV personalit­y rather than the player. That is a shame and too little footage exists of St John at his peak. He had a subtle touch, superb awareness and movement and a knack for creating chances. When the battle was on he was one of the players that team-mates turned to for leadership.

The list of Liverpool greats grows longer by the year but St John is close to the top. He helped lead the team out of the wilderness and scored one of the most important goals in the club’s history. Things changed for the better for Liverpool the day he arrived at Anfield. (© Independen­t News Service)

St John was Shankly’s favourite. Both talked about it as near to a father-son relationsh­ip

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