Football for Breakfast
Anthony Parker's first ever football match was a Matt Busby testimonial. George Best was on the pitch. They moved the goalposts to the 18-yard line so he could play. He had bags and bags of skill. Anthony was five or six years old. He never forgot it. In episode eleven of Football for Breakfast, Jim Johnson sits down with Anthony in the greasy spoon cafe to talk about Manchester United, the weight of history and what it means to be a fan of a club built as much on tragedy as triumph. They talk about the Busby Babes, Duncan Edwards - probably the best player in the world at 18, with virtually no substitutes available - and the way the Munich air disaster created something mystical about United that even their rivals can't deny. They talk about 1992-93, when Anthony's dad turned up on the Sunday with scarves out the window, a cake and a bottle of champagne. Twenty-six years. Worth every second. Midway through the conversation, Man United call. He answers. He tells them he's recording a podcast. He hangs up. In the second half Anthony talks about a career that started at 17 in an accounts department that happened to be in the gates and barriers industry and ended up, thirty-odd years later, with him as managing director of Country Gates and Barriers. He didn't plan it. He found his rhythm. He found something he was good at and let it take him somewhere. His object is the ticket stub from the Fenerbahce game in 2004. Wayne Rooney's Manchester United debut. A hat trick. Anthony was there. The result he'll never get over? Agüero. QPR. The last minute. Football for Breakfast is presented by OSS Security. Cafes. Clubs. Communities. Culture.
11 episodes
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