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Wear your heart on your sleeve and remind everyone that Charlie’s love is always with them!
Meeting A Legend: Charlie Hurley (Part Two) – ‘Why I Love Sunderland’
An interview with the King – Charlie Hurley.
By Editor Gav | Updated Apr 25, 2024, 10:07am BST
Before football became the commercial juggernaut it is today—dominated by overpaid, pampered athletes and corporate interests—it was a sport deeply rooted in the working-class community, played by men who shared the same backgrounds as their fans.
For someone like Charlie Hurley, who played during an era that starkly contrasts with the modern game, witnessing the evolution of football must be both mind-boggling and frustrating.
“I remember we used to have to clean our own boots! Today, the players have someone to do that for them!” Hurley remarked. Can you imagine today’s players scrubbing their brand-new, colorful Nike boots with an old toothbrush?
He continued, “I recall reading that Harry Redknapp said they had to widen the parking spaces just to accommodate the huge cars these young kids have today. We used to have to break the boots in and break toenails until they were months old. No amount of dubbing would help. The ball was heavier than today and the boots so hard, the ball rarely made the halfway line from a goal kick. It was just a completely different era.”
Charlie Hurley’s reflections offer a poignant reminder of how much football has changed, emphasizing the grit and passion that characterized the sport in his day.