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b.
George Best,
22 May 1946, Belfast, Northern Ireland.
d. 25 November 2005,
London, England. |
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George Best is widely
acknowledged to have been one of the greatest football players of all
time. The first and foremost football superstar. George will always be
remembered for his halcyon days with Manchester United F.C.. He played
for the Northern Ireland football team. Although some people claim that
their failure to reach the final rounds of the World Cup denied him the
ultimate global stage. He played for United as a winger between 1963 and
1974, helping them to win the Football League Championship in 1965 and
1967, and the European Cup in 1968. He was named European Footballer of
the Year and Football Writers' Association Player of the Year in 1968.
Indeed, Pelé, the Brazilian who is often said to be the greatest player of
all time, called Best "the greatest footballer in the world". The great
Argentinian Diego Maradona regarded Best equally highly. Best's brilliance
is often summed up in one sentence: Maradona good, Pele better, George
Best. Best's lovable, cheeky image won him many fans, during his career
and after. News of Best's death led to tears on the streets of Belfast,
before and during a funeral for which some 100,000 people turned out on a
rainy day. Best had developed a drinking problem while still a player, and
it contributed to his early retirement from top-level football. He was
imprisoned in 1984 for drunk driving and assaulting a policeman and was
unable to give up alcohol for any length of time. The condition of his
liver deteriorated to the point where a transplant became necessary. The
immuno-suppressive drugs given to prevent rejection of his new liver
caused him to develop a serious kidney infection, which his doctors were
unable to redress. In 2005, the infection caused him to fall into a coma.
His final days were watched over by his father and other family members,
and also by former football colleagues such as United's Denis Law. He died
at the age of 59 and is buried in East Belfast.
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