Bruce grobbelaar

20 min read

“I peed in a bottle, poured it all down the posts at Anfield, then Liverpool went on an unbeaten run and won the Premier League”

Interview James Hilsum Portrait Guardian / eyevine

TEAMS (PLAYER) 1973-74 Highlanders 1975 Chibuku Shumba 1976 Highlands Park 1977-78 Durban City 1979-81 Vancouver Whitecaps 1979-80 Crewe (loan) 1981-94 Liverpool 1993 Stoke (loan) 1994-96 Southampton 1996-97 Plymouth 1997 Oxford 1997 Sheffield Wednesday 1997-98 Oldham 1998 Chesham 1998 Bury 1998 Lincoln 1999 Northwich Victoria 2002 Hellenic 2007 Glasshoughton Welfare COUNTRY (PLAYER) 1977 Rhodesia 1980-98 Zimbabwe 2018 Matabeleland TEAMS (MANAGER) 1997 Zimbabwe 1998 Zimbabwe 1999-01 SuperSport United 2001-02 Hellenic

F ew people have had a life quite as eventful as Bruce Grobbelaar. Born in South Africa before growing up in Rhodesia, now known as Zimbabwe, Grobbelaar fought in a civil war, headed to Vancouver to take on Pele & Co, then made his home in Liverpool via a spell as a goalscoring goalkeeper at Crewe.

The jelly-legged hero of Liverpool’s 1984 European Cup Final victory over Roma also won six league titles, three FA Cups and three League Cups in his 13 years at Anfield, which produced a total of 628 appearances, the ninth highest tally in the club’s history. After making his debut in 1981, he didn’t miss a game for five years, playing 310 consecutive matches.

All of that followed a bizarre journey from Vancouver to Merseyside, then a tough first six months as Liverpool’s first-choice shot-stopper, which almost brought a premature end to his time at the club. It wasn’t the only difficult period throughout the gloveman’s long career: Grobbelaar successfully fought allegations of match-fixing during the 1990s, having previously witnessed horrifying stadium tragedies at Heysel and Hillsborough.

Now 64, he’s ready to discuss his life in football with FourFourTwo, after an unexpected playing comeback in 2018, and his successful mission to overcome a curse and help his beloved Liverpool finally lift the Premier League trophy two years later…

Were you really offered a US baseball scholarship when you were young?

Andy Hampton, Ohio Yes I was. I played for Ralyton Braves as a kid in Rhodesia, then got scouted because baseball came to Africa with the American missionaries – it was one of the top sports in Rhodesia. I joined the army, then when I came out they continued to watch me. North Adams State College in Massachusetts offered me a scholarship at 19. I chose football. I felt it was less advantageous to go back to school after the army, so I said no. At the time I was playing football for Durban, the place where I was born.

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