fbpx
Wikipedia

Luther Blissett

Luther Loide Blissett OBE DL (born 1 February 1958) is a former professional footballer and manager who played for the England national team during the 1980s. Born in Jamaica, Blissett played as a striker, and is best known for his time at Watford, whom he helped win promotion from the Fourth Division to the First Division. As of 2022, Blissett holds Watford's all-time records for appearances and goals, having played 503 games and scored 186 goals.

Luther Blissett
OBE DL
Personal information
Full name Luther Loide Blissett[1]
Date of birth (1958-02-01) 1 February 1958 (age 66)[1]
Place of birth Falmouth, Jamaica
Height 5 ft 10+12 in (1.79 m)[2]
Position(s) Striker
Youth career
1974–1976 Watford
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1975–1983 Watford 246 (95)
1983–1984 A.C. Milan 30 (5)
1984–1988 Watford 127 (44)
1988–1991 Bournemouth 121 (56)
1991–1993 Watford 42 (9)
1992West Bromwich Albion (loan) 3 (1)
1993–1994 Bury 10 (1)
1993Derry City (loan) 4 (1)
1993–1994Mansfield Town (loan) 5 (1)
1994Southport (loan) 5 (2)
1994–1995 Wimborne Town
1995–1996 Fakenham Town
2007 Chesham United 2
International career
1979 England U21 4 (0)
1984 England B 1 (0)
1982–1984 England 14 (3)
Managerial career
2006–2007 Chesham United
2016 Burnham (caretaker)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Blissett's other clubs included A.C. Milan, who paid £1m for him in 1983 before selling him back to Watford for £550,000 in 1984, and AFC Bournemouth, for whom he had a goals-to-games ratio of nearly one goal in every two appearances. Blissett was capped 14 times by England, scoring a hat-trick on his debut. After retiring from playing, Blissett turned to coaching, initially under the management of Graham Taylor at Watford, and managed Chesham United from 2006 until 2007.

Since the mid-1990s, Luther Blissett has frequently been used as a pseudonym, most notably by members of the Luther Blissett Project.

Club career edit

Watford edit

Born in Falmouth, Jamaica,[1] Blissett began his career with Watford as an apprentice on leaving school in the summer of 1974. He turned professional for the 1975–76 season, making three appearances in the Football League Fourth Division and scoring one goal. Four goalless appearances came in the 1976–77 season, before he broke into the first team under new manager Graham Taylor in 1977–78, when his six goals in 33 games helped Watford win promotion to the Football League Third Division. 21 goals the following campaign played a big part in a second successive promotion which took them into the Football League Second Division. He remained among the club's top goalscorers over the next three seasons as Watford consolidated in the Second Division and finally reached the First Division for the first time in their history in 1982, at the end of a season in which Blissett scored 19 league goals.[3]

Blissett and his teammates made the headlines in the 1982–83 season as they surprised many by proving successful in the First Division. Watford briefly led the league in the autumn, before finishing second to Liverpool and qualified for the UEFA Cup. In Watford's first ever First Division season, Blissett was the division's top goalscorer that season with 27 goals.[4]

A.C. Milan edit

He subsequently moved to A.C. Milan for £1 million in June 1983, but he was not as successful as he had been in England, scoring only five goals in 30 appearances. It has since been rumoured that A.C. Milan confused him with his Watford teammate John Barnes.[5] However Italian football journalist Gabriele Marcotti believes this story is untrue. "There are two main reason for which I think it's not true," he says. "First, even the most ignorant and provincial person could see that Blissett and Barnes looked absolutely nothing alike. Second, the fact is that at that time Milan were looking for an out-and-out goalscorer and Barnes just wasn't that type of player."[6] "No matter how much money you have here", Blissett famously complained about Italy, "you can't seem to get Rice Krispies,"[7] though he later claimed this was a joking response to what he considered a stupid question from a journalist.[8]

Return to Watford edit

Blissett was sold back to Watford for £550,000 after one season with AC Milan. In his absence, Watford had reached their first FA Cup final, but lost to Everton, while new signing Mo Johnston was top scorer with 20 goals in the First Division.[9]

On Blissett's return, Watford failed to achieve their successes of the previous two seasons, but survived another four seasons in the First Division. Blissett scored 21 goals in his first season back in the First Division, though the Hornets could only manage a mid table finish. He also helped them reach the FA Cup semi finals in 1986–87, but a year later they were relegated with Blissett scoring just four times in the league. He remained with the club until November 1988, when he signed for AFC Bournemouth.[9]

Bournemouth edit

Blissett was successful at Dean Court, scoring 19 times from 30 league games in 1988–89 as the Cherries finished 10th in the Second Division, after emerging as surprise promotion contenders in only their second season at that level. He scored 18 goals in 1989–90, though a slump in the second half of the season dragged the Cherries down the table and on the last day of the season they were beaten at home by Leeds United in a result which gave the visitor's promotion as Second Division champions and relegated the Cherries to the Third Division. Undeterred, Blissett continued his fine form for Harry Redknapp's team, scoring 19 goals, though it wasn't enough to earn promotion at the end of the 1990–91 campaign.[10]

Third spell at Watford edit

Blissett returned to Watford for a third spell at the start of the 1991–92 season. They were still in the Second Division, and his 10 goals in the league that season were not enough for Watford to look like promotion contenders, meaning that they would be founder members of the rebranded Division One – rather than the new FA Premier League – for the 1992–93 season. Blissett never played a first team game for Watford again, his only action in 1992–93 coming in shape of a three-match loan spell at West Bromwich Albion, which resulted in one Division Two goal.[10]

Lower leagues edit

He ended his English league career in late 1993 with a five-match spell with Division Three club Mansfield Town (where he scored once) that had followed 10 games club Bury. After that came a five-match spell in the Football Conference at Southport, producing two goals, and four games and a goal for Derry City in the League of Ireland, before he finally retired from playing in 1995 after a season playing for Fakenham Town in the Eastern Counties Football League.[11]

International career edit

Although born in Jamaica, Blissett was eligible to play for England having moved to the country at a young age. After making four appearances for England under-21s, Blissett became one of the first black footballers to play for the senior team. He scored a hat-trick on his full international debut – a 9–0 win over Luxembourg, in doing so becoming the first black player ever to score for England.[12] He never scored in any other international, however, despite playing for England a further 13 times.[13]

Coaching career edit

He rejoined Watford as a coach in February 1996, coming in with returning manager Graham Taylor. He left the club in June 2001, following the appointment of Gianluca Vialli as manager. Vialli wanted to appoint his own backroom staff, and Blissett was among those deemed surplus to requirements. Taylor was publicly critical of the decision not to retain long-serving members of staff such as Blissett and Kenny Jackett.[14]

In May 2002, he moved to York City to carry out a coaching role.[15] He later left that post and on 15 February 2006 was appointed manager of Southern League team Chesham United, which he even made two appearances for as a substitute. However, in April 2007, it was announced that Blissett would leave Chesham at the end of the season to concentrate on his involvement with the Windrush Motorsport project, which aimed to enter the Le Mans 24-hour race.[16]

On 27 March 2010, it was confirmed that Blissett had signed to Hemel Hempstead Town as a coach.[17]

In the summer of 2016, Blissett was appointed Director of Football at Burnham, briefly serving as caretaker after the departures of both Dave Tuttle and Gifton Noel-Williams.

Personal life and cultural impact edit

Blissett has worked as a television pundit for Channel 4 and Bravo's coverage of Serie A.

With fellow former Watford and England footballers John Barnes and Les Ferdinand, he founded Team48 Motorsport; a team aiming to promote young racing drivers of Afro-Caribbean background. In 2008, Blissett entered a team into the British Touring Car Championship, aiming to run Alfa Romeos for white Jamaican Matthew Gore and 18-year-old black Briton Darelle Wilson.[18] However, the project never got off the starting line and the team failed to show up for any of the races.

Soccer AM, a football magazine programme on Sky Sports, refers to the area where 'fans of the week' sit as the 'Luther Blissett Stand'.

In 2011, Blissett took part in a celebrity motor race at the 2011 Silverstone Classic. He had a large crash on the opening lap, rolling the car several times. He was unhurt. Rick Parfitt Jnr won the race, with Heston Blumenthal second and Brendan Cole third. They were all raising money for the Bobby Moore fund for Cancer Research. From 2014, Blissett was racing an Alfa 156 in the BRSCC Alfashop Alfa Romeo Championship.[19]

Blissett was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2022 Birthday Honours for services to association football and charity.[20]

Blissett and the "Luther Blissett Project" edit

Blissett's name has been adopted by many people in radical activist circles as a nom de plume or collective alias when engaged in unusual performances, situationist pranks, media hoaxes, and the production of radical theory. The Luther Blissett multiple name project first began in 1994 in Italy, no doubt a consequence of his link with A.C. Milan, and has since then been widely used by artists, underground reviews, poets, performers and squatters' collectives in cities throughout Europe and South America. In 1999 "Luther Blissett" authored a historical novel called Q, which sold hundreds of thousands of copies in over ten languages.[21]

On 30 June 2004, the real Luther Blissett took part in the British television sports show Fantasy Football League – Euro 2004, broadcast on ITV. He jokingly claimed that he himself was part of the Luther Blissett Project, and read aloud the following sentence from an LBP manifesto (in Italian): "Chiunque può essere Luther Blissett, semplicemente adottando il nome Luther Blissett" [Anyone can be Luther Blissett simply by adopting the name Luther Blissett].

Career statistics edit

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League National cup[a] League cup[b] Total
Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Watford 1975–76 Fourth Division 3 1
1976–77 4 0
1977–78 33 6
1978–79 Third Division 41 21
1979–80 Second Division 42 10
1980–81 42 11
1981–82 40 19
1982–83 First Division 41 27 33
Total 246 95 101
A.C. Milan 1983–84 Serie A 30 5 9 1 39 6
Watford 1984–85 First Division 41 21
1985–86 23 7
1986–87 35 11
1987–88 25 4
1988–89 Second Division 3 1
Total 127 44
AFC Bournemouth 1988–89 Second Division 30 19
1989–90 46 18
1990–91 Third Division 45 19
Total 121 56
Watford 1991–92 Second Division 42 10
West Bromwich Albion 1992–93 Second Division 3 1
Bury 1993–94 Third Division 10 1
Mansfield Town 1993–94 Third Division 5 1
Career total 584 213

Honours edit

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hugman, Barry J. (2005). The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–2005. Queen Anne Press. p. 66. ISBN 1-85291-665-6.
  2. ^ Rollin, Jack, ed. (1981). Rothmans Football Yearbook: 1981–82. London: Queen Anne Press. p. 368. ISBN 0-362-02046-9. OCLC 868301130.
  3. ^ Phillips, Oliver (1991). The Official Centenary History of Watford FC 1881–1991. Watford Football Club. ISBN 0-9509601-6-0.
  4. ^ "Luther Blissett — Watford FC — Football-Heroes.net". Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved 8 February 2010.
  5. ^ Doyle, Paul; Shaikh, Sajit & Turner, Georgina (5 January 2005). "Did AC Milan sign Luther Blissett by mistake?". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  6. ^ Turner, Georgina; Doyle, Paul (6 January 2005). "Did AC Milan sign Luther Blissett by mistake?". The Guardian. London.
  7. ^ Kuper, Simon; Szymanski, Stefan (2009). Soccernomics: Why England Loses, Why Germany and Brazil Win, and Why the U.S., Japan, Australia, Turkey—And Even Iraq—Are Destined to Become the Kings of the World's Most Popular Sport. New York, NY: Nation Books. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-56858-425-6.
  8. ^ FourFourTwo magazine - October 2015, page 58.
  9. ^ a b Jones, Trefor (1996). Watford Football Club Illustrated Who's Who. p. 41. ISBN 0-9527458-0-1.
  10. ^ a b Brown, Neil. "Luther Blissett". Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  11. ^ "Luther Blissett — Watford FC — Football-Heroes.net". Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved 8 February 2010.
  12. ^ "David James explores why England have only ever had one Black senior goalkeeper". Sky Sports. 16 May 2023. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  13. ^ "Luther Blissett". The Football Association. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  14. ^ "Taylor upset over backroom blitz". BBC Sport. 1 May 2001. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  15. ^ "Blissett joins York". BBC Sport. 27 May 2002. Retrieved 14 July 2007.
  16. ^ "Blissett to leave Chesham". Non-League Daily. 11 April 2007. Retrieved 2 September 2009.
  17. ^ Legend Luther helping out at Hemel[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Neil Adams. "Team 48 Motorsport". Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  19. ^ "The BRSCC Alfa Romeo Championship". The BRSCC Alfa Romeo Championship. Retrieved 20 July 2015.
  20. ^ "No. 63714". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 June 2022. p. B11.
  21. ^ Arie, Sophie; Ezard, John (28 August 2003). "From Watford striker to top novelist – but only the name's the same". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  22. ^ "Watford legend Luther Blissett made Freeman of the borough". 10 March 2021.
  23. ^ "Luther Blissett: Ex-Watford striker given freedom of the town". BBC News. 11 March 2021.
  24. ^ "Deputy Lieutenants - the Lieutenancy of Hertfordshire".
  25. ^ "Deputy Lieutenant Commissions Lieutenancy of Hertfordshire". The London Gazette. Retrieved 24 October 2021.

External links edit

  • from Italian Daily Newspaper L'Unità, followed by a comment from Wu Ming, the writers formerly known as the "Luther Blissett Project".
  • BBC Sport article

luther, blissett, pseudonym, used, many, artists, authors, pseudonym, luther, loide, blissett, born, february, 1958, former, professional, footballer, manager, played, england, national, team, during, 1980s, born, jamaica, blissett, played, striker, best, know. For the pseudonym used by many artists and authors see Luther Blissett pseudonym Luther Loide Blissett OBE DL born 1 February 1958 is a former professional footballer and manager who played for the England national team during the 1980s Born in Jamaica Blissett played as a striker and is best known for his time at Watford whom he helped win promotion from the Fourth Division to the First Division As of 2022 Blissett holds Watford s all time records for appearances and goals having played 503 games and scored 186 goals Luther BlissettOBE DLPersonal informationFull nameLuther Loide Blissett 1 Date of birth 1958 02 01 1 February 1958 age 66 1 Place of birthFalmouth JamaicaHeight5 ft 10 1 2 in 1 79 m 2 Position s StrikerYouth career1974 1976WatfordSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1975 1983Watford246 95 1983 1984A C Milan30 5 1984 1988Watford127 44 1988 1991Bournemouth121 56 1991 1993Watford42 9 1992 West Bromwich Albion loan 3 1 1993 1994Bury10 1 1993 Derry City loan 4 1 1993 1994 Mansfield Town loan 5 1 1994 Southport loan 5 2 1994 1995Wimborne Town1995 1996Fakenham Town2007Chesham United2International career1979England U214 0 1984England B1 0 1982 1984England14 3 Managerial career2006 2007Chesham United2016Burnham caretaker Club domestic league appearances and goals Blissett s other clubs included A C Milan who paid 1m for him in 1983 before selling him back to Watford for 550 000 in 1984 and AFC Bournemouth for whom he had a goals to games ratio of nearly one goal in every two appearances Blissett was capped 14 times by England scoring a hat trick on his debut After retiring from playing Blissett turned to coaching initially under the management of Graham Taylor at Watford and managed Chesham United from 2006 until 2007 Since the mid 1990s Luther Blissett has frequently been used as a pseudonym most notably by members of the Luther Blissett Project Contents 1 Club career 1 1 Watford 1 2 A C Milan 1 3 Return to Watford 1 4 Bournemouth 1 5 Third spell at Watford 1 6 Lower leagues 2 International career 3 Coaching career 4 Personal life and cultural impact 5 Blissett and the Luther Blissett Project 6 Career statistics 7 Honours 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksClub career editWatford edit Born in Falmouth Jamaica 1 Blissett began his career with Watford as an apprentice on leaving school in the summer of 1974 He turned professional for the 1975 76 season making three appearances in the Football League Fourth Division and scoring one goal Four goalless appearances came in the 1976 77 season before he broke into the first team under new manager Graham Taylor in 1977 78 when his six goals in 33 games helped Watford win promotion to the Football League Third Division 21 goals the following campaign played a big part in a second successive promotion which took them into the Football League Second Division He remained among the club s top goalscorers over the next three seasons as Watford consolidated in the Second Division and finally reached the First Division for the first time in their history in 1982 at the end of a season in which Blissett scored 19 league goals 3 Blissett and his teammates made the headlines in the 1982 83 season as they surprised many by proving successful in the First Division Watford briefly led the league in the autumn before finishing second to Liverpool and qualified for the UEFA Cup In Watford s first ever First Division season Blissett was the division s top goalscorer that season with 27 goals 4 A C Milan edit He subsequently moved to A C Milan for 1 million in June 1983 but he was not as successful as he had been in England scoring only five goals in 30 appearances It has since been rumoured that A C Milan confused him with his Watford teammate John Barnes 5 However Italian football journalist Gabriele Marcotti believes this story is untrue There are two main reason for which I think it s not true he says First even the most ignorant and provincial person could see that Blissett and Barnes looked absolutely nothing alike Second the fact is that at that time Milan were looking for an out and out goalscorer and Barnes just wasn t that type of player 6 No matter how much money you have here Blissett famously complained about Italy you can t seem to get Rice Krispies 7 though he later claimed this was a joking response to what he considered a stupid question from a journalist 8 Return to Watford edit Blissett was sold back to Watford for 550 000 after one season with AC Milan In his absence Watford had reached their first FA Cup final but lost to Everton while new signing Mo Johnston was top scorer with 20 goals in the First Division 9 On Blissett s return Watford failed to achieve their successes of the previous two seasons but survived another four seasons in the First Division Blissett scored 21 goals in his first season back in the First Division though the Hornets could only manage a mid table finish He also helped them reach the FA Cup semi finals in 1986 87 but a year later they were relegated with Blissett scoring just four times in the league He remained with the club until November 1988 when he signed for AFC Bournemouth 9 Bournemouth edit Blissett was successful at Dean Court scoring 19 times from 30 league games in 1988 89 as the Cherries finished 10th in the Second Division after emerging as surprise promotion contenders in only their second season at that level He scored 18 goals in 1989 90 though a slump in the second half of the season dragged the Cherries down the table and on the last day of the season they were beaten at home by Leeds United in a result which gave the visitor s promotion as Second Division champions and relegated the Cherries to the Third Division Undeterred Blissett continued his fine form for Harry Redknapp s team scoring 19 goals though it wasn t enough to earn promotion at the end of the 1990 91 campaign 10 Third spell at Watford edit Blissett returned to Watford for a third spell at the start of the 1991 92 season They were still in the Second Division and his 10 goals in the league that season were not enough for Watford to look like promotion contenders meaning that they would be founder members of the rebranded Division One rather than the new FA Premier League for the 1992 93 season Blissett never played a first team game for Watford again his only action in 1992 93 coming in shape of a three match loan spell at West Bromwich Albion which resulted in one Division Two goal 10 Lower leagues edit He ended his English league career in late 1993 with a five match spell with Division Three club Mansfield Town where he scored once that had followed 10 games club Bury After that came a five match spell in the Football Conference at Southport producing two goals and four games and a goal for Derry City in the League of Ireland before he finally retired from playing in 1995 after a season playing for Fakenham Town in the Eastern Counties Football League 11 International career editAlthough born in Jamaica Blissett was eligible to play for England having moved to the country at a young age After making four appearances for England under 21s Blissett became one of the first black footballers to play for the senior team He scored a hat trick on his full international debut a 9 0 win over Luxembourg in doing so becoming the first black player ever to score for England 12 He never scored in any other international however despite playing for England a further 13 times 13 Coaching career editHe rejoined Watford as a coach in February 1996 coming in with returning manager Graham Taylor He left the club in June 2001 following the appointment of Gianluca Vialli as manager Vialli wanted to appoint his own backroom staff and Blissett was among those deemed surplus to requirements Taylor was publicly critical of the decision not to retain long serving members of staff such as Blissett and Kenny Jackett 14 In May 2002 he moved to York City to carry out a coaching role 15 He later left that post and on 15 February 2006 was appointed manager of Southern League team Chesham United which he even made two appearances for as a substitute However in April 2007 it was announced that Blissett would leave Chesham at the end of the season to concentrate on his involvement with the Windrush Motorsport project which aimed to enter the Le Mans 24 hour race 16 On 27 March 2010 it was confirmed that Blissett had signed to Hemel Hempstead Town as a coach 17 In the summer of 2016 Blissett was appointed Director of Football at Burnham briefly serving as caretaker after the departures of both Dave Tuttle and Gifton Noel Williams Personal life and cultural impact editBlissett has worked as a television pundit for Channel 4 and Bravo s coverage of Serie A With fellow former Watford and England footballers John Barnes and Les Ferdinand he founded Team48 Motorsport a team aiming to promote young racing drivers of Afro Caribbean background In 2008 Blissett entered a team into the British Touring Car Championship aiming to run Alfa Romeos for white Jamaican Matthew Gore and 18 year old black Briton Darelle Wilson 18 However the project never got off the starting line and the team failed to show up for any of the races Soccer AM a football magazine programme on Sky Sports refers to the area where fans of the week sit as the Luther Blissett Stand In 2011 Blissett took part in a celebrity motor race at the 2011 Silverstone Classic He had a large crash on the opening lap rolling the car several times He was unhurt Rick Parfitt Jnr won the race with Heston Blumenthal second and Brendan Cole third They were all raising money for the Bobby Moore fund for Cancer Research From 2014 Blissett was racing an Alfa 156 in the BRSCC Alfashop Alfa Romeo Championship 19 Blissett was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire OBE in the 2022 Birthday Honours for services to association football and charity 20 Blissett and the Luther Blissett Project editMain article Luther Blissett nom de plume Blissett s name has been adopted by many people in radical activist circles as a nom de plume or collective alias when engaged in unusual performances situationist pranks media hoaxes and the production of radical theory The Luther Blissett multiple name project first began in 1994 in Italy no doubt a consequence of his link with A C Milan and has since then been widely used by artists underground reviews poets performers and squatters collectives in cities throughout Europe and South America In 1999 Luther Blissett authored a historical novel called Q which sold hundreds of thousands of copies in over ten languages 21 On 30 June 2004 the real Luther Blissett took part in the British television sports show Fantasy Football League Euro 2004 broadcast on ITV He jokingly claimed that he himself was part of the Luther Blissett Project and read aloud the following sentence from an LBP manifesto in Italian Chiunque puo essere Luther Blissett semplicemente adottando il nome Luther Blissett Anyone can be Luther Blissett simply by adopting the name Luther Blissett Career statistics editAppearances and goals by club season and competition Club Season League National cup a League cup b Total Division Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals Watford 1975 76 Fourth Division 3 1 1976 77 4 0 1977 78 33 6 1978 79 Third Division 41 21 1979 80 Second Division 42 10 1980 81 42 11 1981 82 40 19 1982 83 First Division 41 27 33 Total 246 95 101 A C Milan 1983 84 Serie A 30 5 9 1 39 6 Watford 1984 85 First Division 41 21 1985 86 23 7 1986 87 35 11 1987 88 25 4 1988 89 Second Division 3 1 Total 127 44 AFC Bournemouth 1988 89 Second Division 30 19 1989 90 46 18 1990 91 Third Division 45 19 Total 121 56 Watford 1991 92 Second Division 42 10 West Bromwich Albion 1992 93 Second Division 3 1 Bury 1993 94 Third Division 10 1 Mansfield Town 1993 94 Third Division 5 1 Career total 584 213Honours editHe was awarded the Freedom of the Borough of Watford on 10 March 2021 22 23 He was appointed as a Deputy Lieutenant of Hertfordshire in July 2021 24 25 He was awarded an OBE in June 2022 See also editList of England international footballers born outside EnglandNotes edit Includes FA Cup Coppa Italia Includes Football League CupReferences edit a b c Hugman Barry J 2005 The PFA Premier amp Football League Players Records 1946 2005 Queen Anne Press p 66 ISBN 1 85291 665 6 Rollin Jack ed 1981 Rothmans Football Yearbook 1981 82 London Queen Anne Press p 368 ISBN 0 362 02046 9 OCLC 868301130 Phillips Oliver 1991 The Official Centenary History of Watford FC 1881 1991 Watford Football Club ISBN 0 9509601 6 0 Luther Blissett Watford FC Football Heroes net Sporting heroes net Retrieved 8 February 2010 Doyle Paul Shaikh Sajit amp Turner Georgina 5 January 2005 Did AC Milan sign Luther Blissett by mistake The Guardian London Retrieved 24 August 2010 Turner Georgina Doyle Paul 6 January 2005 Did AC Milan sign Luther Blissett by mistake The Guardian London Kuper Simon Szymanski Stefan 2009 Soccernomics Why England Loses Why Germany and Brazil Win and Why the U S Japan Australia Turkey And Even Iraq Are Destined to Become the Kings of the World s Most Popular Sport New York NY Nation Books p 47 ISBN 978 1 56858 425 6 FourFourTwo magazine October 2015 page 58 a b Jones Trefor 1996 Watford Football Club Illustrated Who s Who p 41 ISBN 0 9527458 0 1 a b Brown Neil Luther Blissett Retrieved 24 August 2010 Luther Blissett Watford FC Football Heroes net Sporting heroes net Retrieved 8 February 2010 David James explores why England have only ever had one Black senior goalkeeper Sky Sports 16 May 2023 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Luther Blissett The Football Association Retrieved 24 August 2010 Taylor upset over backroom blitz BBC Sport 1 May 2001 Retrieved 24 August 2010 Blissett joins York BBC Sport 27 May 2002 Retrieved 14 July 2007 Blissett to leave Chesham Non League Daily 11 April 2007 Retrieved 2 September 2009 Legend Luther helping out at Hemel permanent dead link Neil Adams Team 48 Motorsport Retrieved 24 August 2010 The BRSCC Alfa Romeo Championship The BRSCC Alfa Romeo Championship Retrieved 20 July 2015 No 63714 The London Gazette Supplement 1 June 2022 p B11 Arie Sophie Ezard John 28 August 2003 From Watford striker to top novelist but only the name s the same The Guardian London Retrieved 24 August 2010 Watford legend Luther Blissett made Freeman of the borough 10 March 2021 Luther Blissett Ex Watford striker given freedom of the town BBC News 11 March 2021 Deputy Lieutenants the Lieutenancy of Hertfordshire Deputy Lieutenant Commissions Lieutenancy of Hertfordshire The London Gazette Retrieved 24 October 2021 External links editA Translated Interview with Luther Blissett from Italian Daily Newspaper L Unita followed by a comment from Wu Ming the writers formerly known as the Luther Blissett Project BBC Sport article Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luther Blissett amp oldid 1219862337, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.