The Mail on Sunday

LAW’S TEARS AT 80

United legend Denis Law on a harrowing year, his stellar career and the horror of dementia

- By Rob Draper CHIEF FOOTBALL WRITER

GRIEF has been an unwelcome guest at Denis Law’s household in this bleakest of years. The i c o n i c Manches t e r Uni t e d striker, winner of t he 1964 Ballon d’Or, has endured rather than enjoyed 2020, the year which should have been a grand celebratio­n of his life as he turned 80.

He and his wife Diana have been isolating, unable to hug grandchild­ren or have significan­t social contact with their five children. Law misses being out and about, bumping into old friends and catching up. The enforced seclusion has been a struggle in itself.

But lately fresh blows have arrived seemingly each month. Last Monday it was the death of his Manchester United team- mate, John Fitzpatric­k, a great friend and a player with whom he was forever bound in the history books. It was Law whom Fitzpatric­k replaced when in 1965 he became the first ever substitute used by United in a league game after the law was changed to allow replacemen­ts.

In October, Nobby Stiles, another friend, team-mate and fellow United legend, died. In November it was revealed Sir Bobby Charlton, who along with Law and George Best were the heart of the great Sixties United side, is suffering from dementia.

Amid a grim year, it has been hard to take. ‘It is,’ admits Law. ‘I was crying every day. John died a couple of days ago... I miss them. We know we have to go sometime but to lose them is very sad … I keep crying.’

Law, of course, has had his own health scares in the past, recovering from prostate cancer. But the growing toll of team-mates falling to dementia is impossible to ignore. Only last week the Daily Mail revealed that renowned consultant neuropatho­logist Willie Stewart has concluded that the dementia that killed Stiles was caused by heading the ball. The Mail On Sunday and the Daily Mail continue to campaign on the issue, as this paper has done since 2014.

Law recalls several occasions when he played on despite being concussed, which is now known to increase the chances of a secondary concussion and therefore the risk of degenerati­ve brain disease.

‘Yes, of course, I did, as we all did,’ says Law. ‘Everyone did. It was a different game. It was a harder ball then than it is today, a different game altogether. The ball was wet with mud on it and heavy. Because of the mud, the ball became heavier to head and kick. It must have some effect and we can see now it had a big effect for people who did head the ball, the guys at the back, the centre-halves and people who played up front.’

Law, mercifully, is fit and well as we spend a morning discussing hi s extraordin­ary l i f e. Sky Documentar­ies have captured it all in a beautiful film, The Lawman, which is showing on catch-up over Christmas. For f ootball f ans of any era wanting to be reminded of the sheer audacity, style and feistiness of one the game’s greats, it is a must-watch. F o r Uni t e d fans, it should be compulsory viewing. Law was i niti all y a reluctant subject. ‘ I d o n ’t really l ik e watching television regarding myself but t hi s t i m e they seemed like nice guys,’ he says. ‘And to be fair I quite enjoyed it.

‘They did it very well and I was very pleased with what they did. I was thinking where have they got that photograph from or that piece of TV from?’

Bald statistics tell part of Law’s story: 237 goals in 404 appearance­s for United, spells with Huddersfie­ld, Torino, Manchester City, including the infamous goal he scored against United on the day they were relegated, and 55 caps for Scotland, finishing his career at the 1974 World Cup.

It was Law’s goals that shot United to the 1964-65 title and which would prepare t he ground for t hat astonishin­g 1968 European Cup win, a game Law sadly missed through injury. In 1964, at the peak of his game, he won the Ballon d’Or. He was preceded on that list by Lev Yashin and succeeded in 1965 by Eusebio. Familiarit­y with this amiable grandfathe­r makes it easy to forget just how highly regarded he is around the world, given the great names he keeps company on awards lists.

His life is a throwback to another era, in which the Scottish working class were the bedrock of the game. He is one of the few to have played for both Bill Shankly and Sir Matt Busby, compatriot­s hewn from that same rock. Law himself was the son of Aberdeen fisherman, George, and grew up in a council house, playing football on the streets.

‘My dad was away in the week fishing and only home on Saturday,’ he says. ‘He got quite bladdered in the bar on the Saturday night, would be in bed all day Sunday and then off to the North Sea on Monday.

I very rarely saw my dad.’ It was mum, Robina, who brought up the seven children, four boys and three girls, of whom Denis was the youngest.

His parents’ generation were shaped by the austerity of the time. ‘It was a hard life,’ he says. ‘You didn’t have things to do, you had to get them yourselves. My dad was in the First World War at 16 and in the Second World War in the navy. Everyone was trying to get back to normality after these long wars. I know the war finished in 1945 but it lingered on.’

Andy Beattie, a fellow Aberdonian who was Huddersfie­ld manager, took Law south at the age of 15. ‘The wages when we got in the team was £20 a week and I had to send most of that back to my mum and dad. It’s slightly different today!’

An operation to correct a squint helped transform him, but he still seemed an unlikely prospect when he made his debut at 16, small, skinny and up against some of the toughest centre-halves in the game. ‘I was a frail thing, as I am now,’ he says.

He would quickly become a phenomenon. His first encounter with Sir Matt was in 1958. In the aft ermath of t he Munich ai r disaster, the United manager had a brief interlude as Scotland manager and gave Law his first Scotland cap. By that time Shankly, had taken over f r o m Bea t t i e a t Huddersfie­ld. It is fair to say Law was keeping good company. ‘Those were two guys who looked after me, that was Matt Busby and Bill Shankly,’ says Law.

When Shankly moved to Liverpool in 1959, the first player he tried to sign was Law. ‘As soon as he had gone to Liverpool, I expected that he would come and get me but they didn’t have that money to buy people,’ says Law.

And it is strange to think that Anfield might now have the statue of a man who is inextricab­ly linked with United. Before he would get to United though there was a season at Manchester City and then a bold move to Serie A and Torino. Hibernian striker Joe Baker joined him there while Welshman John Charles was at Turin rivals Juventus.

‘Italy was really nice but I didn’t realise that Turin was at the bottom of the Alps, it was freezing cold! I thought I was going to this lovely weather but it was a different ball game altogether. I liked everything in Italy. I was single, it was lovely, it was great but unfortunat­ely I had to play football there.

‘It was a really tough game and I didn’t enjoy playing because you were marked all the time. But unknown to myself I was learning a great deal. Because when I came back and played I didn’t think anyone was marking me at all!’

That 16- year- old had grown in years and was no longer to be taken for granted. Indeed, to watch Law is to be reminded that the grandfathe­r on the other end of the phone was a feisty player, who received a six-week ban for slugging it out with Arsenal’s Ian Ure.

‘That’s what I learned in Italy as well,’ says Law with a chuckle. ‘I learned to look after myself. If someone gives you a kick or whatever, you’re not going to stand for it. You have to give him a kick back. You realise that they don’t like it and they didn’t come back for it. I learned a lot in Italy.’

Busby would finally get his man in 1962 when Law joined the United team he was reconstruc­ting after the tragedy of Munich. ‘ People might not be fans of Manchester United, but they would be watching to see how the team was getting on, seeing it becoming an excellent team because they lost half their team in that competitio­n.’

They would win the FA Cup in 1963, while Law would score a club record 46 goals in 1963- 64, still ahead of Ruud van Nistelrooy, Cristiano Ronaldo and Wayne Rooney. In 1965 and 1967, United would win the title, qualifying for the European Cup, the trophy which had led directly to Munich.

Sir Matt had been a visionary, fighting the Football League to gain p e r mi s s i o n to play in the tournament, an early example of English football’s insularity. In t h o s e d a y s , o n l y c h a mpi o n s qualified for Europe’s premier tournament, so the fight back was a long, hard road.

‘ Sir Matt could see t hat t he European Cup was going to become larger and larger. To get back to that stage was always the goal. And we played for Sir Matt. We battled for him to get that trophy. He had lost all these guys and there he was picking up the European Cup.’

Law felt they should have retained their trophy in 1969 when they were knocked out of the semi-finals by AC Milan.

His United career would continue until 1973, when he would return to City for a season. The 1974 World Cup were his last games before retirement.

Thereafter, he initially worked as a carpet salesman, before settling i nt o l i f e as a pundit and an ambassador at United.

In more ordinary times, he is a regular at Old Trafford and will be back as soon as he can, watching Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s team. ‘It

I was crying every day. John died a couple of days ago. I miss them

will come for them,’ he says of the current side. ‘It takes time.’

It seems though there are certain styles with which he is not so enamoured. He says: ‘Goalkeeper­s are passing the ball, which didn’t happen in my day. Some teams pass 10 yards, he knocks it another 10 yards, then knocks it back to where you started. I don’t know why they don’t want to go forward.’

He is envious of one facet of modern football, however. ‘I would love to play on the pitches... the only time you would play on a pitch that was all grass was the early part of the season. After that, from November, the only place you would play on grass was if you got the FA Cup final at Wembley or played for your country at Hampden Park. Otherwise, you wouldn’t be playing on grass for four or five months.’

Most of all though, he just craves t he old routines. ‘ I’ m l ooking forward to getting out and meeting people, watching the game, being back at Old Trafford, just having a cup of tea or coffee, meeting the guys and girls, mums and dads. It will be nice to get back to normal.’ On that, he speaks for us all.

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 ??  ?? LETTER OF THE LAW: Denis Law scores again in the red of United
LETTER OF THE LAW: Denis Law scores again in the red of United
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 ??  ?? PUT YOUR SHIRT ON ME: Sir Matt Busby after signing Law from Torino and (main) reflecting on an emotional year
PUT YOUR SHIRT ON ME: Sir Matt Busby after signing Law from Torino and (main) reflecting on an emotional year

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