Silent Blade
Well-Known Member
Fully agree, Hodgy was letting in too many soft goals and other teams knew that he had lost confidence in coming out for crosses. I still remember Hope's debut at Oxford very well. He came out for crosses and caught them. This made my dad (who loved Hodgy) come out of his seat and applaud the catches in front of the Oxford fans because it had been a long time since we had a keeper making catches like that. Hope was a decent shot stopper too and NOTW gave him 9 out of 10 in players performances for our 0-0 home draw against Norwich (Norwich were dominant in that match). Hope had 8 clean sheets in the last 10 games of the promotion season which was one of the big factors in us getting promotion. His good form continued in the following season as we were at the top of the league with 8 wins and 2 draws in our first 10 games. He played only one bad game in 1971 which was the 5-0 League Cup defeat at West Ham. He lost confidence in 1972. It annoys me when narrow minded Blades fans say that Hope was the worst keeper we have had. Either they have a poor memory of 1971 or didnt watch any of our gamesIn the long run it was strange. Tudor was a very good centre forward and a better player than either Ford or Hope or even Ford and Hope. But, as has been pointed on here recently, in the short term it probably got us promotion. Despite his protestations in his autobiography, Hodgy was beginning to show his age and the defence was losing confidence in him. There were genuine fears of United having another mid-season wobble and dropping away and the introduction of Hope (and, of course, Hockey) had a huge positive effect on the promotion campaign. Hope's flaws only began to show well into the following season.