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Offline vb

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Re: Condolences Thread
« Reply #540 on: June 26, 2015, 12:45:07 PM »
My condolences SH.

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Offline soccerman

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Re: Condolences Thread
« Reply #541 on: June 26, 2015, 02:59:04 PM »
Sorry about your loss Stephen Hart and Corbin, may they RIP.

Offline Deeks

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Re: Condolences Thread
« Reply #542 on: June 26, 2015, 03:46:11 PM »
Condolences to the Corbin family.

Offline KND2

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Re: Condolences Thread
« Reply #543 on: June 26, 2015, 04:54:36 PM »
92 year celebrate...what a milestone

Offline duscam

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FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #544 on: July 23, 2015, 05:37:44 PM »
Former National and Defence Force footballer Gerard Ramey aka Gerry Forde was killed last night by a gunman in Maracas St. Joseph. He was my neighbor growing up and used to play right back for our country. He was around the time right before Strike Squad and was also a staple for Defence force.

He was 49. The story got a mention in the express but they didn't know he was a former national footballer. RIP.

Offline Controversial

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #545 on: July 23, 2015, 05:45:38 PM »
Former National and Defence Force footballer Gerard Ramey aka Gerry Forde was killed last night by a gunman in Maracas St. Joseph. He was my neighbor growing up and used to play right back for our country. He was around the time right before Strike Squad and was also a staple for Defence force.

He was 49. The story got a mention in the express but they didn't know he was a former national footballer. RIP.

My condolences.. My moms family is from maracus, where was he killed?

Offline duscam

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #546 on: July 23, 2015, 07:52:47 PM »
On Wednesday night, Gerard Ramey was found dead in a vehicle with multiple gunshot wounds.

Police said Remy, 49, lived at Third Street, Barataria.

He was found at Sombadora Road, Acono Road, Maracas, St Joseph.

Officers were called to the area at around 11 p.m. when a black AD wagon was found parked in bushes at the side of the street.

Ramey had gunshot wounds to his head and upper body, and was slmuped in the driver's seat.

He was an employee of the San Juan/ Laventille Regional Corporation as apart-time watchman.

Police said last night Ramey and another man were on duty at a WASA site near where he was killed.

Officers were told that shortly before 11 p.m. he received a phone call from someone who asked him for a lift and he left driving the vehicle he was found in.

Copied from online express..

Offline Controversial

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #547 on: July 23, 2015, 08:01:05 PM »
On Wednesday night, Gerard Ramey was found dead in a vehicle with multiple gunshot wounds.

Police said Remy, 49, lived at Third Street, Barataria.

He was found at Sombadora Road, Acono Road, Maracas, St Joseph.

Officers were called to the area at around 11 p.m. when a black AD wagon was found parked in bushes at the side of the street.

Ramey had gunshot wounds to his head and upper body, and was slmuped in the driver's seat.

He was an employee of the San Juan/ Laventille Regional Corporation as apart-time watchman.

Police said last night Ramey and another man were on duty at a WASA site near where he was killed.

Officers were told that shortly before 11 p.m. he received a phone call from someone who asked him for a lift and he left driving the vehicle he was found in.

Copied from online express..

real sorry to hear about that... my prayers go out to his family and friends.. st joseph is no longer safe... acono rd is badjohn central...

Offline Fyzoman

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #548 on: July 24, 2015, 10:25:46 AM »
Gerard (George) was on the "original" U-16 team with Latas, Faustin, Marcelle et al. He played for Army too. His "batch" was my boy so I -as did many Fyzo people-got to know him. Good soldier he was...R.I.P. Remy.
« Last Edit: December 25, 2015, 08:47:12 AM by Fyzoman »
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Offline Deeks

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #549 on: July 24, 2015, 12:54:47 PM »
Don't know the guy! But condolences to the family. RIP.

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Re: FORMER National footballer slain last night
« Reply #550 on: July 24, 2015, 03:44:33 PM »
Gerard (George) was on the "original" U-16 team with Latas, Faustin, Marcelle et al. He played for Army too. His "batch" was my boy so I -as did many Fyzo people-got to know him. Good soldier he was...R.I.P. Randy.

If he played in that era and held his own, he had to be damn good.

May he RIP.

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The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #551 on: August 28, 2015, 07:41:14 PM »
Alcides Ghiggia
December 22 1926 - July 16 2015

Alcides Ghiggia, footballer - obituary
The Telegraph




Alcides Ghiggia, who has died aged 88, scored the goal which won Uruguay the 1950 World Cup.

“Only three people have silenced the Maracanã,” Ghiggia liked to quip, referring to the 200,000-capacity stadium built for the tournament: “The Pope, Frank Sinatra – and me.” That year, the format used to decide the destination of the trophy was a round-robin series between the four winners of the pool games. Hosts Brazil went into the last match, against neighbours Uruguay in Rio de Janeiro, needing only a draw to win the competition.

Having swept aside all opposition, the Brazilians were hot favourites. A leading Brazilian newspaper went so far as to print a photograph of the side on the morning before the match captioned “Champions of the World”. But Uruguay’s captain Obdulio Varela made a rousing speech and then invited the players to urinate on the offending newsprint.

Brazil took the lead shortly after half-time through Friaca. But on the right wing Ghiggia – all moustaches and tango dancer’s poise – was certain that he had the measure of the full-back Bigode. In the 68th minute, he slid in a cross for Juan Alberto Schiaffino to equalise.

Then with 11 minutes remaining, he skipped around Bigode and into the penalty box. “The goalkeeper, Moacir Barbosa, thought that I was going to cross it, like with the first goal,” he recalled. “So he left a gap between himself and the near post. I just had a second, so I shot low between the keeper and the post.

“There was complete silence. It was like the crowd was frozen still. It was like they weren’t even breathing. That was when I realised that they weren’t going to do it and we’d won.” Brazil’s defeat was regarded as a national humiliation. Pele afterwards said that it was the first time that he saw his father cry, and several suicides were reported.

The blame was spread widely and even the team’s white strip was replaced by the now familiar gold-and-green. Barbosa was ostracised, complaining five decades on that he had served 20 years more than the maximum prison sentence. He eventually bought the goalposts from the Maracanã and held a barbecue over them.



 Ghiggia was set upon after the game and returned home on crutches. More than fifty years later, he was passing through customs at Rio when the young official examining his passport asked him if he was the Ghiggia who had scored the winning goal. “I said: 'Yes, but it was a long time ago.’ And she put her hand on her heart and said: “No, no, it still hurts us here.”

Alcides Edgardo Ghiggia was born in Montevideo, Uruguay, in 1926. After starting to study electronics at university, he joined the leading club Peñarol in 1946. He forged a formidable partnership with Schiaffino in a strikeforce which in 1949 won the championship after scoring 62 goals in 18 matches.

After claiming another domestic title in 1951, he was banned from Uruguayan football for a year after thumping a referee and decided to move to Italy to re-build his career. He played for Roma for eight seasons – tucking a photograph of his mother inside his socks – and made the most of his time there in the era of the Dolce Vita. He owned three Alfa Romeos and became friends with Gina Lollobrigida. In 1957, he was made team captain, but soon after was caught in a car in compromising circumstances with a 14-year-old girl who later that year bore him a child. He was given a two-month sentence for lewd conduct.

After winning the Fairs Cup with Roma in 1961, Ghiggia moved to Milan. He only played four matches for them but these qualified him for a champions’ medal that season. His forebears had come from the Ticino region of northern Italy and after being naturalised in record time he also played five games in 1958 for the national side, in which he was reunited with Schiaffino.

Ghiggia returned to Uruguay and played in the top flight until he was 42. His jobs thereafter included being an inspector at Montevideo’s casino and manager of a supermarket. At 85, he survived a crash with a lorry which put him in a coma for a month.

In 2010, Ghiggia was honoured with a ceremony at the Maracanã in which a mould of his feet was placed alongside those of Pele, Eusebio and Beckenbauer. He died on the 65th anniversary of his most famous match, while talking – his son said – about football.

His first marriage ended in divorce and his second wife predeceased him. He is survived by his third wife, Beatriz, and two sons.

Alcides Ghiggia, hero of Uruguayan soccer, dies at 88
The Washington Post




Alcides Ghiggia, the Uruguayan soccer great who scored the winning goal in a stunning 2-1 victory over Brazil in the final game of the 1950 World Cup, died July 16 in the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo. He was 88.

His son, Arcadio Ghiggia, said his father died of a heart attack.

Mr. Ghiggia’s goal broke a tie in the 79th minute. It gave Uruguay its second World Cup title in a match Brazilians fully expected to win before about 200,000 fans at Rio de Janeiro’s Maracanã Stadium. Even a draw would have given Brazil the title. The loss is still known in Brazil as the “Maracanazo.”

Mr. Ghiggia also set up Juan Schiaffino’s tying goal in the second half.

“Only three people have silenced the Maracana,” Mr. Ghiggia once said of his game-winning goal. “The pope, Frank Sinatra and me.”

He was the last surviving Uruguayan player from the match and poignantly, he died on the 65th anniversary of the game. When he turned 80, he was honored by the Uruguayan congress, still a national hero a half-decade later.

Though Mr. Ghiggia was viewed as the nation’s top soccer idol, he played only 12 times for the national team and scored just four goals — all in the 1950 World Cup.

Alcides Edgardo Ghiggia was born Dec. 22, 1926, and quickly emerged as a right winger with pace who could outrun defenses. He started his professional career with the Uruguayan club Peñarol. He later played in Italy with Roma and AC Milan. Because of his Italian roots, he also played several matches with the Italian national team.

Mr. Ghiggia was visibly overwhelmed when he was honored in 2009 at the Maracana, placing his footprints in a plastic mold along with other greats of the game, including Pelé, Eusébio and Franz Beckenbauer.

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #552 on: August 28, 2015, 07:56:05 PM »
Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder
March 3, 1933 – August 17, 2015

Former DFB President Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder dies
Deutsche Welle




The former president of the DFB, Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder, has died aged 82. He was one of the most influential figures in German football through the 1970's, 80's and 90's both at club and international level.

"We have lost one of the most influential figures in the history of German football."

The words of now DFB (German FA) president Wolfgang Niersbach on the news of the death of Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder, aged 82. The former club president of VfB Stuttgart passed away in his hometown of Stuttgart, his family announced on Tuesday.

From 1975 to 2000 Mayer-Vorfelder, who was often referred to as "MV," was the club president of Bundesliga club VfB Stuttgart. After his quarter of a century working at the top of the The Reds, he became president of the DFB and worked from 2001 to 2006, having been joined by Theo Zwanziger for his final two years of work before his retirement.

Mayer-Vorfelder was also for many years a member of the European Football Union (UEFA) and an executive of FIFA. Current FIFA president Joseph Blatter, tweeted the above message, mourning Mayer-Vorfelder's death. "FIFA Honorary member Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder, a great, has left us. Your life's work will always be remembered."

"MV" also worked as a CDU politician for eleven years, starting as a minister of Badem-Württemburg in 1980. He then moved to the finance division, which he headed for seven years until 1998. He is survived by his wife Margit and their four children.

"I've known him for all these years as an always straight, resolute and competent person," said Wolfgang Niersbach. "He worked with great dedication to the sport and always met the needs and views of the players under him. His ideas and commitment to football have given important impulses from which we still benefit today."

Former German football association chief Mayer-Vorfelder dead
Business Standard


Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder, honorary president of DFB, the German football association, has died at the age of 82, the federation confirmed in an official statement on Tuesday.

The former DFB president died on Monday in a hospital in Stuttgart, and is survived by his wife Margit and his four children, reports Xinhua.

Mayer-Vorfelder was a well-known German sport official. He was from 1975 until 2000 president of Stuttgart, who lifted two German championships and one German Cup during his presidency.

Mayer-Vorfelder became the DFB president in 2001, following his election in Magdeburg, before he left the German football association in 2006 after monitoring the organisation of the FIFA World Cup in Germany. He was besides that member of the FIFA executive committee and vice president of the UEFA.

"His ideas and efforts gave the soccer impulses, from which we all benefit today. The recent successes, such as winning the World Cup, are the outcome of Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder' s efforts," DFB president Wolfgang Niersbach said.

Due to his contributions to the German football, Mayer-Vorfelder was been named (sic) as the honorary president of the DFB in 2007.

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #553 on: August 30, 2015, 08:39:12 AM »
On August 25, Sepp Blatter wrote to the Honduran federation (cc: CONCACAF) to express his condolences on the passing of Germán Enrique Centeno Reneau. Reneau represented Honduras during 1998 WC qualifying and at the 1996 Gold Cup. He was 44.

Ordinarily, the next item would probably escape mention, but since Big Mag's post addresses the presence of Honduran players in post-Katrina recovery ... it should be noted that Reneau was also in New Orleans.

He died a week ago today, following a tenuous experience with paralysis and eventually respiratory failure.

Update: Reneau scored 69 goals in the Honduran league, lead Victoria to its only championship, and also won league titles with Real Espana, Olimpia, and Marathon (colectively a record).

He was the first Honduran to score in the Azteca Stadium during WC qualifying. See video at @ 4:22.

Video of his exploits.
« Last Edit: August 31, 2015, 10:27:34 AM by asylumseeker »

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #554 on: September 02, 2015, 12:27:04 PM »
C.K. Gyamfi: Legendary Ghanaian footballer and coach dies
BBC Sport




Legendary Ghanaian former footballer and coach C.K. Gyamfi has died aged 85 (sic).

Gyamfi was the first African player to play in Germany, when he joined Fortuna Dusseldorf in 1960, and he also captained the Black Stars.

As a coach he won the Africa Cup of Nations three times with Ghana - in 1963, 1965 and 1982. It made him the most successful African national team coach, unequalled until Egypt's Hassan Shehata also won a third Nations Cup title in 2010.

The Ghana Football Association said on Twitter: "It's with great sadness that we learnt of the passing of the legendary Ghanaian coach and footballer C.K. Gyamfi.

"The GFA is immensely hurt by the loss of such a talented footballer and coach who shaped the lives and careers of many Ghanaian footballers.

"We wish to extend deepest condolences to the family of CK Gyamfi and most importantly to his wife, children, friends and loved ones."

The Big Interview: “We played our part,” says Ghana legend CK Gyamfi
By Fiifi Anaman, Goal Ghana


This interview was conducted two years ago.



The man who guided Ghana to win its first African title and added two more welcomed Goal Ghana to his residence to reminisce his glory days and his thoughts about today’s football

Ghana’s first African Cup triumph occurred almost 50 years ago.

The man who was in charge of that team went on to win it a further two times, in 1965 and 1982, making it a then record hat-trick of triumphs, cementing his place in the pantheon of not only African but world football coaching legends.

Charles Kumi [CK] Gyamfi, now 84, looks back on his achievements and feels proud, and humbled, in a beautiful emotional paradox that can only be appreciated if you see how he talks about it. He sits in his living room, close to a cabinet that holds many FIFA documents from his time as a technical director in the late 90s, as well as many framed photos from his playing and coaching days.

Young CK Gyamfi
“I thank God for making me so because I never thought I will get to the place I am today. I feel very happy and feel blessed by the almighty,” he tells Goal Ghana in an interview. “I don’t stress too much about what people think about me. I do things to make myself and the people around me happy.”

CK has long been known for his achievements from the dugout, but unknown to many, he was equally as good on the pitch. His talent shown as early as when he was a seven-year-old playing with the senior team of his school. With his talent in hot demand, he would later represent Accra Great Argonauts, Koforidua Sailors Football Club, Accra Standfast, Cape Coast Mysterious Dwarfs as well as both of Ghana’s two traditional giants, Asante Kotoko and Hearts of Oak.

“I was a very young boy when he played football. Everyone talked about just how good he was as a footballer. He was a star. He’s one of Ghana’s greatest ever footballers,” ‘Sir’ Cecil Jones Attuquayefio, a celebrated Ghanaian coach, who cites CK as his biggest influence and mentor, tells Goal Ghana.

Learning the trade
CK left for Germany in August 1969 after German top division club Fortuna Dusseldorf had played a friendly with his club Hearts of Oak. He would become Ghana’s first ever footballer to play professionally in Europe, dazzling German fans with his breathtaking talent and earning the nickname “Tunda Vita” (Thunder weather) for his powerful shooting ability.

Interestingly, Ghana’s then Amateur Football Association, under the leadership of legendary administrator Ohene Djan, arranged for him to be groomed as a coach in Cologne, which was at the time the world’s most reputable center for the training of coaches, inspired by the great German coach Hennes Weisweller.

It was all part of then Ghana president Kwame Nkrumah’s grand scheme of things; a plan to express pan-Africanism through football. Ghana’s Black Stars was to be Africanised; a native team managed by a native coach, to spread Nkrumah’s popular catchphrase that “the black man can manage his own affairs".

Nkrumah was such a great man, he loved sports so much. He loved us (the Black Stars) so much too. We worked for him. Whenever we were beaten, he would become very upset,” CK says, looking at a framed photo of Kwame Nkrumah and himself, where the former has his hand on the latter’s shoulder, seemingly congratulating him for his good works. “He was always there and supportive of everything we did. He liked the players very much, whenever he met you, he would talk to you. This made us so energetic. We were always prepared to die for Ghana.”

On CK’s return in September 1960, he was made a player-team manager of the Black Stars, as well as given the opportunity to understudy expatriate Josef Ember, whom he eventually succeeded. His ascent to head coach status, the first black to achieve that in the Republic of Ghana, occurred when he was barely a 34-year-old. He started out as a player-coach, eventually phasing out his on the pitch duties to fully concentrate on training the team. Public expectations of the team – “you always had to win!” - like today, were high, and young CK knew he had to have no distractions. He knew he had to leave no stone unturned.

In June 1962, CK was sponsored to go and study the training methods of Brazil’s National team - a team including the game’s greats such as Pele, Garrincha and Didi, who had won two World Cups. Ghana’s football top hierarchy wanted to know what the Brazilians had done to become so beautifully dominant. They wanted in on some success too.

“The players are dedicated and the programmes are tough and stiff,” CK had observed then. “They run through mountains and valleys regularly before starting with tactics. It is no joke at all. I prize this opportunity highly and I hope Ghana players will benefit from my experience.”

His players did benefit from his experience. CK, though with a team many claimed had been prepared by Ember, went on to win the Uhuru Cup in Uganda, the West African Gold Cup, and finally, the Holy Grail; the Africa Cup of Nations, hosted by Ghana in 1963. At that tournament, CK was the only black coach – his winning of the trophy representing victory and justification for Nkrumah’s beliefs.

Tribute to a fekkow legend
The team that won that historic first African Cup for Ghana unfortunately missed one influential member.

Baba Yara, affectionately known as the “King of Wingers”, had been part of the contingent of Ghanaian top flight power club Real Republikans FC (formed with the best players from every other club, in Nkrumah’s image) that had suffered an accident after a league game in March 1963.

Yara, whose legendary name is now on one of Ghana’s biggest stadiums in Kumasi, home of his club Asante Kotoko, had not been lucky. He became paralysed after the accident, and was flown to the UK for treatment. He returned later, his once magical legs immobile and helplessly confined in a wheel chair.

CK talks about Yara with so much respect, so much admiration and so much awe. He thinks Yara is the best footballer Ghana have ever produced.

“Has to be him,” he says without a scintilla of doubt or hesitation. “Baba was always careful and he had so much understanding. You could always work with him the way you liked it. He would go so hard; he would never tell you he’s tired, no matter what.”

CK had played with Yara before later coaching him. “He was a great player, very stylish. He was very humble and respectful too.

“Whatever you would teach, he would try to learn. When I was leaving the football scene, I was very much disturbed about my exit because of him. He was such a nice boy.”

Unfortunately, that accident and the subsequent paralysis signaled the end of an iconic career for Yara. It was a cruel arrangement by fate that it happened nine months before the National team, of which he was arguably its marquee star, won its first African Cup.

CK recalls: “We all called on God to have mercy on him. Sometimes we would pass by his place after close of training. It was very painful. Very painful.

“When he was taken out from hospital, we were there for him. Anything that he wanted was supplied to him by management. We had to give him a chance to relax. A few years later he died. That was the end of him.”

CK’s glowing tribute to Yara is deep, something he barely thinks about before saying. Something that flow naturally. Something so engaging.

“He liked laughing a lot. I cannot even describe him. We were lucky to be very close with him during his playing days. We know just how good he was. He was so flexible, and if a player is flexible, he can do anything you would like him to do - bending, jumping and other things that are necessary for the team. He could do all things by himself. It was very sad what happened to him. Very sad.”

Insight into success' salient ingredients
Talking about Yara, CK tries to reflect on how the brilliant King of Wingers’ values was a microcosm of how every player was during his coaching days, and also of the spirit in camp - Hard work, humility, respect, focus, and commitment.

“Most of the young players these days don’t put all their heart in it, so they climb a little and they start falling. Some don’t respect their elders too. And that’s very bad. Otherwise we would have a lot of good players over here in Ghana these days.”

CK goes on to talk about what he discovered as the key to a successful national team, something that the current generation seems to lack. Ghana have gone 31 years without the African Cup since he last won it.

“It all depends on the contact between the players and management; that’s very important. If the management is ok, then the playing body will also be okay. Vice versa. Whole thing depends on the team, management, players. You have to have people who are concerned with whatever happens and take it serious. They must know each other, work together and play together so that when they get on the field, the fluidity will be there.”

He talks about the little things that made his team a delight to watch, and a constant threat in every competition they played in. “We loved each other. There was nothing like arrogance and disunity; no one would say “menim bor kyen wo!” [I’m a better footballer than you are!] No.”

“Everyone in the team was a star. I had certain boys in the team who were very good, and you had to use your head and try to get those people into positions that they loved and that worked for them and for the team. If you went in and you used who you liked where you wanted, then you would obviously be destroying yourself,” CK states.

“If you did the job very well, you’d find out that you would have your players support, trust and confidence – that way, things would fall into place and they would do whatever you ask them to do.”

And his job was made much easier with the intelligence of his players. “When I used to travel, I would bring back many systems for us to learn and try out. The players had a deep understanding of the game, it was so easy to impart knowledge.”

Faith and confidence in our own
CK is disappointed with Ghana’s constant preference for expatriate coaches, something that seems to have become entrenched in our thinking. The culture, he argues, basically says the black man cannot manage his own affairs, a blatant lack of adherence to Nkrumah’s belief in the 60s that made Ghana a fearsome force - a force which became widely known as the “Brazil of Africa.”

The matter is most dear to his heart because he is been a victim of it before; he was surprisingly a second choice on the scale of preference when the Ghana Football Association was about appointing a coach for the Senegal 1992 African Cup. German Burkhard Ziesse was preferred over CK – despite the latter’s glowing and much superior C.V.

“Why should we sit down and have a white coach come and dictate to us? What they have to do, they’ve done it already, [and] we’ve seen whatever they want to do with football in the country.

“Anything we have to learn from them we have done. I can’t see anything more important that they can add, honestly.”

The Brazilian Connection
CK would prove his competence two years after the 1963 triumph, assembling an almost totally new team in his own image and ideas to clinch a second successive African Cup in Tunisia. That squad, which was tuned to employ the 4-2-4 formation that CK had picked up during his time in Brazil, included the likes of 1965 Ghana footballer of the year, Osei “Wizard dribbler” Kofi, Ben Acheampong, Frank Odoi, captain Addo Odametey and a young Jones Attuquayefio.

Condescending whispers that he was a clueless beneficiary of Ember’s foundational work ceased, with Ghanaian fans developing a deep admiration and respect for him. His momentous African Cup three-peat in 1982 would come at a time when his pedigree as one of Africa’s most competent and successful coaches was already indubitable.

Nkrumah’s overthrow in 1966 saw CK assume a relatively quiet professional life. He had, however, helped a then 24-year-old student named Carlos Alberto Parreira, a future World Cup winner, to prepare Ghana for the 1968 edition of the African Cup.

“I met Parreira in Brazil. He was a nice person and serious about his job. When I came back, I said very good things about him to the authorities. Then it became necessary at some point that he came over,” CK says.

In 1967, Ghana, under the National Redemption Council - the military junta that overthrew Nkrumah - had approached the Brazilian foreign ministry for a trainer, with Parreira being selected. He was considered the brightest physical education student at Rio State University. “Together with my assistant Ben Koufie, I decided to help him out in preparing the team,” CK, whose recommendation played a part in the Brazilian’s advent, recollects.

Ghana would win silver medals at the African Cup in Ethiopia. Parreira, who also led Asante Kotoko to a runner-up finish in the 1968 African Champion Club’s Cup, would go on to become a physical trainer for Brazil’s golden team that won the 1970 World Cup, as well as winning the World Cup as coach himself 24 years later. He is now one of the biggest names in world football, and Ghana, through CK, played a vital role in his formative years as a coach. “That experience abroad in Ghana really helped my career,” Parreira would admit years later in film Director Baff Akoto’s Ghanaian football documentary Football Fables.

CK himself was then a much bigger name than Parreira. His exploits from Ghana’s bench had made him a high profile coach on the globe. He was famously selected to be the head coach of an African XI side that played in a tournament featuring other strong nations as Japan, Italy, France and Argentina.

Legacy
Now known as Nana Kumi Gyamfi I after being enstooled as a chief by the people of Okorasi in the Eastern region of Ghana (1999), CK’s importance to football history and development in Ghana cannot be over emphasised. His influence grew from the landmark genesis of being part of the Gold Coast XI team that toured Great Britain in 1951, where Ghana lost eight of its 10 matches playing barefooted. CK, then a young 22-year-old amongst senior players, scored 11 of Ghana’s goals. “It was a sign of good things to come.”

Very few athletes have made the successful transition from exceptional player to exceptional coach. CK would later play for both Kotoko and Hearts, Ghana’s biggest clubs as a star player and captain, as well as once forming his own club (Great Ashanti 1954, after breaking away from Kotoko) through to being a founding member of the Black Stars, captaining and coaching it to many laurels.

“We did our part,” he says, nodding, staring reflectively at a clay sculpture of himself on top of his cabinet. That wonderful piece of art was done when he was approaching the twilight of his playing career, and he says it reminds him of how he looked like in his youth. It aids all those nostalgic memories to flow back. To be relived and looked back on with pride and satisfaction.

“We really did.”

CK says he is close to completing his memoires, which will be on bookshelves before the close of the year.

For access to the original article, click on the source cited.

<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/loemCmvOJr0" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/loemCmvOJr0</a>

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« Last Edit: September 02, 2015, 12:35:34 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #555 on: September 09, 2015, 10:16:40 AM »
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Ralph Milne: Former Dundee United and Manchester United player dies aged 54
The Independent


Tributes have been paid to former Scottish footballer Ralph Milne who has died at the age of 54.

The former Dundee United and Manchester United winger had been receiving treatment in hospital for liver problems.

He is remembered by Dundee United fans for scoring the first goal in a 2-1 victory over rivals Dundee that won United their only Premier League title in 1983.

He later signed for Manchester United and also played with Charlton and Bristol City during his career.

Dundee United confirmed his death and paid tribute to him on the club's website.

A statement from the club read: "Ralph can now take his seat in the main stand on high alongside other departed club legends."

He was inducted into the club's Hall of Fame in 2009.

Dundee United chairman Stephen Thompson said: "This is a very sad day. Ralph's skill and flair epitomised the Dundee United teams he graced and he was undoubtedly one of the finest footballers to hail from the city of Dundee.

"He remains Dundee United's top goalscorer in Europe and I am grateful to have watched him in his prime many times during those fantastic years he starred for United.

"It was a privilege to have known Ralph and he will be remembered fondly and missed sadly by Arabs everywhere."

Football fans united on social media to pay tribute to Milne with many posting a picture of him standing on the pitch with both arms raised aloft after scoring the opening goal when Dundee United won the league in 1983.
« Last Edit: September 09, 2015, 10:18:52 AM by asylumseeker »

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #556 on: September 12, 2015, 11:00:35 PM »
Graham Leggat
20 June 1934 – 29 August 2015

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Tribute to Leggat paid prior to the start of yesterday's SPFL match between Aberdeen and Celtic.

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Canadian soccer commentator Graham Leggat dies at 81
Associated Press


TORONTO (AP) - Graham Leggat, a longtime soccer commentator in Canada who played for Scotland in the 1958 World Cup and coached in the NASL in the 1970s, has died. He was 81.

His death was announced Monday by TSN, where Legatt was a network host from 1986 to 2000. Known for his Scottish brogue, Leggat helped expand soccer’s profile in Canada, covering five World Cups and two Olympics. He covered World Cup soccer for CBC in 1974.

Leggat came to Canada in 1971 and was the first coach of the Toronto Metros. He was an executive with the NASL’s Edmonton Drillers in 1979 and 1980. He was inducted to the Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame in 2001.

Leggat spent six seasons in the Scottish league, helping Aberdeen win the league title in 1955. He also played in England for Fulham and Birmingham City, among other clubs. He played 18 games for Scotland, including the 1958 World Cup in Sweden, where Pele burst to prominence.

Soccer player, analyst Leggat passes away
TSN


Former TSN soccer analyst and Scottish international player Graham Leggat has passed away at the age of 81.  Leggat played with Aberdeen, Fulham and Birmingham City as well as for his national team before moving to Canada to manage Toronto Metros and moving into media work.

In a statement, TSN President Stewart Johnston described Leggat as an icon.

"The TSN family mourns the passing of Graham Leggat, an iconic soccer analyst and host of the network’s long-running flagship soccer show Soccer Saturday.

With his distinct voice and Scottish charm, Graham set the standard for soccer broadcasting in Canada, helping to raise a new generation of Canadian soccer fans.  A true gentleman, Graham’s passion, integrity and dedication has always been an inspiration to all of us at TSN.

We extend our heartfelt condolences to Graham’s family and friends. Graham’s lasting legacy to soccer in Canada will always be remembered."

His former club, Fulham, also released a statement calling Leggat, "An extremely quick player, (who) was revered by the Fulham fans for the bravery in his game, as well as the many goals he contributed."

While a spokesperson for Aberdeen praised Leggat for everything he did as a member of the club.

"The term 'legend' is overused these days but in Graham's case it was entirely appropriate," said Aberdeen in a statement. "He was a wonderful servant for both club and country and out thoughts are with his family at this extremely sad time."

Leggat scored eight goals in 18 games internationally and appeared in the 1958 World Cup. 

He also held the record for fastest hat-trick in English top flight football history when he scored three times in three minutes against Ipswich while with Fulham.  That record was broken during the 2014-15 season.
« Last Edit: September 12, 2015, 11:07:11 PM by asylumseeker »

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #557 on: September 13, 2015, 02:28:29 AM »
For those of us living in Toronto back in the day. Leggat was a welcome figure. He wasn't just a Canadian announcer, this was someone who knew the game and had played at a high level.

If you watched World Cups in the 90s on TSN, Leggat was your main man. A pleasure to hear his insight. I remember one day during a weeknd broadcast they showed us clips of some Tottenham legend in the 60s (name forgotten) , when the camera came back to Leggat, his eyes were all alight. He said watching the clip had taken him back to his days in the Eng. First Div. and playing against the top names of the time.

In the late 90s he was still doing commentaries and broadcasting but didn't seem to be as polished as he used to be. I am guessing, it was being post 60.

From all the fooball fans in Canada, Thanks Graham.

VB
« Last Edit: September 13, 2015, 04:24:00 AM by vb »
VITAMIN V...KEEPS THE LADIES HEALTHY...:-)

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #558 on: September 24, 2015, 04:48:10 AM »
Bayern Munich fans pay tribute to Syrian refugee Nawf Satteh
Deutsche Welle


The 30-year-old is one of more than 2,000 refugees killed in the Mediterranean Sea. She had a binding love for one thing in particular: Bayern Munich. Fans had called for a mark of respect before the match on Tuesday.



Bayern Munich fans around the globe are paying tribute to Nawf Kamil Satteh. The 30-year-old is one of thousands of refugees to flee war-torn Syria and make the perilous journey to Europe. Along with her sister Mary, Nawf drowned Sunday on the crossing between Turkey and Greece in the Mediterranean Sea.

Nawf was part of a Christian minority near the city of Homs and fled in fear of persecution from the Islamic State. She had acquired a university degree in English literature.



She was influential in broadening Bayern's connections with other corners of the globe, setting up a fan club for Syrian-based fans. They would organize meetings in cafes even with the country ravaged by conflict. The fan club became part of Bayern's network of organizations in January, its official member number was 99905108.

Her Facebook page, which has not been deactivated, is full of photos from her favorite team, especially for Sebastian Schweinsteiger, for whom she posted several poems in honor of his success. According to people who knew Nawf, her one dream was to see Bayern Munich play in the Allianz Arena.

Bayern Munich fans had been calling for a minute's silence at Tuesday's league match against Wolfsburg as a mark of respect, while others have used Twitter to create the hashtag #RIP_Nawf and #MiaSanMiaNawf.


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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #559 on: September 24, 2015, 05:05:51 AM »
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/v/4FFR0Rg1_j0" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">https://www.youtube.com/v/4FFR0Rg1_j0</a>

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Joe Morrone, Hall of Fame Soccer Coach at UConn, Dies at 79
The New York Times


Joe Morrone, a Hall of Fame coach who led the University of Connecticut men’s soccer team to the 1981 national title, died on Wednesday at his home in Mansfield, Conn. He was 79.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, the university said.

Morrone guided the Huskies from 1969 to 1996. He previously coached at Middlebury College in Vermont from 1958 to 1968. His career record was 422-199-64.

The Huskies were nationally ranked 16th or better 14 times from 1975 to 1996, and the university’s soccer stadium on its campus in Storrs was named for Morrone in 1997.

His 1981 team defeated Alabama A&M, 2-1, in overtime to win the national championship. He led the Huskies to 15 other N.C.A.A. tournament berths, reaching the national semifinals in 1982 and 1983.

“Coach Morrone laid the blueprint not only for soccer at UConn but as importantly for college soccer in the entire country,” the current UConn coach Ray Reid said, adding that Morrone was one of the first soccer coaches to actively recruit players.

UConn won the national championship again in 2000, under Reid.

Morrone was inducted into the National Soccer Coaches Association of America Hall of Fame in 2002.

Joseph John Morrone was born on Oct. 20, 1935, in Worcester, Mass. He graduated from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he played soccer, hockey and lacrosse.

After retiring as a coach, Morrone was an associate professor in the UConn department of kinesiology, where he was a coordinator of the coaching and administration concentration.

His wife, Elizabeth, died in 2007. He is survived by two sons, Joe and Bill; a daughter, Melissa Taintor; nine grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.

NOTE: Connecticut alums include Brent Rahim, Darin Lewis and Julius James et al.


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« Last Edit: September 24, 2015, 05:16:33 AM by asylumseeker »

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #560 on: September 24, 2015, 06:06:00 AM »
Condolences to the Morrone family. Saw him when Howard played the Huskies in Storrs. They had an English-JA guy name Elvis Comorie. We lost 4-0.

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #561 on: September 24, 2015, 06:46:33 AM »
Condolences to the Morrone family. Saw him when Howard played the Huskies in Storrs. They had an English-JA guy name Elvis Comorie. We lost 4-0.

Comrie.

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #562 on: September 24, 2015, 07:38:52 AM »
Condolences to the Morrone family. Saw him when Howard played the Huskies in Storrs. They had an English-JA guy name Elvis Comorie. We lost 4-0.

Comrie.

Thanks!

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #563 on: September 27, 2015, 09:08:40 AM »

Well-traveled soccer coach Dettmar Cramer (left), seen in a file photo from 2005, arrived in Japan in 1960 and helped prepare the Japan national team for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. The former Bayern Munich and U.S. national team mentor passed away on Thursday. He was 90.



'Father of Japanese Soccer', Cramer dies at 90
The Japan Times


As the Japanese soccer world mourns the loss of Dettmar Cramer, dubbed “the father of Japanese soccer” for helping develop the game as a coach in the country in the 1960s, former players and officials offered their condolences on Friday.

Cramer passed away on Thursday at age 90. A cause of death has not been revealed, but he had been battling cancer, according to Japanese sources.

“He was a mentor that taught me about life itself, not just soccer,” said Saburo Kawabuchi, Japan Football Association’s honorary president.

Cramer came to Japan in 1960 and was hired as a coach to help strengthen the national team ahead of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. Japan reached the last eight.

He worked to establish the Japan League, the forerunner of the J. League, in 1965. In 1968, Japan won the bronze medal at the Mexico City Olympics.

“Before the bronze medal he told us ‘show me your Yamato damashii (Japanese fighting spirit),’ ” former striker Ryuichi Sugiyama said. “As a trainer, he was fantastic but he was also engaging as a human being.”

In 2005, Cramer was inducted into Japan soccer’s Hall of Fame.

Cramer led Bayern Munich to two consecutive European Cups in the 1970s and one Intercontinental Cup. He also coached in Egypt, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Greece and Thailand.

Popularly known as “Napoleon” for his small stature, Cramer also coached Eintracht Frankfurt, Bayer Leverkusen and Hertha Berlin in the Bundesliga.

The German Football Federation said Cramer worked in more than 90 countries.

Bayern coach Cramer, known as 'father of Japan's football,' dies
Asahi Shimbun/Reuters




BERLIN--Dettmar Cramer, the former coach of Bayern Munich who led them to two consecutive European Cups in the 1970s, one Intercontinental Cup and is credited with helping develop football in Japan, has died at the age of 90.

The diminutive Cramer, with his trademark bushy sideburns, was also a former U.S. national team coach while also working as a coach or coaching instructor in dozens of countries around the world in a career that spanned more than half a century.

"For many he was more than just a sporting person," Bayern CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, who was part of Cramer's winning Bayern team, said in a statement.

"For me he was a fatherly friend, he was the biggest promoter of my early sporting career. The fact that I played such successful football was thanks in large part to him," said the former Germany striker.


Cramer's biggest achievement remains the two straight European Cups with Bayern during the club's golden era where they won three in a row.

He had joined the Bavarians in 1975 in a team brimming with stars, including Gerd Mueller, Franz Beckenbauer and Uli Hoeness, straight after they won their maiden continental title a year earlier under his predecessor Udo Lattek.

"Dettmar Cramer was a globally highly recognized ambassador of German football," German football association (DFB) president Wolfgang Niersbach said in a statement. "He was respected everywhere for his competence but he was also a man who loved life, a lovely and caring individual."

Cramer, who was also an assistant to then Germany coach Helmut Schoen at the 1966 World Cup in England and had spent more than two decades at the DFB, started his coaching career in Westphalia in 1948.

He also had coaching stints in Egypt, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Greece and Thailand and also worked for Bundesliga clubs Bayer Leverkusen, Eintracht Frankfurt and briefly Hertha Berlin.

See link for photo of Cramer at the 1964 Olympics.

Remembering Dettmar Cramer reminds us: It's all about the ball
By Mike Woitalla, Soccer America


The legendary German coach Dettmar Cramer once joked he felt sorry for the ball when he watched soccer by players with poor technique.

I didn’t know he said that when, as an 8-year-old, I met Cramer. The meeting came in Dallas, where my father was getting his U.S. Soccer Federation “C” license from Cramer in 1972.

But I do remember how my dad -- who had before he got his license from Cramer read three of his books -- coached. We did everything with the ball. Even the stuff now called SAQ – speed, agility, quickness training. I think Cramer may have called it gymnastics. And he came up with ways to include the ball.

Cramer died last week at age 90. The scores of obituaries in the German media listed plenty of his accomplishments and noted his impact on the rise of German soccer as a federation (DFB) coach, first working regionally to identify and develop young talent. Cramer was Helmut Schoen’s assistant coach at the 1966 World Cup. He famously lobbied the DFB officials not to kick an 18-year-old Franz Beckenbauer out of the national team program because he had sired a child out of wedlock. Cramer coached several pro clubs, including Bayern Munich, which he guided to back-to-back European Cups in the 1970s. Under the auspices of FIFA he traveled to 90 nations to give coaching courses. In Japan, which recruited him to create a soccer infrastructure and which he led helped win the 1968 Olympic bronze medal, Cramer is considered “The Father of Japanese Soccer.”

A few of the German obits mentioned his short stint as U.S. national team coach, which comprised of two games against Mexico in 1974 before returning to Germany to coach Bayern. Not mentioned was that Cramer had a profound impact on U.S. Soccer. In the early 1970s, Cramer set up the U.S. Soccer Federation’s national coaching school, helping create its curriculum and traveling the nation teaching coaching courses.

The first course was held at the Moses Brown School in Rhode Island in 1970. Among those getting their licenses at that session were Joe Morrone (who died last week) and future U.S. national team coaches Eugene Chzyowych, Gordon Bradley, Al Miller, Manfred Schellscheidt and Alkis Panagoulias.


First USSF license course, 1970, Providence, R.I. Back row: Bob Ritcey, Layton
Shoemaker, (unknown), Lenny Lucenko, Tom Nevers, Dettmar Cramer, Bob McNulty,
Hubert Vogelsinger, Joe Morrone, (unknown), Will Myers. Front row: Trevor Pugh,
Joe Machnik, Gene Chyzowych, James Bradley, Manfred Schellscheidt.


Schellscheidt went into the record as the USA’s A-1 coach (the first USSF A license coach) and also went on to coach or assist with the U.S. U-17s, U-20s -- he headed the U.S. U-14 national team program for nearly a decade -- as well as NASL, ASL and McGuire Cup championship teams.

“Dettmar was a great man who had an enormous influence on soccer and on people in general,” says Schellscheidt, who has in turn been credited by the likes of Bruce Arena and Bob Bradley for having a major influence on their coaching. “Cramer coming here was a milestone of great importance because he started the coaching schools that are in the end still a good thing. The coaching school is not just to coach but to have a better understanding of the game.”

The first encounter Schellscheidt, a German native, had with Cramer came when Schellscheidt was a teenager called into a German regional youth national team pool. When they met again 14 years later ...

“[USSF President] Gene Edwards and [general secretary] Kurt Lamm asked me to join them to meet Cramer at a restaurant,” Schellscheidt says. “Before I was introduced, Dettmar looks at me and says, ‘Was machst du denn hier?’ [What are you doing here?] It was unbelievable. I was one out of hundreds of kids he coached. He had a photographic memory.”

When Miller, a Pennsylvania native who had started running federation coaching programs and youth national team camps, first met Cramer he didn’t expect it to go well.

“I was told the Federation was bringing in a German guy,” says Miller, who would become the only U.S.-born coach to win a title in the old NASL. “I thought, oh hell, not again. We were always getting guys from Brooklyn -- Germans, Swedes, Brazilians or whatever, who were supposed to have all these great soccer credentials and 90 percent of the time these guys were total screw-ups.

“I knew zero about who this Cramer guy was.”

Cramer explained he was just there to observe and politely asked Miller to see his training plan for the teens brought into a junior Olympic development camp.

“Cramer looks at it,” says Miller. 'He says, ‘This is really impressive. Who developed this?’ I told him I did. That I was a physical education teacher and grew up playing soccer in Philadelphia’s German community, and I played soccer in New York.”

On the second day of camp Cramer asked Miller if he could help. Miller let Cramer to do a session on ball control.

“It was like an angel came down,” Miller says. “Cramer gets up in front of the kids and starts juggling like a wizard. The kids were mesmerized, and so was I. And he’s talking to them the whole time! Sending a message: ‘Ball control is all about being friendly with the ball, feeling the ball, understanding the ball, how the ball works, and being a master of the ball.’

“And then he gives one of the most amazing sessions I’ve ever seen.”

Miller still didn’t know exactly who Cramer was until Cramer asked him if he wanted to use a film he brought for a classroom session:

“I said sure. We didn’t have very good film. It wasn’t like now when there’s all sorts of video. So we start watching and it’s the 1966 World Cup final. And I see Cramer training the German players. I thought, ‘Oh my God!’ This is the guy who liked my training plan!"


USSF "C" license course, 1972, Dallas. Bernard Shub, Pat Craig, (unknown), Bill Murphy, Stephen Radvic, Philip Ramirez, Dettmar Cramer Jr., Dettmar Cramer, Ron Griffin, Jan Book, Horst Woitalla.

Miller says the curriculum that Cramer brought not only changed American coaching, it also created a “tremendous camaraderie between the college and high school and [adult] club and the youth coaches.”

“Early in my days we had a little problem because if you were a club coach, you thought college coaches were stupid,” says Miller. “And if you were a college coach, you thought club coaches were stupid. I was kind of caught in the middle because I was coaching in college but playing at the club level.

“I thought that Dettmar’s original schools crushed that and brought everybody together. That was one of the best things that came out of it, other than learning good fundamentals for coaching and getting educational coaching background.

“A lot college coaches were physical education teachers trained by coaches who had never seen a game. Cramer modernized American soccer coaching.”

Miller remembers Cramer’s approach to fitness being greeted as “revolutionary.”

“He believed in fitness but the fitness was with the ball,” Miller says. “He called it specific fitness -- getting fit for the game that you played by playing the game and using the ball to do the running and exercising and so forth.

“He thought training without the ball was wasting time. Everybody bought into it, because we didn’t have that much time with our players and he was teaching us how we could get more out of them.”

Schellscheidt says, “Of course, let’s take into account that the game evolves. But what Dettmar put on paper is as good today as it was in those days.”

Bayern Munich Mourn the Death of Their Former Coach Dettmar Cramer
90Min


​Bayern Munich are mourning their former coach Dettmar Cramer, who has died at the age of 90.

Cramer, who led the Bavarians to double European Cup success in the mid-1970s, passed away at his home in Reit am Winkl on Thursday.

A statement on the club's website credited Cramer's team, which boasted the likes of Franz Beckenbauer, Sepp Maier, Uli Hoeness and Gerd Müller, as having 'decisively shaped' the history of Bayern Munich.

Another of that team, current chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge, said Cramer was like a father to him and thanked him for his success as a footballer.

“To many people, Dettmar Cramer was more than merely a sporting figure,” said Rummenigge.

“To me he was like a fatherly friend, and the biggest influence on my early years as a professional. To a large extent, I have him to thank that I was very successful as a footballer.

"FC Bayern mourns the loss of a great coach and special individual.”

Cramer managed fellow German sides, Eintracht Frankfurt, Hertha Berlin and Bayer Leverkusen, and worked in more than 90 countries as a German FA [DFB] and FIFA instructor.



He also became the first coach ever to receive a lifetime achievement award from the DFB in 2011.








​​​​
« Last Edit: September 27, 2015, 09:20:25 AM by asylumseeker »

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #564 on: September 29, 2015, 05:14:31 AM »
Dettmar Cramer video.

:cheers: to E-man for finding this.

Although Cramer's legacy is far-reaching ...

If we really think about it, here's a man who had a profound impact on putting two countries (Japan and the US) on the football map. Many of us have seen the consequences, of the seeds Cramer sowed, blossom before us. Just think about the achievement leaps made in both nations in the last three decades. 

RIP!

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #565 on: October 21, 2015, 04:55:54 PM »
Howard Kendall, Everton FC manager - obituary
The Telegraph


May 22, 1946 - October 17, 2015


Howard Kendall celebrates an Everton win in the dressing-room in 1984.

Howard Kendall, who has died aged 69, managed Everton Football Club in the 1980s, the greatest era of success in the team’s modern history, breaking the stranglehold that its neighbours Liverpool had exerted on the domestic game for a decade.

Having won the league championship with the club as a player, Kendall was already a favourite of the fans when he returned to Goodison Park in 1981. Yet three years of disappointment followed as he rebuilt the side and he came close to losing his job before his patience was rewarded.

Kendall had brought in players overlooked by other clubs or yet to reach their potential. Among them were the goalkeeper Neville Southall, midfielders Peter Reid and Kevin Sheedy, and strikers Andy Gray and Adrian Heath. Kendall himself retired from playing only on taking the manager’s role, and the team responded to his relaxed ways and belief that camaraderie was best built over several drinks and a meal in a Chinese restaurant.

Like Kendall in his youth, his team had both flair and determination. These elements began to first fuse together during the run to the Milk Cup final in 1984, where they lost to Liverpool. But later that season they defeated Watford to claim the FA Cup.

The following year, Everton won the First Division by a margin of 13 points over their Merseyside rivals; and while they lost in the final of the FA Cup to Manchester United, they also won the Cup Winners’ Cup by beating Rapid Vienna – having defeated Bayern Munich in the semi-final. It remains the last time that an Englishman has managed an English team to a European trophy.

In 1986, Everton twice finished runners-up to Liverpool as they won the Double, but in 1987 they were champions once again, this time by nine points. Gary Lineker, who had moved from Everton to Barcelona the previous summer, has always maintained that Kendall’s was the better side.

Howard Kendall was born on May 22 1946 at Ryton, near Newcastle. He was an only child and became the focus of his parents’ hopes. His father had worked as a miner before ill-health compelled him to take other jobs, while his mother sold tickets in a cinema.



 Encouraged by his father, who taught him to volley by kicking balloons, Kendall showed promise at both football and cricket. His skill with the bat led to the offer of trials from several counties but his love of soccer won out. At 15, he left Washington Grammar School – where he played in the same team as Bryan Ferry, later of Roxy Music – and joined Preston North End as an apprentice.

Thinking that he might not make the grade, for a while Howard gained experience of ladies’ hairdressing. But he made his professional debut at 16, and a year later became the youngest player at that time to appear in the FA Cup Final. But Preston, then a Second Division side, lost in injury time to West Ham.

Playing in defence, Kendall captained a junior England team (including Harry Redknapp) to victory in a European tournament soon afterwards, although he was never to win a full cap. Yet his potential was evident and in 1967 he joined Everton. Bill Shankly had coveted him for Liverpool and was so angry at the board’s refusal to buy him that he sent a letter of resignation, which was ignored.

On arriving at Goodison in his new MGB, Kendall was advised by the manager Harry Catterick to change the car, telling him: “You’ve no idea what they’re like that around here!” Yet the supporters took to him at once, especially when he was moved into midfield, allowing him to use his skill at reading the game to create chances as well as to snuff them out.

“The Holy Trinity”, as the trio that Kendall formed with Alan Ball and Colin Harvey was dubbed, guided Everton to the Cup Final in 1968. There they were beaten by West Bromwich Albion, but in 1970 they achieved apotheosis by claiming the league title. Kendall assumed the club captaincy and many thought that the side would dominate English football in the coming decade.

In the event it was Liverpool who went on to glory. Everton struggled for form and finished 14th in 1971, leading to the departure of Ball, who had lost his appetite for goals. In 1974, Kendall was sold to Birmingham, moving on to Stoke – whom he helped gain promotion to the top flight in 1979 – before having an initial stint as player-coach at Blackburn Rovers.



 He quit as Everton’s manager for the first time in 1987, frustrated by the post-Heysel ban on English teams playing in Europe. Wanting to test himself against Continental teams, he was in line to take over from Terry Venables at Barcelona before the opportunity fell through. Instead he went to Athletic Bilbao, who had wanted Kenny Dalglish but were told by Liverpool to approach Kendall instead.

While he enjoyed his time in Spain, he was hampered by the club’s policy of just signing Basques and had only moderate success. Accordingly, in 1989 he returned to England to manage Manchester City. The following year he was the favourite to replace Bobby Robson as the national coach, but he and the selectors had reservations about the pressures the isolated nature of the job would place on him. In the event the job went to Graham Taylor, whose ideas about the game were perhaps the antithesis of Kendall’s devotion to close passing.

Another surprise came when Kendall chose instead to return to Goodison, saying that his relationship with the club was like a marriage compared to the affairs he had had with other teams. But the side struggled and his relationship with the board was more fraught than in the past. He resigned in 1993 after failing to get backing to buy Dion Dublin.

This opened a cycle of short-lived appointments which were to prove his last in football. A brief spell in Greece was followed by a shorter one at Notts County, which he left under a cloud amid unsubstantiated rumours about his drinking. He went to Sheffield United, and then back to Everton in 1997 for a final stint which ended with the club avoiding relegation only on the last day of the season.

He returned once more to Greece but was sacked by Ethnikos Piraeus after four months. Kendall retired to Formby, wrote a column for the Liverpool Echo and published a memoir.

He was divorced from his first wife, Cynthia and is survived by a son and two daughters of that marriage and by his second wife, Lil.

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« Last Edit: October 21, 2015, 07:27:14 PM by asylumseeker »

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #566 on: October 21, 2015, 06:54:05 PM »
Russia Soccer Coach, Ex-Player Dies During Friendly Game
The Associated Press


2 August 1971 – 15 October 2015

A former Russian international player has died after collapsing on the field during a friendly game for ex-professional soccer players.

Sergei Filippenkov was playing on October 15 at Russian club Zenit Penza along with other former players when he became ill five minutes before the end of the game.

Zenit says Filippenkov scored a goal just before he collapsed.

The 44-year-old Filippenkov, who had made one appearance for Russia in a friendly against Brazil in 1998, was the coach of the third-tier Zenit Penza club.

Filippenkov played for CSKA Moscow from 1998-2001, finishing second in the Russian league and reaching a Russian Cup final.

After taking his first head coaching job with Zenit Penza last year, Filippenkov built the team into a promotion contender.

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Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Foreign)
« Reply #567 on: October 21, 2015, 07:25:20 PM »
Historic soccer figure and politician dies in Peru
Peru Reports


March 26, 1962 - September 18, 2015


Courtesy CONMEBOL

Peruvian soccer player and coach Freddy Ternero died of cancer on Friday at 53 years old.

Ternero won four Peruvian league championships with the Lima-based Universitario de Deportes. He also played for Leon de Huanuco, San Agustin, Defensor Lima and Cienciano in a career that spanned over a decade.

However Ternero will be forever remembered as the coach who led the Cusco-based Cienciano club to the 2003 Copa Sudamericana championship, the only international title won by a Peruvian team. Ternero inspired the low-ranked team to victory over the Argentinean soccer giants, River Plate, with the iconic phrase “Si se puede” (Yes, we can).

Ternero followed the Copa Sudamericana championship with a victory over the Argentine Boca Juniors to win the Recopa Sudamericana in 2004.

After his career in soccer, Ternero turned to politics and served as mayor of Lima’s San Martin de Porres district for two terms.

Ternero had been hospitalized for the last four months in his struggle against liver cancer. Hundreds of fans and sports figures attended his funeral in Lima’s Campo Fe Huachipa cemetery.


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El método de Ternero
El Peruano


En la década de 1990, el psicoanalista Max Hernández diagnosticó que el principal problema de todos los peruanos era la ausencia de una autoestima sólida. En 2003, el recientemente desaparecido entrenador Freddy Ternero canalizó bien esta anomalía y puso en terapia intensiva a todos los jugadores del Cienciano.

Primero, los capacitó para sentirse superiores, para mirar a los rivales en igualdad de condiciones y, sobre todo, les inyectó personalidad y fue el único que complementaba las técnicas del fútbol con sesiones de lectura y buen manejo de la palabra. El resultado: Cienciano ganó la Copa Sudamericana en 2003 y la Recopa en 2004, luego de imponerse a River Plate y a Boca Juniors de Argentina, respectivamente.

Luego de esa campaña, ningún otro técnico ha podido emular la metodología de Ternero. Hace poco, el club Sporting Cristal, del argentino Daniel Ahmed, fue eliminado de la Copa Libertadores y, actualmente, Universitario de Deportes, con Roberto Challe como nuevo técnico, tiene muy complicadas sus aspiraciones luego de su derrota por goleada frente a Defensor Sporting de Uruguay.

Los clubes nacionales juegan de visita con el propósito de empatar. Se juega para no perder. Eso le pasó al Melgar de Arequipa, que en su partido de ida con el Junior de Barranquilla perdió por goleada y no obstante su triunfo en casa por 4-0, no le alcanzó para la siguiente etapa de la Su-damericana.

Por eso, los comentaristas de los canales internacionales viven aferrados a un recuerdo. Siempre resaltan a la generación blanquirroja del Mundial de México 70 como si el balompié peruano se hubiera estancado luego de Teófilo Cubillas. Parece que les resulta más cómodo hablar de las proezas de estos jugadores antes de narrar un partido que tiene a un solo equipo que brilla en la cancha. Se han acostumbrado tanto a esa época que casi nunca recuerdan al Cienciano de Ternero.

Si hacemos un recuento de los clubes peruanos en los torneos de Copa Libertadores y Copa Sudamericana luego de la hazaña de Cienciano del Cusco, solo podemos destacar la participación de Universitario de Deportes con Guillermo del Solar en 2011, cuando llegó a cuartos de final luego de ganar a Vasco da Gama en Lima y perder increíblemente en Brasil por 5-1 tras ir ganando el partido.

Sería necesario revisar la lección que dejó Freddy Ternero para superar esa típica expresión de que los equipos peruanos solo llegan a la primera rueda.


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The In Memory Of Thread (Red, White & Black)
« Reply #568 on: November 23, 2015, 12:14:51 PM »
I'm not sure if we have a local version of this thread, but if we do I couldn't find it.  Mods please move and merge accordingly.

RIP to former St. Augustine coaching legend Kenny Thomas who passed away last week.

"Simple... SIMPLE!!"

« Last Edit: December 09, 2015, 05:21:44 AM by asylumseeker »

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Re: Re: The In Memory Of Thread (Red, White & Black)
« Reply #569 on: November 23, 2015, 12:34:49 PM »
I'm not sure if we have a local version of this thread, but if we do I couldn't find it.  Mods please move and merge accordingly.

RIP to former St. Augustine coaching legend Kenny Thomas who passed away last week.

"Simple... SIMPLE!!"



RIP
« Last Edit: December 09, 2015, 05:19:17 AM by asylumseeker »
Carlos "The Rolls Royce" Edwards

 

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