Hall: Shanks was extraordinary
In the week marking 50 years since Bill Shankly arrived at Anfield, Brian Hall recalls the glory of 1974 and a show of red strength.
Bill Shankly is the most extraordinary man I've ever met in my life.
He was a character that was bigger than anything I've ever met before and anything I've ever met since. He was a quite remarkable man.
He wasn't just a great manager, he was a great speaker. It wasn't so much a lengthy speech of 30 to 40 minutes long but he had that wonderful ability to communicate in very simple terms to large numbers of people.
There were times when I heard him talk to people and quite frankly it was bordering on genius. He was quite an amazing character.
Everything about him was simple and I mean that in the best possible way. His football strategy was simple and so was his training. His lines of delivery when speaking to people was simple to the point and they were direct - the man was a genius.
Two abiding memories of the great man for me both involve cup finals. The first was in 1971 when we lost to Arsenal after extra-time. We came back to Liverpool and had an open-top bus tour.
It was my first season in the team and I just didn't know what to expect because I thought we had lost the FA Cup final so there wouldn't be that many people out to see us. How wrong was I! There was hundreds of thousands of people and it was absolutely spectactular.
When we got down to St George's Hall and we came down to the plateau there is this iconic picture when the Lord Mayor goes up to the microphone to address the crowd and the 250,000 people just carried on chanting.
You couldn't hear a word and then Shanks went over to the microphone and just put his arms up. I was about two yards from him and I experienced the whole thing. He calmed them down with his arms and they stopped and there was silence. It was absolutely stunning.
We won the FA Cup against Newcastle in 1974 and by the time we had got down to Lime Street the streets were absolutely packed to the rafters, and our bus was having problems getting through the crowd!
The police were also having problems guiding us through them.
It was manic but at the same time it was fantastic because we had the FA Cup with us. We had a few beers and we were in the best of spirits. The crowd were going daft and waving scares and rattles.
As we approached the library I had this tap on my shoulder and it was the boss. In the middle of all this mayhem Shanks said to me: 'Son, who is the Chinaman with the wee red bull?' I just turned to him and said 'Chairman Mao!' He said Yes, that's him. I honestly thought he was cracking up and wondered what has that got to do with where we were at.
We came to the balcony and Shanks went up to the microphone again and puts his hands up. Everybody goes quiet, 250,000 again just went silent. His opening line was Chairman Mao has never seen a greater show of red strength! They went absolutely ballistic and again I was stood there two yards away from him and thought 'That's just genius!' He just knew exactly what to say and it was quite stunning.
He didn't say much more after that but had hit the right note yet again and pressed all the buttons. It was phenomenal.
It was an absolute privilege to play for him. He was a hard task master. I can't speak for other players but I had times when quite frankly I didn't like him because he made decisions that affected me playing.
He demanded that we all worked hard at all times and he demanded that we always played as a team. Everybody was in it together. It was that collectiveness that I liked about him.
To be a successful team Shanks had Bob, Joe, Ronnie and Roy came along when Bob became manager, and they all knew that the collective effort was greater than all of their individual efforts. It's that collectiveness and togetherness that made such great teams and that's what I liked about it.
Once you put on that red shirt and went out onto the pitch you had to perform in the team structure. You had to perform well but inside the team structure and it was fascinating living in that environment.
Shanks was a socialist. Politically he didn't do a great deal and push that too strongly but he had this principle that working together we could achieve far more than individually.
It wasn't just about the 11 red shirts on the pitch and him, Bob, Joe and Ronnie. That was one team but there was another team that was all very much a part of what he was trying to achieve as a manager.
He sensed and realised the power of the supporters. When he came to Liverpool he realised there was something very special, so the team for Shanks was the 11 red shirts, okay 10 and a green one! His backroom staff and 50,000 people. Everybody got behind the team and he harnessed that - he brought that in.
Again that's the collectiveness I am talking about and it was absolutely fascinating. He knew how to communicate to those people and he knew how to say the right words at the right time to bring the people on board.
He might not have won the European Cup with Liverpool but he laid the foundations for it to happen. As I was coming to the end of my playing days with Liverpool I realised something and that was Shanks never stopped learning.
The European football was probably the most important lesson they were learning from. In Shanks and Bob's era all of English football was affected by the Hungarian massacre of England at Wembley when Puskas inspired it.
By going into Europe and playing against some of the best teams in the world there was a learning curve process and all that background started from when he arrived at Anfield in December 1959.
When Shanks resigned in June 1974 is everybody including the players wondered what was next. Could Bob take over as manager? He just carried on doing what we had always done under Shanks in training and nothing changed. It was just a different guy making the team decisions but nothing else changed.
What Shanks did was take the slumbering giant that was Liverpool Football Club with this fantastic support and he harnessed the whole lot together. He brought quality players into the club and began to develop learn about producing successful football clubs. That was the foundation upon which everything else was built.
Bob, Joe and Ronnie just took that on and they too never stopped learning.
There will never be another Bill Shankly because the scrutiny from the modern media is so intense these days that I don't think Shanks would have got away with some of the things he used to say quite frankly!
Shanks was a newspaper man's dream because he would always have a line for them. Every game he would come out with something.
He wasn't just a great football manager, he was a great speaker and he had that ability to be able to communicate with Liverpool supporters.
He is not just revered by Liverpool supporters, he is acknowledged by football supporters from many different clubs and different cultures.