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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/10/21 in all areas

  1. We all (except maybe dB) grew up hearing from old guys who themselves had heard from even older guys about the great players of the past but we never saw them play because they were gone before we went to matches. Somehow the names are so wired into our brains we feel we must have seen them or at least I do. Meiklejohn, McPhail and Morton are the prime examples but here’s the team: Jerry Dawson; Bert Manderson and Billy McCandless; Jimmy Gordon, David Meiklejohn (C) and Neilly Gibson; Sandy Archibald, Jimmy Smith, R. C. Hamilton, Bob McPhail and Alan Morton. I didn’t pick Dougie Gray, one of the most famous names of all, because I didn’t want to split the fullback partnership. “Two Irish backs you can’t get past” according to the fragment of the old song. What names have penetrated your brains to the extent of delusion? I don’t expect contributions from the Accountants. Nothing penetrates their brains.
    2 points
  2. Besides the obvious greats, my Dad always talks about Alex Scott in glowing terms. Maybe because be played for Bo'ness United before signing for Rangers. Scott scored 57 goals in 216 appearances for Rangers, including a Hat-trick on his debut, aged just 19. Scott would go on to win four league titles, one Scottish and two League Cups. He was also part of the Rangers side defeated by in the 1961 UEFA Cup Winners Cup Final scoring Rangers' only goal. The signing of the majestic Willie Henderson effectively ended Scott's Rangers career and he moved to Everton, then Hibs and finally Falkirk.
    2 points
  3. My paternal Grandfather was born in 1892, he was attending Ibrox by 1899. He passed in 1979 and left me a collection of Wee Blue Books. Often in the mid 60s-mid 70s, I would sit with him in Section G of the old Main Stand. It was the bunnet and raincoat brigade. Half time conversations featured Neilly Gibson, the consensus being he was the best ever to grace the hallowed turf. Grandpa was an absolute adherent. My old man had never seen Gibson play, he could not see past Baxter. Similarly Grandpa loved Meiklejohn or, 'the Meek' as he called him; Dad preferred gazelle-like Ronnie McKinnon or Willie Woodburn. I loved Dave Smith. I think we forget quite quickly how bad the Ibrox pitch became every season by mid-November? The constant pitch improvement began during the reign of Souness. Different times and circumstances produce different favourite players.
    2 points
  4. Just a pity he wasn’t available for selection. Brilliant winger. Springbok-fast, good ball skills (football was only one of his many sports) great crosser and penalty taker supreme. A hard act to follow but Davy Wilson managed it.
    2 points
  5. My own fathers favourite team was the one that won the cup I 1928 he had a framed photograph of it up on the front room wall . T. Hamilton Dougie Gray Bob Hamilton Jock Buchanan Davie Mekilejohn Tilly Craig Sandy Archibald Andy Cunningham Jimmy Fleming Bob Mcphail Alan Morton
    2 points
  6. Read a lot about Johnny Hubbard - South African, I think - and I feel as though as I had seen him. Likewise Don Kichenbrand, though I think both were living still when I was growing up. (You can tell it's international break, can't you?)
    2 points
  7. It shows that things could have been a lot worse. Ibrox and Auchenhowie could have been sold and then what state would the club be in now? Thankfully D&P did the right thing for us, even if it was for the wrong reasons.
    2 points
  8. Alex Scott at Bo'ness United. I had the fortune to meet Caldow 2hen I was doing a YTS at a builders yard in Linlithgow. He would drop into the office a few times a month and always took time out to talk about Rangers. This would be early 1984 and he would tell me to continue to follow follow and that the good days would return. Proud moment was when he walked past me at Ibrox and stopped to speak to me. Gentleman and a true Ranger.
    1 point
  9. I have the great mans autograph
    1 point
  10. Johnny Hubbard was a regular at Ibrox right up to his passing in 2018
    1 point
  11. I suppose Stein and to a lesser extent, Shankly in his early years, showed that transformation can happen without mega bucks. The Souness/Walter combination illustrates the cash injection brings success model. However it comes about, once the transformation occurs big money is needed to keep it going.
    1 point
  12. The question I want answered is why was Murray's offer to settle for a one off payment rejected when many clubs in England were accepted.
    1 point
  13. I also think Newcastle have previous in appointing former great players as manager and not working out for them. The best players in the world don’t want to go to the north east. They’d prefer to go to London or North West (Liverpool & Manchester)
    1 point
  14. I think if Lampard at chelsea whe i see this. Too soon for gerrard me thinks.
    1 point


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