Imagine what they'd make of Cristiano Ronaldo's new galactic salary of £288,000 after tax.
The abolition of footballer's £20-per-week salary cap in England on January 18, 1961, was a defining moment in the history of the game's global wage rises.
Jimmy Hill, Fulham, 1953:£20 a-week
Yet in a PFA meeting to vote on strike action Bolton's representative Tommy Banks, who had been a miner, gave a speech in which he argued that although admired people in the mining community that didn't mean they could mark Stanley Matthews on a Saturday afternoon. The decision was unanimous and the cap was lifted.
Fulham's then chairman Tommy Trinder saw the publicity value of making his England midfielder the highest-paid player. Soon other clubs such as Manchester United and Liverpool, having initially decided to stick to strict wage caps, followed suit.
It came just in time with Italian clubs spotting the value in attracting star names and persuading the likes of Denis Law and Jimmy Greaves to leave England for bigger salaries. The competition forced clubs to offer higher and higher salaries to secure top players.
George Best, Manchester United, 1968: £1,000-a-week
The Bosman ruling in 1995 then had a dramatic effect on wage increases. Power shifted from the clubs to players when it was decided in the European Court of Justice that players finishing their contract at a club were allowed to leave for free. Agents could now demand their clients received greater wages based on their new employers saving money on their transfer fee.
Roberto Baggio, Juventus, 1990: £50,000-a-week
Sol Campbell, Arsenal, 2001: £100,000-a-week
It has continued to escalate from there, with other stars demanding wages matching their team-mates or counterparts at other clubs. Coupled with the money poured into the Premier League through TV rights, global sponsorship and merchandise sales; the spiralling season ticket costs and billionaire owners bankrolling their teams and with clubs like Real Madrid and Barcelona having a limitless overdraft from Spanish banks.
Carlos Tevez, Manchester City, 2009: £200,000-a-week
Wayne Rooney trumped him by threatening to move across the city, too, and was the first on £250,000. And now we have Ronaldo, but who knows where it will go from here.
Cristiano Ronaldo, Real Madrid, 2013: £288,000-a-week (after tax)
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