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Paul Madeley : ウィキペディア英語版
Paul Madeley

Paul Edward Madeley (born 20 September 1944 in Beeston, Leeds, West Riding of Yorkshire) is a former Leeds United and England footballer. During his career with Leeds, Madeley played in a variety of different playing positions which led to him being described as a utility player.〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=15 March 2013 )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=15 March 2013 )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=15 March 2013 )
==Leeds United==
Born in Beeston, Leeds,〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=5 March 2013 )〕 Madeley signed for Leeds from non-league Farsley Celtic in May 1962〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=5 March 2013 )〕 and made his debut for Leeds in January 1964,〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=5 March 2013 )〕 following injuries to Freddie Goodwin and Jack Charlton, and became a regular in the team from 1966 onwards.
Madeley was arguably the most versatile of players – in his Leeds career, he played in every position on the pitch except goalkeeper and wore every shirt from No.2 to No.11 (and occasionally No.12) as a result. His natural ability to adapt to a different role on a frequent basis meant that he was often in the side chosen by manager Don Revie at the expense of a 'specialist' in that position, though the majority of the time there was a player either injured or suspended whom Madeley would replace – usually in defence.
However, Madeley was utilised in attacking positions when Leeds won their first major honours under Don Revie; in the 1968 Football League Cup Final, Madeley wore the number 9 shirt (striker) in the 1–0 win over Arsenal, whilst in 1971 he scored the crucial away goal against Juventus which helped Leeds win the Fairs Cup – in the two legs he wore the No. 11 shirt (left wing/midfield). His versatility led to the nickname "The Eleven Pauls", which was used in the 1972 FA Cup Final song Leeds United.
Madeley played 31 League matches in various positions in the 1968–69 season as Leeds won the League championship and in 1970 played in multiple positions, until Paul Reaney broke his leg shortly before the end of the season, .with Leeds seeking to win three trophies. Madeley duly played in Reaney's right back position as Leeds missed out on the League to Everton, the European Cup in the semi-finals to Celtic and the FA Cup in the final to Chelsea, who won after a replay.
Having deputised so well for Reaney at club level, Madeley was asked by Alf Ramsey to take Reaney's place in the England squad for that summer's World Cup in Mexico, but Madeley politely refused, saying he wanted to rest and, as a stand-in, was unlikely to kick a ball.
For the 1970–71 season, Madeley was in the side in one position for all bar one of Leeds' matches in the League, with Leeds again missed out on in the last game of the season. Madeley scored in the first leg of the Fairs Cup Final of 1971 away in Turin. This goal along with a 1–1 score-line at Elland Road helped Leeds to triumph in the competition with Leeds winning on the away goals rule.
In the 1971–72 season, Madeley again found himself moving round the side as injuries and suspensions to his team-mates, and in the end he never missed a League match, though for a third year in a row Leeds failed to clinch the title on the last day of the season. In April 1972, left back Terry Cooper suffered a broken leg, so Madeley switched to the No.3 shirt for the season's end and the FA Cup final, which Leeds finally won with a 1–0 win over Arsenal.
Revie signed Trevor Cherry as a replacement for Cooper in the summer of 1972, and Madeley moved across to the centre of defence for much of the next season as Jack Charlton's distinguished career at Leeds wound down. He wore the No.5 shirt as Leeds lost the FA Cup final to Sunderland, and then switched back to the left wing and the No.11 shirt for the European Cup Winners Cup final a few days later in Salonika, which Leeds lost to A.C. Milan in controversial circumstances.
Leeds won the League in 1974 – Madeley missing just three matches – and even after Revie's departure that summer to take over the England job, got to their first and only European Cup final a year later, with Madeley in the No.5 shirt again.
Madeley was granted a testimonial season in 1977, and eventually retired from playing in 1980 with 711 appearances in all competitions to his name〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=15 March 2013 )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】accessdate=15 March 2013 )

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