Quote Old Feller="Old Feller"& Sam Smith's Old Brewery bitter knocks spots off Tetley's.
I agree with all the plaudits foir Leeds Brewery's ales.
I also now have a soft spot for Adnam's ales.
On a point of information you can get Marston's pedigree on draught in the Long Room when the Cricket is on at Headingley & occasionally in the Rhinos' 2000 bar or whatever it's called these days.
Alternatively if you can't stomach the Carlsberg p*ss offerings on sale, try the Guiness, sadly only the extra cold is now on offer but infinitely preferable to the Danish rubbish on offer.'"
I was nodding in agreement about Sam Smith's, Leeds Brewery and Adnams ... then you mentioned Guinness.
That's not beer, it's nitrokeg mock-stout, a triumph of Blarney advertising.
Anyway, back on topic.
Many have mentioned how far apart decent pints of Tetley's were but there were dozens of places you could get a decent pint of it. You could hardly move in coughHunsletcough for places that sold good Tetley's.
When I did the pub hunt, I don't recall getting a bad pint anywhere and that was twenty pubs for a start.
(I didn't get the T-shirt, for some reason I got a Tetley's bath towel

)
Back then my two favourites were Tetley's and Boddington's but my taste (and I guess, the average bitter-drinker's taste) has changed since then and I prefer a more-strongly hopped beer nowadays, such as Timothy Taylor's Landlord.
Or, if fancy a lighter, session beer, Copper Dragon's Golden Pippin takes some beating.