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gavlin

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Posts posted by gavlin

  1. Alan Dick’s  book is a very interesting read and the paragraphs on the Keegan transfer. 
    Tony Collins watched Keegan play for Scunthorpe and immediately rings Dicks to say we have got to sign this kid. 
    Travels down over night and meets Dicks in the morning . They contact the Scunthorpe manager and agree terms only for Tony Collins to rain back and say I would like to see him play again. 
    Later the same day Bill Shankly buys him for Liverpool for £25000.

    Moral of the story trust your instincts!!!

     

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  2. 7 hours ago, LondonBristolian said:

    What I would say is the club have at least realised people are angry and they need to get a comms message out.

    At the same time, they've potentially set a rod up for their own backs here as the new manager has to

    a) play front foot, attacking, pressing football (i.e probably not Gary Rowett or Nathan Jones)

    b) reduce the number of injuries

    c) get the team up the league

    d) keep bringing young players through.

     

    To be honest, if they did all that, I'd be delighted and I might even hold my hands up and say maybe the club got it right and we got it wrong. But there are a lot of "ifs" there and, now they've set out the terms the new manager has to succeed on, they don't have a lot of room to justify themselves if those four things don't happen 

    You forgot 

    e) Once the young players play regularly for the first team sell them at big money and when the manager doesn’t like it . Sack him

  3. 2 hours ago, Curr Avon said:

    Is Gordon in this photo, which is taken from the second leg, not as quoted?

    Tottenham Hotspur 2 v Bristol City 0 - 1970

    English League Cup Semi Final First leg match at White Hart lane. Tottenham Hotspur 2 v Bristol City 0. (Spurs win 3-1 on aggregate). Martin Chivers (9) is hugged by teammate Martin Peters after scoring Spurs first goal. December 1970 . (Photo by Mirrorpix via Getty Images)
     

     

    Tottenham Hotspur 2 v Bristol City 0 - 1970

    Gordon Low left in 1968. He was captain of the City side that lost at White Hart Lane in 1967. 
    Gordon Low was a  no nonsense defender , rolled up shorts and sleeves . He and Jack Connor were at the heart of City’s defence in the first team I watched . 
    RIP Gordon . 

     

     

    IMG_1919.jpeg

    IMG_1918.jpeg

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  4. Loved playing youth football. Remember playing against the bottom in the league who had lost all 7 games and had a goal difference of 0 goals scored and 42 against them . 
    second half we  were leading 5-0 when the ball was past to me and thinking our goalie hadn’t seen much of the ball decided on a pass back . The ball took an awkward bounce went through his legs and into our net. We won 7-1 but got congratulated by the opposing side at the end as I was now there top goalscorer. 

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  5. Remember going to Elm Park on a night match and sitting with Reading supporters behind the dugout and several benches for the City staff and subs. The teams about to kick off at the start, a young City player sitting on the end of one of benches thinking Joe would sit in the dug out , wrong Joe strides out claps at the City fans at the open end then walks to where the kid was sat and barks, Aye young un move . 
    The poor kid’s reaction was like he saw a ghost!!!

  6. It was Ken Aston who was Head of the World Cup referees in 1966  also 1970 and 1974. He was the guy on the touchline who escorted Rattin off the pitch.

    Interesting fact about Ken Aston he was the person who came up with the yellow and red cards. Below is how he thought of the idea .

    On the trip, as he stopped at a traffic light junction at Kensington High Street, Aston realised that a colour-coding scheme based on the same amber/yellow ('stop if safe to do so') - red (Stop) principle as used on traffic lights would traverse language barriers and clarify to players and spectators that they had been cautioned or sent off.[3]

    Aston later explained that upon arriving at his home, he explained the dilemma to his wife, Hilda. She disappeared into the other room, only to return a few minutes later with two "cards" made of construction paper. She had cut them to fit into his shirt pocket. Thus was devised the system whereby referees show a yellow card for a caution and a red card for an expulsion, which was first used in the 1970 World Cup.

    These cards have also been adopted – with appropriate differences depending on the rules – in many other sports.

     

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  7. Interesting article in the Green Un from October 1975 City promotion year when City bank overdraft was at £200000 and their bank allowed them to stay at that level instead of selling players to halve the debt because they were near the top of the of the second division. 
    This shows the club were already financially precarious. 
     

    7AF92702-A526-4072-8A20-93C966B96E3F.jpeg

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  8. Thanks to Steve Sutor’s facebook old football photos for this image.

    This article was taken from the Green un in April 1972 . Four years before City gained promotion to the old First Division.

    You have to give Alan Dicks a lot of credit for the youth set up he initiated in the early 70s . 
    It worked last time , hopefully we are the road to the same happening again 

     

    E9DC139E-D604-4E80-8BF2-4FB6DC47EB7A.jpeg

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  9. Yes , let’s get back to early 70s and 2 pm weekday kick offs . Remember Millwall home , good crowd attendance and like me the number of kids that bunked off school made it all the better. No 9 bus from Hanham was packed to the rafters , poor conductor didn’t know what had hit him. Think it ended in a 1-1 draw. 

  10. I would think if you take the song by The Who "Tommy The Pinball Wizard" Ever since I was a young boy, I watched football , From Sheffield down to Brighton , I watched them all , But I ain't seen nothing like. He 's Tommy Conway and he sure plays a mean football. 

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  11. The eight saved the club on that day and they deserve the recognition but it was supporters that help resurrect the club in the months after with purchasing of shares to start off the new club . 
    Remember kids giving pocket money and adults putting savings toward buying shares of which I was one. It was a tremendous effort from the fan base to start the rebuilding of the new club . 

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  12. On 10/10/2021 at 12:01, italian dave said:

    The siege of the Alamo! The ball barely left our penalty box, never mind our half!!

    Battle of the Alamo, Got there late only place to watch was in the enclosure surrounded by Baggies supporters, scored just before half time a yes shout was met with dirty looks, half time one baggies supporters turned round and said "you haven't won yet" and watch Albion go second half. Well after watching them hit the post and cross bar 7 times and clearing off the line it was all summed up at the end by seeing Gerry Gow vertially crawling along and totally knackered City gave there all. The baggies supporter turned to me at the end and said with that luck you are going up. 

    • Like 1
  13. 11 hours ago, The Dolman Pragmatist said:

    I’m pretty sure that Danny Bartley played in Atyeo’s last match, the 4-1 win over Ipswich, and indeed supplied at least one of the crosses for Atyeo’s two goals (from a corner).

    Agree about Crowe and Savino though, certainly never played together. Crowe was later (with Quigley and McIlmoyle).

    Yes you are right it was Gordon Low who partnered Parr at the heart of the defence . 

  14. On 21/08/2021 at 22:33, stephenkibby. said:

    Yeah that was my introduction ,City in all red midfielders like Jonny Quigley,Bobby Kellard Chris Crowe and of coarse the likes of Parr Low and Danny Bartley running down the wing.

    Those early 70s was a struggle,a 1-0 win on a Tuesday night was a bonus but Fred keeping us in the division set it up for Dicks to have a go and see us through.

    Fred Ford was manager 1960 to 1967. 
    Took them up to Division 2 ( championship now ) in 1965 with a 2-0 win over Oldham my second home game . Then had a chance to take them to League 1 with City in the promotion mix but they lost to Southampton, another promotion challenger over Easter , first clash of fans in the East End that day, Finished there promotion push. 
    Unlucky for Ford,  Ayteo retired and left a hole that they didn’t fill and struggled for goals . Struggled the following season and Ford got the sack.

    It was Dicks who took over in 1967 a struggling side and for the next four or five seasons, battling relegation was the norm . 
    The first side I saw was Gibson, Drury, Ford, Crowe, Parr, Bartley, Savino, Rogers , Clark, Atyeo, Derrick 
     

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  15. Great player, always thought he had a big influence on Gerry Gow's early career and how he played from then on. Gritty determined and one of Alan Dick's best buys. Was a major influence in saving City from relegation in the late 60's. RIP  Bobby.

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