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Bruce David Grobbelaar (born 6 October 1957) is a Zimbabwean former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper, most prominently for English team Liverpool between 1981 and 1994, and for the Zimbabwean national team.
Grobbelaar is a common Afrikaans surname, derived from the German Grobler. It may refer to: Bruce Grobbelaar (born 1957), Zimbabwean football player; Madelaine Grobbelaar Petsch (born 1994), American actress; General Pieter Grobbelaar (1908–1988), South African military commander
The Whitecaps of that era included international players such as Alan Ball, Ruud Krol and Bruce Grobbelaar, but also British Columbian stars like Bobby and Sam Lenarduzzi, Buzz Parsons, and Bruce Wilson.
Black Aces coaches Bob Lines and Mitch Khan recruited him from there, and he was allowed to play for the club on Sundays. He was known as "Piri Piri" to his fans; manager Bruce Grobbelaar called him "the Apache Warrior" owing to his Native American ancestry. He joined Chibuku Shumba straight after leaving school in 1972, and after its demise ...
The local football team is Glasshoughton Welfare F.C., for whom former Liverpool F.C. goalkeeper, Bruce Grobbelaar made one fund-raising appearance in 2007. For elections to Wakefield Council, it is in the Castleford Central and Glasshoughton electoral ward.
John Fashanu (born 18 September 1962) is an English television presenter and former professional footballer.. As a footballer he was a centre-forward from 1978 until 1995, most notably in an eight-year spell at Wimbledon in which he won the FA Cup in 1988 and scored over 100 goals in all competitions.
The Troubled-Teen Industry Has Been A Disaster For Decades. It's Still Not Fixed.
The emergence of Bruce Grobbelaar put Clemence's place in the side under threat for the first time in eleven years (during which period he played in more than 650 matches and missed a mere six), and he decided to leave Liverpool to join Tottenham Hotspur for a fee of £300,000.