Drico
Player Valuation: £50m
The superb Nottingham Forest film of the great Brian Clough side, I Believe in Miracles, barely mentions their second European Cup win, either. It's simply that the main story - the rise from rags to riches - has been told by then and everything else is simply gravy.The DVD Howard’s way had next to no mention of that league title win.
I notice from this thread, with some surprise, that many fans here never really saw the 80s side as they were either too young or not even born. That really hits me. I'm 49 and the 80s side is really why I can sustain my fandom as an Evertonian. I started to follow Everton in 1980 when we were very poor. As a teenager, I had the privilege of supporting the greatest team in Europe. It keeps me going. I can't imagine what it is like to not know success. It allows me to feel that Everton are one of the biggest clubs in the land, but if I had missed the 80s I would say we were an inferior club to Leicester City. To me, Leicester, admirable as they are, are about the size of Norwich City or Crystal Palace. That's certainly what history says...
That said, back in 2006 when ESPN Classic started broadcasting on Sky, I had the foresight to record pretty much every Everton match that they showed from the mid-80s period. Their "Dead Good Match" series - reruns of Match of the Day - focused on 1984/85 and showed numerous Everton games from that campaign. I treasure those DVDs as sacred arteacts - evidence that we were a truly great club once upon a time.
One final aside: there was very little shown from 1986/87 - not because we were forgotten, but because there was very little televised football in that season due to the lack of a TV highlights deal. Match of the Day transmogrified into a live show and there were only a handful of live games shown. We featured three times on the BBC. If we are forgotten, it's because the highlights shows didn't exist as TV football changed in an era when football was a second-class sport.