Guernsey Press

Journalists invited to ‘walk round’ the giant Ron Yeats – Liverpool’s colossus

The Scottish defender has died aged 86.

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Bill Shankly famously invited journalists to take a walk around the “colossus” Ron Yeats such was his physical presence.

But the impact the rugged Scottish central defender had extended beyond the bounds of his considerable frame as the man who was Liverpool captain for a decade wrote his place in the club’s history.

Yeats, who has died at the age of 86, lifted the Reds’ first FA Cup in 1965, ignoring etiquette by telling the Queen he was “knackered” after an energy-sapping Wembley final win over Leeds.

Liverpool's Ron Yeats in red (left) shakes hands with Leeds captain Bobby Collins in white in front of the referee at the 1965 FA Cup final at Wembley.
Bill Shankly’s ‘colossus’ Ron Yeats (left) was the first Liverpool captain to lift the FA Cup after beating Leeds – captained by Bobby Collins –  in the 1965 final (PA)

Yeats’ life experiences shaped the footballer he became and it was no surprise to see him become a leader of men at Anfield.

Born in Aberdeen in 1937, the childhood home was bombed during the Second World War and they lost everything.

Growing up with his two brothers and sister he played football in those bomb craters and on the dirt roads of his home town but he owed much to his Causewayend Primary teacher Miss Allen who spotted his potential and got him into the school team.

After leaving school at 15 he trained as a mason but when his uncle’s firm went bust he followed his father to the slaughterhouse, making £4 15 shillings a week (£4.75), with its 3am starts.

Weeks passed, hope faded and when Dundee United offered him a contract Aberdeen Lads’ Club got an £80 transfer fee and Yeats a £20 bonus. Yeats later learned the two Celtic scouts had been in a car accident, with one killed and the other severely injured.

He continued to live in Aberdeen, 70 miles from his new club, and was still getting up at 3am on a Saturday to work at the slaughterhouse, slaughtering up to 12 animals before catching the 9.20am train to Dundee.

So the approach from Liverpool four years later would come as a blessed relief. And Shankly worked his magic early on.

“Shankly made me feel like a million dollars,” Yeats would recall.

Yeats celebrates Liverpool's first FA Cup win with manager Bill Shankly on the pitch at Wembley.
Yeats celebrates Liverpool’s first FA Cup win with manager Bill Shankly (PA)

“Bill just turned round and said: ´Ron, I want you to captain the side. You will be my eyes, my ears and my voice on that pitch’, I thought to myself, ‘bloody hell’.

“I did that for him, captain Liverpool, for 10 years. It was the best 10 years of my career and my life.”

On his arrival at Anfield, Shankly told the waiting press: “Take a walk around my centre-half, gentlemen, he’s a colossus!’

Yeats, known as Rowdy by the Kop, helped steer the Reds out of Division Two in his first season and to the Division One title inside two years before that historic FA Cup win, forming a formidable partnership with Tommy Smith.

Yeats in the red of Liverpool kicks the ball in a warm up.
Yeats, a captain for 10 years with more than 400 appearances, signed for Liverpool from Dundee United for £20,000 in 1961 (PA)

“At that time we had these big centre forwards to play against. I always knew if there was going to be a battle I would win the battle. I wouldn’t come second to nobody.”

Yeats played with Smith for seven seasons, adding: “We let the ball go past us, but never the ball and the man.”

Incredibly he won just two Scotland caps and after 454 Liverpool appearances he left to be Tranmere’s player-manager for three years, followed by a brief spell in America in his late 30s before returning to Anfield in 1986 as chief scout, a role he held for two decades.

He said his proudest achievement was signing Sami Hyypia, a centre-back and leader like himself.

Yeats holds the FA Cup aloft after receiving it from the Queen at Wembley in 1965.
Yeats was the first Liverpool captain to lift the FA Cup (PA)

“The football itself was incredibly heavy, especially when it was wet,” he said.

“Most of the times you headed it you’d just think Jesus Christ! It’s almost impossible to imagine.”

He was Shankly’s colossus, hewn from Aberdeen granite, but sadly even Yeats found an opponent whose progress he could not halt.

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