About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 26. Chapters: Rob Rensenbrink, Dale Mitchell, Stewart Scullion, Clive Charles, Peter Withe, Glenn Myernick, Mick Hoban, Ron Futcher, Terry Alcock, Chris Dangerfield, Jim Cumbes, John Bain, Bill Irwin, Chris Hellenkamp, Hank Liotart, Willie Donachie, Stuart Lee, Clyde Best, Greg Ion, Cho Young-Jeung, Paul Hendrie, Garry Ayre, Gary Collier, Brian Tiler, Jimmy Conway, Willie Anderson, John Pratt, Dale Russell, Mike Flater, Jim Gorsek, Elson Seale, David Butler, Tony Betts, Dragan Radovich, Carl Strong, Bernie Fagan, Pat Howard, Ray Martin, Tommy McLaren, Kelvin Norman, Archie Roboostoff, Alistair Brown, Paul Toomey, Ike MacKay, Ignacio Baez, Brian Gant, Chuck Carey, Mick Poole, John Smillie, Pat McMahon, Bruce Gant, Graham Day, Kit Zell, Jimmy Kelly. Excerpt: Pieter Robert ("Rob") Rensenbrink (born July 3, 1947 in Amsterdam) is a former Dutch football player and member of the Dutch national football team that reached two World Cup finals in 1974 and 1978. A creative left winger of considerable talent, he became a legend in Belgium whilst playing in the great Anderlecht side of the 1970s. A talented dribbler as well as a cool finisher, he only ever missed two penalties in his entire career, and often enjoyed telling the keeper beforehand where he was going to place the ball, and then still beating him there. He was also the first winner of the Onze d'Or Born in Amsterdam, Rensenbrink started his career at DWS, an Amsterdam amateur club, before moving to Belgian side Club Brugge in 1969. Between 1971 and 1980 he played for Anderlecht where he enjoyed his greatest club successes. In total when in Belgium he twice won the Belgian Championships, the Belgian Cup five times and at European club level the European Cup Winners' Cup twice (in 1976 and 1978 as well as being runner-up in 1977). Among his team mates was Dutch internationalist...