Brian Glanville football died at the age of 93

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Brian Glanville, the influential football that covered the game for seven decades, died at the age of 93.

Glanville was the Sunday Times football correspondent for 30 years and contributed to the world football magazine for five decades, and it was some of the maximum influential books in football.

An Arsenal For Life fan, Glanville’s first electronic book, with the end of Arsenal Cliff Bastin, published in 1950, while his last published paintings included necologies of Manchester United’s attacker United Denis Law and the North air manufacturer Peter McParland this year. He continued to paintings in Arsenal publications, the last one is a Highbury story in 2006.

Glanville was more productive known for his electronic book The history of the World Cup, first published in 1993 and since then. He was also a novelist and wrote 31 electronic books. Glanville had intelligent relations with the captain of England Bobby Moore, the World Cup captain, during his time, for canopy for the national team, but did not retain when it was a consultation of criticizing the directors.

“I have all kinds of funny memories of Alf Ramsey, but he was a very man. He deserved to have passed two years before doing so. He had exploded it. He had left his ray,” Glanville said.

“I went very well with Walter Winterbottom, however, he was a rotten manager. Bobby Robson surfed grotesmente. I have an idea that he is a very insufficient manager and failed a lot in Europe. He did a shocking job. Very lucky.

On Friday night, the news of his death announced through his son Mark.

The Sports Newshouings arrangement said in a press release: “The SJA sends most of the interior sympathies to the circle of relatives and friends of Brian Glanville, the” Deans of the football writers “whose books, adding the essential history, the history of the World Cup, continues to provide so much information, wisdom and joy to the enthusiasts of all the parts.

Andrew Neil, among Glanville’s editors at the Sunday Times, published in X: “Brian Glanville indeed a great great brilliant active ingredient of my 11 years has published The Sunday Times. One of the greatest football writers of all time. “

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