Watched Paul McGrath playing for Man UTD IN the mid/late 80’s I was a kid from Chorlton a couple miles from United ground and he was a class player and probably was let go from UTD to early as he went and had a couple good seasons with Villa.UTD legend🇾🇪
A brave man. No need to beat him up. Paul does it himself believe me. Stay sober. You're A family guy, get drunk on you're family. Of course he's Irish. He's honest. He doesn't need to go in to detail but we know the score. Giants Stadium, New Jersey, his greatest achievement.
proper legend - remember him when he was at united, i was just a kid but he was my fave player, no messing about. shame he was moved on by Fergie - proper player.
Legend but that sad thing about this is the audience. Us Irish find tge alcohol element funny. Almost like you were getting the drink in again haha. We real are a sad bunch.
I think you're wrong because the audience didn't know where Paul was at with his drinking. He responded 'ah yeah' when asked a question about his drinking when he retired and the audience laughed because it was in the past. When he started talking about the present they weren't laughing.
I'm not Irish but I sensed that the audience was listening carefully. Btw that laughter was modest and supportive rather than loud and careless, ppl in general do that to make a person feel more comfortable. In that case Paul McGrath
@@evilkhamzat cheers m8. I thought the interview was excellent, and rather touching. I know Tommy Tiernan from standup stuff, but huge gaps in my knowledge when it comes to Ireland and UK football.
@@danieljm41McGrath was a top notch footballer and a shy guy with a big alcohol problem. His ma was Irish, his da wasn't, he was black but I dunno what country he was from. I think it's Nigeria. He's loved in Ireland for his achievements and his personality.