About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 59. Chapters: Corinthian-Casuals F.C. players, Corinthian F.C. players, Alan Pardew, C. B. Fry, Harry Goodhart, Fred Spiksley, Crystal Palace National Sports Centre, Claude Ashton, Kevin O'Flanagan, Harry Daft, Martin Tyler, George Cotterill, R. E. Foster, G. O. Smith, Percy Melmoth Walters, Charles Bambridge, Percy de Paravicini, George Brann, Arthur Melmoth Walters, Max Woosnam, Graham Roope, William Cobbold, Roger Winlaw, Andrew Watson, Ricky George, Charles Wreford-Brown, Charles Plumpton Wilson, Alfred Bower, Cuthbert Burnup, Bernard Joy, Kenneth Hegan, George Smithies, Wilf Waller, Andy Gray, George Raikes, Nils Middelboe, John Veitch, R. Cunliffe Gosling, Giuseppe Funicello, John Frederick Peel Rawlinson, Queen's Club, Robert Mills-Roberts, John Dixon, Andrew Amos, Leslie Gay, Micky Stewart, Arthur Henfrey, Charles William Miller, Miles Jones, Povl Ahm, Benjamin Howard Baker, Tinsley Lindley, Lewis Vaughan Lodge, Hubert Ashton, Bertie Corbett, Thelwell Pike, Mike Pinner, Geoffrey Plumpton Wilson, John Smith, Norman Creek, Stephen Broad, Arthur Bambridge, Segar Bastard, Elphinstone Jackson, Keith Robson, Andre McCollin, Doctor Greenwood, Anthony Hossack, Leroy Griffiths, Walter Gilliat, Doug Insole, James Johnson, Ernest Bambridge, Percy Fairclough, John Challen, Arthur Knight, Billy Moon, Charles Campbell, Humphrey Jones, Graham Doggart, Norman Bailey, Norman Cooper, Frank Hartley, Basil Patchitt, John Knight, Tony Finnigan, Ralph Squire, John Lambie, Gordon Wright, Edgar Shearer, David Allan, William Oakley, Jack Laybourne, John Sutcliffe. Excerpt: Alan Scott Pardew (born 18 July 1961 in Wimbledon, London) is an English football manager and former player, currently the manager of Newcastle United. His highest achievements in the sport include reaching the FA Cup Final twice, as a player with Crystal Palace in 1990 and as ...