Premier League

The day Sir Alex Ferguson subbed himself on to play for Man Utd

The day Sir Alex Ferguson subbed himself on to play for Man Utd

While Sir Alex Ferguson was a fine goalscorer is his days as a player, it’s probably fair to say his legs had gone by the time he was appointed Manchester United manager. But that didn’t stop him donning his boots and shinpads for one last time in what must be one of the most bizarre tales of his 27 years in charge of the club.

Fergie’s last hurrah as a player, if you can call it that, came during a strange mid-season trip to Bermuda for two friendlies in his first full season in charge of the club.

Travelling to the Caribbean in November 1987, United faced fixtures against Bermuda and Somerset Trojans, the latter of which was played on a cricket ground.

Ferguson was understandably not too keen on the trip in the first place and had previous experience of touring the Caribbean when in charge of St Mirren.

That tour featured Ferguson bringing himself on as a player to exact revenge on Guayana’s centre-back for his “cruelty” in “taking liberties” against St Mirren’s young striker Robert Torrence. Fergie was sent off for a challenge that left the defender rolling on the floor “like a dying man”.

After United beat Bermuda 4-1 in their opening match of the tour, injuries began to pile up – so much so that a British ex-pat came off the bench for United in one of the two friendlies – and Ferguson witnessed more violence in the second game when goalkeeper Gary Walsh suffered a kick to the head that Ferguson later suggested took the player years to recover from.

Ferguson was 45 at the time and his assistant Archie Knox was 40, but both men entered the fray in the second half.

“Archie was angry at the Walsh challenge and wanted to make his presence known,” former full-back Arthur Albiston told GQ in 2019. “Had he been 10 years younger he might have made a tackle!”

Knox got his revenge in a different way, scoring a long-range strike, while Ferguson also reportedly came close to scoring with a header in another 4-1 victory.

“It was humorous because at that time he was in his 40s and we were teasing him about how easy we could get past this old man,” former Trojans and Bermuda keeper Llewellyn Simmons told the Bermuda Sun in 2013.

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