Fred Keenor: The Man Who Never Gave Up - eBookAuthor: James LeightonFred Keenor: The Man Who Never Gave Up - eBookBritish football has always had a reputation for producing hard, no-nonsense, inspirational defenders in the mould of John Terry, Terry Butcher and Tony Adams, but how would the so-called 'hard men' of the modern game have fared in the trenches during World War One or on a salary of just £4 a week? Fred Keenor, captain and talisman of Cardiff City and Wales during the 1920s, was the original football hard man. He had an unparalleled reputation for delivering violent, juggernaut challenges on the stars of the day such as Dixie Dean and Alex James; however, he was also regarded as being one of the country's great defenders by fans, players and critics alike. Not only does he remain the captain of the first - and only - team from outside England to win the FA Cup, but he also came within 0.024 of goal difference from winning the First Division title and captained his country to three home international victory shields. Perhaps the pinnacle of his international career came in a game against Scotland which was christened 'Keenor and the Unknowns', such were his awe-inspiring efforts to motivate and inspire his team. All these achievements came in spite of the fact that he was wounded while fighting in World War One, and it was felt that he would never be able to play the game again. His fight back to full fitness from his war wounds was matched by his fighting spirit throughout his football career.
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James Leighton is a qualified lawyer and football fanatic from Cardiff. He has been going to Cardiff City games since 1986 when, as a five-year-old boy, his father took him to watch the Bluebirds defeat local rivals Newport County 5–1. While in subsequent games James would learn that the Bluebirds were not Real Madrid, he had the football bug and loved witnessing the highs and lows of his team.