Banknote tribute to George Best

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Banknote tribute for Best




Tribute ... George Best, one of Britain's greatest footballers who died in November 2005 and who played for Manchester United and Northern Ireland, is appearing on a Northern Irish £5 note, though he won't appear on banknotes in the rest of Britain as the designs of £ notes are different in England/Wales (which are the same as each other) and also in Scotland


By VINCE SOODIN
October 26, 2006

SOCCER hero George Best will feature on a million banknotes being issued in Northern Ireland next month to mark the first anniversary of his death.

Ulster Bank said it would issue the five pound limited edition note a year after the celebrated Northern Irishman and Manchester United star died from multiple organ failure.

Best, soccer’s first superstar, will feature on the notes in his Northern Ireland and Manchester United strips.

“At the outset of this project we wanted to ensure that, in celebrating the life of this legendary footballer, we paid fitting tribute to his contribution to football in Northern Ireland and beyond,” Ulster Bank chief executive Cormac McCarthy said.

“By selecting the most affordable note denomination, five pounds, we have tried to make the notes as widely accessible as possible,” he said at the unveiling of the note’s artwork where he was joined by members of Best’s family.

Best, who underwent a liver transplant in 2002, died on November 25, 2005, at the age of 59 after a lifetime of heavy drinking.

He had suffered infection and internal bleeding and had problems with his liver and kidneys.

He once summed up his turbulent life in one memorable phrase: “I spent a lot of my money on booze, birds and fast cars. The rest I just squandered”.



thesun.co.uk
 

Daz_Hockey

Council Member
Nov 21, 2005
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He was also a dirty wife-beating drunk who wasted a dead person's liver, he had more chance than most people in Ulster, and he wasted it all with his drinking.

He, in my book, and most other people's book, deserves no respect whatsoever.

Daz