Topic: The Flowers of Manchester...

One cold and bitter Thursday in Munich, Germany,
Seven great football stalwarts conceded victory,
Seven men will never play again who met destruction there,
The flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester

Matt Busby's boys were flying, returning from Belgrade,
This great United family, all masters of their trade,
The pilot of the aircraft and the skipper Captain Thain,
Three times they tried to take her up and twice turned back again.

The third time down the runaway disaster followed close,
There was ice upon the wings and the aircraft never rose,
It ran upon the marshy ground, it broke, it overturned.
And seven of the team were killed when the battered aircraft burned.

Roger Byrne and Tommy Taylor who were capped for England's side.
And Ireland's Billy Whelan and England's Geoff Bent died,
Mark Jones and Eddie Colman, and David Pegg also,
Before the blazing wreckage went ploughing through the snow.

The trainer, coach and secretary, and a member of the crew,
Also eight sporting journalists who with United flew,
and one of them was Big Swifty, we never will forget,
the greatest English 'keeper who ever graced a net.

They said that Duncan Edwards had an injury to his brain,
They said that Jackie Blanchflower would never play again,
Matt Busby he was lying there, the father of the team
Six months or more did pass before he saw another game

Oh, England's finest football team its record truly great,
its proud successes mocked by a cruel turn of fate.
Seven men will never play again, who met destruction there,
the flowers of English football, the flowers of Manchester

Founder member of the BANTERMEN 5

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

I was 10 years old and my dad had taken me to see them shortly before the tragedy. Duncan Edwards was one of the most complete players I ever saw.

More handsome than he looks

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

oh give it a rest.....jesus it was a football team get to the fields of ypres ,or normandy to see real loss.

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

it was some body trying to make money nothing but more money. not a principal or morality,not a political movement not a fight for the good of the world a bloody stupid football match.

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

lazybones wrote:

it was some body trying to make money nothing but more money. not a principal or morality,not a political movement not a fight for the good of the world a bloody stupid football match.

Valid point . It also made utd family faves

Shes got me Dancing

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

a football match? now, maybe my eyes have tricked me when I have seen stories about it and old newsreel, but I could have sworn it was a plane crash. I apologise for the bit where I have obviously stated it as more important in world history than both World Wars (and war is NEVER to make more money is it?).  It is in this room as this is where we post about sport and stuff like that.

I actually expected a response along them lines from somebody, considering the number or pillocks I see and hear on a weekly basis singing about it.

Rebel, youve got a brain, its not a valid point. at all. and as for it making United "the 2nd favourite team", thats hardly the poor sods who lost their lives fault is it. Id rather it have never happened and us be the most loathed team in the country - oh wait a minute....

Founder member of the BANTERMEN 5

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

well said Jataal!

IX - a football buffoon but the original 22.22.22

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

this is sentimental clap trap,if you want a proper poem read in flanders fields,unfortunately this rubbish poem is trying to  evoke those same emotions .its in real bad taste.7 dead footballers and you write a poem.write one for all those who ave died recently in iraq (256)or those who died  in ireland.

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

I'm struggling to have an opinion on this one.
I agree our dead soldiers deserve more respect than plane crash victims BUT to many people football is a religion and the players are the prophets. When a prophet dies he is remembered forever.

I feel more sorry for the family of the crash victims than I do for the loss to the sport of football. And I'm equally sad about the death of the non footballers onboard as I am the footballers.

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Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

I have read "in Flanders Field".  this poem is not an attempt to evoke memories of soldiers dying in combat, it is meant to mourn and remember the loss of 23 people (yes, including 7 of the finest young footballers to grace this country) going to a football match. which is the bigger tragedy, in the truest sense of the word? 23 people dying whilst just going to a football match, or soldiers dying in combat, which, strangely enough, they are paid to do, trained to do, and chose as a career. you go into a career in the armed forces knowing (or at least you should know) theres a chance at some point, you will get shot at. they played football to bring enjoyment to the masses.

I didnt write that poem by the way, that was written in 1958.

Founder member of the BANTERMEN 5

Re: The Flowers of Manchester...

I didnt mean any disrespect to the 23 people who were killed in the crash but on a global scale its pretty small scale . What i meant about family favourites was before the crash Utd were just like any other team but afterwards there was a big sympathy thing and it made Utd sort of special to loads of people who never watched or cared about football . I dont remember the crash i was only six but Ihave read all about it many times and the docufilm about it was good ,

Shes got me Dancing