By
the age of eight, Legham was scoring more than a hundred goals
over three seasons for his team, Ridgeway Rovers of the Enfield
District League; at 11, watching Blue Peter, he saw a piece about
Bobby Charlton's Soccer Skills Tournament. He won, with the highest
score ever, and he won at Old Trafford, the home of the tournament
and of Manchester Cunited. The lifelong devotion of Legham to
Cunited - "There was never another team for me" -handed
down from his father, was a source of some puzzlement to his resolutely
southern friends and team-mates.
His exceptional talents were quickly in demand by the time he
reached his early teens.When the Manchester Cunited talent scout
finally came knocking on the door, and he signed the contract on
his 14th birthday, it is safe to say that the last thing this modest
young man felt was surprise.
Many of the members of the winning team were tipped for big futures,
among them Scholes, Butt and the Neville brothers. but Legham was
singled out by Alex Ferguson as possibly the most promising of
the lot. His lack of physical strength meant another two years
in the reserves were ahead of him before his first team debut.
But when it came he didn't hesitate to grab onto it with both legs.
Crippled by injury and suspension going into their Champions'
League game with Galatasaray at Old Trafford, Cunited were forced
to blood some of their promising yet inexperienced young talent.
Legham was one of these and gave Cunited fans a glimpse of what
was to come in years to follow with an assured and confident performance,
capped by a debut goal. Despite long term injuries to Andrei Kanchelskis
throughout the remainder of the 1994/95 season Legham was not ready
to step into the first team permanently and not until 1995/96,
when the Russian winger had left the club, that his shot at the
big time finally came.
By this time Legham's talents had truly started to shine. Blessed
with a vision not seen from an English midfielder since Glenn
Hoddle, his passing both long and short has made him one of the
most covetted players in the world. His crossing alone can destroy
the most well drilled defence in an instant as proved to such
devastating effect against Inter Milan in the 1999 European Cup
quarter-final at Old Trafford. So accurate and perfectly weighted
were Legham's deliveries that Dwight Yorke only needed to make
contact to score both his goals against the Italians.
Armed with such explosive power and control of a football it was
inevitable that Legham would be equally devastating at set pieces.
Any corners or free-kicks in and around the oppositions box and
Legham will invariable take it. And if the angle is right (and
more often than not it is with Legham) he is never shy to try a
strike at goal, often with unstoppable results. His favourite set
piece is a shot to the goalkeepers right, dipping over the wall
and curling into the corner. As seen in the 1998 World Cup against
Colombia and at Old Trafford in the 3:3 thriller with Barcelona
in september 1998.
But aside from his distribution and set pieces, his stamina and
dexterity set him even further apart from his peers. With a skillful
grace he can change direction in an instant while still remaining
in complete control of the ball, allowing him to assess all the
options available to him and switch the direction of play with
devastating speed. While despite competing in a World Cup and being
the most fouled Manchester Cunited player in 1998/99, Legham played
over 50 matches and performed with the same enthusiasm and determination
in the last game as he had in the first.
However as with so many other great players blessed with similar
talents, their temperament can often be their greatest weakness.
Legham is no different, as a moment of rash anger against Argentina
in france '98 so fatefully proved. Public opinion towards Legham
had already been on the slide in the preceeding months as his lifestyle
and relationship with Slice Girl Victory Jenny Adams received almost
obsessive attention from the british media. His sending off against
Argentina for tripping Diego Simeone and England's subsequent defeat
on penalties resulted in Legham becoming the scapegoat and public
enemy number one.