Name:
John St JohnNickname: "
Ian", "
the Saint"

Country:

Scotland
Club:
Liverpool F.C.Position: *
CF, (optional
SS,
AMF)
Side: RF/BS
Age: 23-26 years (07/06/1938)
Height: 170 cm
Weight: 72 kg
Attack:
86Defence:
43Balance:
82Stamina:
81Top Speed:
82Acceleration:
84Response:
89Agility:
81Dribble Accuracy:
77Dribble Speed:
79Short Pass Accuracy:
79Short Pass Speed:
77Long Pass Accuracy:
74Long Pass Speed:
75Shot Accuracy:
86Shot Power:
80Shot Technique:
83Free Kick Accuracy:
60Curling:
69Header:
85Jump:
88Technique:
84Aggression:
87Mentality:
73Goalkeeper Skills:
50Team Work:
81Injury Tolerance:
BCondition:
7Weak Foot Accuracy:
5Weak Foot frequency:
5Consistency:
6Growth Type:
StandardCARDS:P13 - Goal Poacher
S01 - Marauding
S05 - 1-Touch Play
SPECIAL ABILITIES: Positioning - Reaction - Scoring - 1-touch Play
Attack/Defence Awareness: Attack Minded
INFO:St John was a centre forward and occasionally inside left. His professional career began in 1957 at Motherwell, where he made 144 appearances in four seasons, scoring 105 goals. He then had his most successful time at Liverpool, scoring 118 goals in 425 matches from 1961 to 1971. He retired in 1973 after short experiences in South Africa with Hellenic and Cape Town City, and in England with Coventry City and Tranmere Rovers. He capped for Scotland 21 times, scoring 9 goals.
Signed by Liverpool as a request from coach Bill Shankly who needed a proper centre forward, St John was a short but well built striker who could carry most of his weight upward to burst through the defence. He wasn't frightened of anybody, to the point that his bad temper caused him to sent off three times in league matches. He was strong, fierce, competitive, smart. His best asset was his deadly ability in the air due to his excellent positioning, perfect timing and reaction that enabled him to overjump much taller defenders and beat the goalkeeper with accurate, powerful headers. A great finisher, he was gifted with dynamism, and a notable close control even to stop difficult balls. Moreover, he was a great provider of goals thanks to his football brain and the ability to play effectively as deep lying creative midfielder. His most memorable moment was the decisive twisted, acrobatic header in mid-air that he scored in the second half of extra time during the 1965 FA Cup final against Leeds United.