Former Liverpool and Scotland striker Ian St John, who followed a stellar career on the pitch by becoming a hugely popular and successful TV presenter, has died on Monday aged 82 after a long illness, the Premier League champions said on Tuesday.
St John was one of Liverpool’s leading players of the 1960s and later went on to become a popular presenter of “Saint and Greavsie”, a lunchtime football show with former England striker Jimmy Greaves.
The Scot was a key part of the Liverpool team managed by Bill Shankly, earning promotion to the top flight in his debut season after joining for a then club-record fee of £37,500 ($52,000) from Motherwell.
St John scored 118 goals in more than 400 games for Liverpool from 1961-71. His most famous goal was the extra-time winner in Liverpool’s 2-1 win over Leeds United in the 1965 FA Cup final, a diving header which secured the club’s maiden Cup triumph in an era when that competition enjoyed huge status.
He was also part of the team which won the league title the previous year, Liverpool’s first since 1947, and again in 1966. St John epitomised Shankly’s team, combining skilful and clear play with a combative approach.
“Clever, canny, bags of skill, made things happen. Liked a scrap too. Jesus, did he like a scrap,” Shankly once said. St John made 21 appearances for Scotland, scoring nine goals, one of them coming in the famous 6-2 win against Spain in Madrid in 1963.