Done mine.
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There's two of them who captained their country, won domestic, European and international honours too.Where's Luke??
Expecting pelters but don't think any lasses should be on there
A lot of the times with fan votes for things like this the vote is considered but isn’t necessarily the only thing used.I wish they hadn't done a fan vote in all honesty and let Rob Mason choose! We're no doubt going to see the classic recency bias and the fact people don't know a lot about our history understandably.
I really hope we can celebrate our grand history, and shout about stuff beyond '73! Some names for people to consider (imo).
- Raich Carter is regarded as the greatest player ever to play for our fantastic team. A massively gifted inside forward who captained the club to the 1936 league title and the 1937 FA Cup. A local lad too.
- Len Shackleton, "the Clown Prince of Football," was a maverick entertainer who dazzled crowds at Roker Park with outrageous skill and an maveric streak that made him a fans' favourite but kept him on the wrong side of the football establishment, earning him far fewer England caps than he deserved
- Ted Doig was a Scottish goalkeeper who joined Sunderland in 1890 and spent 14 years at the club, winning the league title and establishing himself as one of the finest keepers of the Victorian era.
- Johnny Campbell, another Scot, was a prolific striker during the "Team of All the Talents" period in the 1890s when Sunderland won three league championships in four years, a dominance that has never really been matched.
- Charlie Buchan arrived in 1911 and went on to score 224 goals for the club across 16 years, making him one of the greatest forwards in English football before the Second World War
- Bobby Gurney holds the club's all-time scoring record with 228 goals between 1925 and 1939, and was the spearhead of the 1936 championship and 1937 FA Cup winning sides.
- George Holley was a skillful inside forward who scored over 150 goals in the decade before the First World War, won 10 England caps, and is probably the most unjustly forgotten great player in Sunderland's history imo.
- James Allan, founded the club in 1879 as a schoolteacher, making him the reason any of this exists at all.
I imagine Quinny is in with a shout, and Gary Bennett and Super Kev - as they're within our lifetime. And Hurley is obviously amazing too - but he does have the gates?
There’s some Hurley gates in the car park tooNo, they are the Murray gates
Michael Gray? Someone definitely gone fishing with that one.
One of the most unlikeable blokes to ever play for us.
probably in the wall of a shopWhere the fuck is Danny Graham?
Maybe so but all of her success happened after Sunderland.Jill Scott deserves one imo, one of, if not, the biggest names in womans football.
Did they do that when playing for Sunderland?There's two of them who captained their country, won domestic, European and international honours too.
None of which at sunderland though, I see this as legends of the club rather than people from the area who have succeeded if that makes senseThere's two of them who captained their country, won domestic, European and international honours too.