Not the fact that he was one of the greatest footballers the world has ever seen. Nor the way he became one of football’s most successful and influential coaches at Ajax and Barcelona. No, what endeared him to me most was his attitude to traffic lights. Cruyff believed that most of the traffic lights in Barcelona were completely unnecessary, so he had a perfect right to ignore them. Anyone who has to drive in London where, I’d estimate, around 75% of traffic lights are completely unnecessary, will have great sympathy with this view. It was also no different from Cruyff’s attitude to defenders – they were not going to stop him from getting where he wanted to go. The Dutch master died yesterday and will be greatly missed. Red lights may have spelled danger for some people, but not for Johan Cruyff.
What I liked most about Johan Cruyff.

- A Christmas C...24th Dec 2015
- Ian Dury's Ch...21st Dec 2015
- Can Christmas...20th Dec 2015
- An essential ...19th Dec 2015
- Demise of the...18th Dec 2015
- Ground Contro...16th Dec 2015
- To St. Mark's...14th Dec 2015
- I often switc...13th Dec 2015
- (Very) ol' Bl...12th Dec 2015
- Christmas Hit...10th Dec 2015
- The card that...8th Dec 2015
- Adele.7th Dec 2015
- RIP Mike Allen.6th Dec 2015
- Leicester Cit...5th Dec 2015
- George Harris...4th Dec 2015 prev next