Farewell Sir Bobby
Tell you what. In an age of and angsty footballers slagging it's good to be reminded that football is at heart a simple and passionate game. I just wish that .
In days of yore , carrying out raids across the Scottish border as part of . Horrible we were. There must've been a happy fork in the family tree though but for us to end up with Sir Bob. (I probably stayed on the dark side).
The first time any of us noticed Bobby really was . Them bony Dutchmen looked about as likely to last an English winter as a couple of especially fey daddy-long-legs but Bobby knew how to pick tough lads as well as good ones. The 91Èȱ¬ tribute on Saturday night reminded you what a top team that was, and also what a desperate time it was for hair. Bobby consoling supersub Clive Woods was touching, but judging by the lad's barnet Clive could've done without climbing up them electricity pylons for a hobby.
Of course Sir Bobby's compassion and enthusiasm was no match for the tabloid tigers. It's hard to believe . I think part of the problem for any manager post-Ramsey was that . Mind you, and he never got the same flak. When it was announced by another follically-challenged character, the damp-voiced Graham Kelly, that Robson was off to PSV after 1990, were just ridiculous. I remember some plank repeating it down the Blue Bell after reading some bog-roll of a newspaper and the whole pub turned on him. Bobby may have been doing a crap job, but he was a good man through and through.
Turned out that Robson was doing a fine job, as it happened. When you look at it, Robson's teams were and away from a semi and a final in two successive World Cups. All right, , but van Basten's torturing of Tony Adams will live longer in the memory than any managerial failings.
Some say he got lucky but his career post-1990 suggests he was Dame Fortune's chosen son. Loads of gongs in , Portugal and at .
The reason the tears flowed so copiously in the Blue Bell (so that the whole place looked like an Edgbaston outfield) had less to do with the man's achievements and more to do with who the bloke was.
I can't think of a current manager who is so highly regarded as a human being. We can admire , but leaves a bit to be desired. He's not the most generous of blokes. Wenger's , is sometimes offset by the , and the odd tantrum about . Most of us , but it's similar to the , I reckon. and may mellow in their later years, but I don't reckon on them ever being quite so treasured as Sir Bob.
And that was what was striking about the tribute programme. Everywhere he went, whoever you spoke to, everyone smiled when he spoke to or about the bloke. I mean stuff the trophy cabinets with as much shiny metal as you like, earn more money than Midas could imagine, drive more fancy cars than the parking attendant at that a seven-star Dubai hotel, but if you come up in conversation and everyone says 'great career, bit of a pratt, though' then I'd be wanting to hand a lot of them back.
Bobby got both: fondness and rewards.
I've yet to meet a Toon Army regular who can understand . At the time the impatient wing on the Gallowgate were chuntering stupidly but by and large everyone understood it to be a blip. Just finished 4th, then 3rd, in the Prem, your manager's got an outstanding track record but we'll sack him anyway and bring in... . Like replacing a tube of strong adhesive with a bag of rusty nails. If a single decision in NUFC's recent history justifies their current position it's that one. just re-emphasises it.
But is on that balcony, pasty English beer belly on full display with his face squeezed so tightly between his palms that he looked like he'd got stuck in the lift doors. He looked more down than a bloodhound with a cold in the nose but it turns out the man was listening to Frank Sinatra on his headphones at the time (and probably pressing down as hard as he could on the earpieces to block out the sound of Gazza desperately trying to cheer his boss up with a quirky tune and some joke-shop boobs.)
They say behind every great man, there's a great woman (which means, according to me Blue Bell pals, that my missus must be downright mediocre) and clearly a man like Bobby needs a patient and very supportive wife to put up with his utter dedication to the game he loved, and to help him through the battles with illness too. I'm sure she's comforted by .
I think there's an unspoken feeling in them tributes that we won't see his like again in footy. He was a fine, fine man and, importantly in today's climate, he knew the value of fellowship - and of a quid. Farewell Sir Bobby. Top man.
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