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Ron HARRIS | 1970-1971 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)

HARRIS PES STATS | 1970-1971

electric_trigger Ron HARRIS | 1970-1971 Club: Chelsea Number: 3 Position: CB*,SB Nationality: English Age: 27 Foot: R Side: R Length: 175 Weight: 74 Attack: 55 Defence: 86 Balance: 91 Stamina: 85 Top Speed: 80 Acceleration: 82 Response: 84 Agility: 82 Dribble Accuracy: 73 Dribble Speed: 74 Short Pass Accuracy:76 Short Pass Speed: 76 Long Pass Accuracy:80 Long Pass Speed: 79 Shot Accuracy: 65 Shot Power: 77 Shot Technique: 68 Free Kick Accuracy:75 Curling: 69 Header: 77 Jump: 75 Technique: 78 Aggression: 64 Mentality: 90 Keeper Skills: 50 Team Work: 82 Injury Tolerance: A Condition/Fitness: 7 Weak Foot Accuracy: 5 Weak Foot frequency: 5 Special *Marking *D-Line Control *Sliding Ronald Edward Harris (born 13 November 1944 in Hackney, London), better known as Ron ''Chopper'' Harris, is a former English footballer who played for Chelsea in the 1960s and 1970s. Harris is widely regarded as one of the toughest defenders of his era - along with players such as Tommy Smith MBE and Norman Hunter - hence the nickname. The 1970 FA Cup final is notorious for being one of the most physical of all time, and it saw Harris come into his own in the role of both inspirational leader and uncompromising tackler. With Leeds having taken a 2-1 lead at Wembley with just six minutes remaining, it was his quick free kick which led to Ian Hutchinson's headed equaliser to take the game to a replay. During the replay at Old Trafford his late tackle on Leeds' playmaker Eddie Gray after just eight minutes (just one of many late tackles committed by both sides) left the latter a virtual passenger for the rest of the match: Chelsea eventually won 2-1 after extra-time. The following season saw Harris lift Chelsea's first major European honour - the Cup Winners' Cup - in another replayed final against Real Madrid in Athens. Chelsea also reached a second League Cup final in 1972, but surprisingly lost to Stoke in what proved to be his last major final for the club. While many of Chelsea's star players departed during the 1970s for various reasons, Harris remained an ever-present in the side throughout a decade which saw them relegated twice and promoted once, though he lost the club captaincy to the 18-year-old Ray Wilkins. He finally left Chelsea in 1980 to become a player-coach at Brentford, having played a record 795 games for Chelsea. He later had a brief stint as player-manager of Aldershot. Ron HARRIS | 1970-1971 | PES Stats Database (Golden Era Backup)

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This blog is dedicated to reviving posts from the "golden era" of PES Stats Database (2008-2010). This was possible thanks to Wayback Machine and my hard work.