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#footballicon #footballhistory #footballlegends #football #manchesterunited #soccerplayer #premierleague #brendonbatson Today, he stands in the National Football Museum Hall of Fame, honored and respected. But even after decades of progress, Batson still carries six names he will never forgive. Not just players. Not just one bad opponent. Mentors who betrayed him, crowds who dehumanized him, and power figures who denied the system was broken. So how does someone get praised as a trailblazer today but still feel trapped by what happened back then? That answer lives in these six stories. If this story matters to you, if you want more deep dives into the names and moments that shaped football history, hit that Hype button and give this video some hype. Now let us get into the list, starting with the one that might surprise you most, because it is not even about racism. Number six is Ronnie Allen. This is the same Ronnie Allen who had an eagle eye for talent, the scout who insisted West Bromwich Albion sign Cyrille Regis. That decision changed football. So you would think Batson would have nothing but respect for Allen, right? Wrong. While Allen was brilliant at spotting talent, Batson says he was a joke as a manager. When Allen was reappointed as West Brom manager in 1981, some older fans and players treated him like a messiah. But the modern dressing room saw outdated training methods and a man living in the past. Batson saw something worse. Petty manipulation and ego. Allen used to wind up Tony Brown, one of the club legends, by telling him he would never break Allen's goal scoring record. That sounds like banter until you realize Allen was the manager who decided if Brown played. That is a conflict of interest wrapped in insecurity. Batson is clear in his autobiography. He just did not rate him. This was not about race. This was about professionalism and integrity. After the high standards Ron Atkinson set, Allen felt like a regression. Watching someone misuse power and let ego get in the way of developing players was unforgivable. Football demands better. Allen represents the failure of professional leadership, and Batson refuses to pretend otherwise.