Fabulous player for City and England: Unbelievable stamina allied to great skill & technique. The fact that his career was wrecked at 29 by injury leaves a few "what ifs"...
R.I.P.
And who wrecked it with a rough challenge??
Marion Ramsey, who starred as Office Laverne Hooks in the Police Academy franchise, has died.
Deadline reports that Ramsey's death at age 73 was announced by her management team. Although the cause of death has yet to be revealed, they noted that she had been ill recently.
And who wrecked it with a rough challenge??
Martin Buchan of Man Utd. The reds were getting a pasting at the time...
Jim McClean, Passed away before Christmas, Dundee United had a memorial for him today before their 2-2 draw with St Johnstone
Dundee United manager & chairman
Played for Hamilton, Clyde, Dundee & Kilmarnock then took a coaching job at Dundee, shortly after he was offered the managers job down the road at Tannadice - that was 1971, it was a role he stayed in until 1993 and took United from being a corner shop club to the heights of Europe.
Won the clubs first trophy (League Cup) in 1979, repeated it n 1980, then won the Scottish Premier League in 1983.
Got to semi final of the European Cup in 1984, losing 3-2 on agg to Roma after being 2-0 up at home - Roma have since admitted that they bribed the ref in second leg game which they won 3-0.
in 1987 beat Barcelona home and away on their way to the UEFA Cup Final, where they lost 2-1 on agg to IFK Gothenburg
Also produced other great European results such as beating Borussia Monchengladbach 5-0 (after a 0-0 draw) & Monaco 5-2 on agg (coming back from 2-0 down)
produced several great players, including the likes of Paul Sturrock, Andy Gray, Richard Gough, Ralph Milne, Paul Hergerty, Maurice Malpas & David Narey
Played a fantastic and admired style of play, was miles ahead of the game, getting in dieticians and analysts long before they were considered the norm
He also got the club to seven Scottish Cup finals, but unfortunately was unable to win that trophy (United finally won it the first year after he stepped down as manager)
Moved into role as Chairman after stepping down as manager, which lasted until 2000 when he took exception to a reporters question and thumped him!
Was also, along with Alex Ferguson, Scotland assistant manager to Jock Sten
To put his achievements into context, Dundee United get an average gate of around 8000 and had never won a trophy before he came along, he put the club on the map and made United fans of the 80s believe it was completely normal for them to reach at least the quarter finals of European competition every season
RIP Wee Jim and thank you
Screech AKA Dustin Diamond RIP. Succumbed to short battle of cancer at age 44
Too young an age to die. RIP.
Captain Sir Tom Moore, the World War II veteran who walked into the hearts of a nation in lockdown as he shuffled up and down his garden to raise money for healthcare workers has died after testing positive for Covid-19. He was 100.
Captain Sir Tom Moore, the World War II veteran who walked into the hearts of a nation in lockdown as he shuffled up and down his garden to raise money for healthcare workers has died after testing positive for Covid-19. He was 100.
THIS
When are the people in charge going to fix 'this' problem????????????????????????????????????????
Captain Sir Tom Moore to me reflects all that was once good in the UK. A real Officer & a Gentleman whom deserved his knighthood and his promotion in rank. I wish there were more like him in our world. Rest in peace Sir Tom, you have thoroughly deserved it and the respect and gratitude of a nation.
Bruce Taylor, former NZ cricketer aged 77. A top quality seam bowler & explosive late order hitter (2 x test 100s).
Former QPR & Newcastle United player Glenn Roeder has passed away aged 65. I saw him play at Loftus Road back in 1981 when our family made a trip to the UK. I was only 13 at the time but remember him sticking out as a really classy player. RIP
Very sad news. Met him a few times in London and in New Zealand.
Ian St John. And people thought Greaviesy would go first.
Former QPR & Newcastle United player Glenn Roeder has passed away aged 65. I saw him play at Loftus Road back in 1981 when our family made a trip to the UK. I was only 13 at the time but remember him sticking out as a really classy player. RIP
When I was a teenager, I saw him play for QPR on their 1983 tour of NZ at QE ll Park against a Canterbury 11.
QPR had just clinched the old 2nd Div. title to gain promotion to the top tier and I still remember their epic FA Cup Final battle against Spurs which went to a replay which they lost in 1982. One of the first FA Cup Finals my parents let me stay up to watch in the small hours on a Sunday morning on TV One.
A really good QPR side with Clive Allen up front - they brought their top team to NZ.
I think Roeder toured NZ again with Newcastle in 1985.
Always a class act.
https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-55954950
Born the same week as my dad in 1929.
Will be perhaps the most noted actor to be commemorated at the upcoming Oscars.
What a career - everyone will have seen him in a movie, no matter wht type of film you like, from "The Sound of Music" to comedies like "The Pink Panther", war movies and Star Trek.
And still going strong right to the end: he starred in 23 films in his last ten years, three in 2019 alone:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Plummer_filmography#Film
"He won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor at the age of 82 for Beginners (2010), becoming the oldest person to win an acting award, and he received a nomination at the age of 88 for All the Money in the World, making him the oldest person to be nominated in an acting category."
Described as having "great old-fashioned manners, self-deprecating humor and the music of words."
With such a work ethic, Plummer had been filming his leading role at home during the lockdown for season two of aptly-named TV mini-series "Departure" (he would have relished the humour in the title and his passing away) when he then passed away:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Departure_(TV_series)
Always sad to see such a young player go.
Leeds Utd legend.
Lots of clubs but mainly Huddersfield and Leicester (70 odd goals in 200 or so games)
when someone asks what you mean by a maverick player he's one of the one's you think of
Interestingly, he was born in my home town of Rome (his father worked for the US embassy there) and died in Naples (Florida).
His biography "Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's journey" is a great book and highly recommended to those who have an interest in space.
This leaves old Buzz Aldrin as the only surviving member of Apollo 11. How great would it be if Buzz were still alive in 2024 when the Americans are planning to put boots on the moon again (if they can make the deadline, that is).
Top English player
One of my favourite English players when i was a teenager in the early 1980's and Mariner was playing for Bobby Robson's successful Ipswich side, then Arsenal and was an important player for England at the 1982 World Cup in Spain.
Mariner also played in New Zealand, first touring with England B in 1978 and then returning towards the end of his career to play for North Shore in our national league.
His second wife was from Devonport and they met while Mariner was playing here.
ESPN FC football opinion show devoted most of an episode to him the other week.
He'd appeared on it regularly over the last decade.
Mariner's best mate was Steve Nicol the former Liverpool and Scotland player who still appears regularly on ESPN FC.
It was a very moving tribute by everyone on the show who new Paul (except Steve Nicol who took time off to mourn).
Shaka Hislop had tears streaming down his face....
Bobby Almond remembers marking Mariner on his All Whites debut in 1978:
https://www.odt.co.nz/star-news/all-whites-loud-mouth-friendly-faced-fuel-boy
"the defender became eligible to play for New Zealand and soon after made his All Whites debut in 1978 against a touring England B side at the Basin reserve in Wellington. The England B side featured the likes of Glenn Hoddle, Paul Mariner, Brian Talbot, Joe Corrigan and Alan Kennedy.
Almond says Mariner was one of the toughest strikers he ever had to mark. The two had a run in during the match in Wellington, which flowed through to the second match in Auckland.
“I rushed into a tackle with him and caught him on the nose. He had quite a large nose, but it was bigger after that . . . he got his own back in the game in Auckland when he did me in a tackle,” he said.
Passed away in January aged 88.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Arok
Hungarian immigrant who became one of Australia's preemminent coaches.
Involved in many classic 1980's battles with the All Whites.
in his autobiography published in the 1990's he rated All White Mike McGarry as the best foreign player ever to play in Australia's national league.
https://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/football/world-game/126081301/world-football-mourns-der-bomber-germanys-70s-goalscoring-machine-gerd-mller
For those that are familiar, he was one of the panellists on possibly my favourite television show - 8 out of 10 cats/does countdown. A great comedian.
R.I.P.
Charlie Watts RIP
I know, it's only rock and roll, but I like it
Harry Kent (cyclist)
A top bloke & player
One of Englands finest strikers
One of the best ever NZ footballers.
Famous and successful author.
Got most of his books (scathingly called 'Mills & Boon for boys' by a mate), and travelled to Africa 3 times, in no small part to being a fan of his stuff.