BigAl Posted Sunday at 12:27 Report Posted Sunday at 12:27 69 is no age nowadays. Thanks for the memories and particularly the trips to Madrid & Munich 3 1 Quote
RicoS321 Posted Sunday at 12:33 Report Posted Sunday at 12:33 Aye, definitely deserves a thread in this forum. A frustrating manager, but I liked him. Some great times with him in charge, and his record stands up very well as Dons boss. 2 Quote
Kowalski Posted Sunday at 12:36 Report Posted Sunday at 12:36 2 minutes ago, RicoS321 said: Aye, definitely deserves a thread in this forum. A frustrating manager, but I liked him. Some great times with him in charge, and his record stands up very well as Dons boss. Spot on and well said. Sad news to hear of his passing. The Munich and Madrid trips were excellent. Quote
Elgindon Posted Sunday at 12:36 Report Posted Sunday at 12:36 Aye,no age. Took more stick than he deserved. 1 Quote
tlg1903 Posted Sunday at 12:42 Report Posted Sunday at 12:42 I had little love for Calderwood for large parts of his tenure but Alzheimers is fucking grim. RIP JC, I'm glad you're no longer suffering and your family don't have to watch you die in front of them yet you're still alive. Quote
JessianK Posted Sunday at 14:30 Report Posted Sunday at 14:30 RIP Jimmy Especially for the European memories... Just shows how your life can change just by one disease. Our condolences to everyone at Aberdeen and his other clubs. Quote
Reekie_Red Posted Sunday at 18:36 Report Posted Sunday at 18:36 When he signed, I thought we'd hired the bigger Chuckle Brother. His tombola team selection was frustrating as hell. But he did bring some wicked memories, particularly Copenhagen and Bayern Munich at Pittodrie. RIP Jimmy 1 Quote
KGB Posted Sunday at 21:30 Report Posted Sunday at 21:30 9 hours ago, BigAl said: 69 is no age nowadays. Thanks for the memories and particularly the trips to Madrid & Munich I was in Madrid and Munich, great trips and great memories. RIP Jimmy Quote
baggy89 Posted Sunday at 22:20 Report Posted Sunday at 22:20 I’ve just turned 45 and my first game was one of Fergies last. Was at SCF in ‘90 under Smith and was probably at Pittodrie for most of his reign. Ebbe was a bit of a cult hero. But after Pele, Calderwood brought a bit of respectability back to AFC. Beating the Huns when Ricksen got sent off and going 2 up against Bayern are two of my favourite memories of being at Pittodrie (along with the Mimms, Gillhaus, Nicholas goal). The forum carry on in his last few months and when he was sacked was ridiculous and tainted, arguably, our best post Fergie managers legacy (definitely at the time). Might dig out my old sky plus box and watch back the Copenhagen and Bayern games. 1 Quote
dons8321 Posted Sunday at 22:20 Report Posted Sunday at 22:20 (edited) Doesn't matter who you support or who you "hate"...dementia is a fucking horrible thing to happen to anyone and you wouldn't wish it on your worse enemy. RIP Jimmy. Quote Edited Sunday at 22:24 by dons8321 Quote
manc_don Posted Sunday at 23:28 Report Posted Sunday at 23:28 I’d probably say this was peak youth for me, well, late teens and early 20s, but had many a good time with the globe reds following him and the team around. Some incredible high and some horrendous lows, but we definitely weren’t the laughing stock anymore and I’ll be forever grateful. The pair of Munich games will forever (vaguely) stick in my memory. Sure, it didn’t end the way any of us wanted but it was one helluva ride. Thank you jimmy and very much, RIP. 1 Quote
Reekie_Red Posted Sunday at 23:48 Report Posted Sunday at 23:48 1 hour ago, baggy89 said: Beating the Huns when Ricksen got sent off That was a cracking game. A proper Roy Of The Rovers story, made particularly pleasing when PRicksen got sent off and we then scored the winner shortly after. Jamie Smith scored the winner IIRC? 1 Quote
Jute Posted Monday at 07:54 Report Posted Monday at 07:54 From the highs of trips to Dinpro, Madrid and Munich to lows of losing cup game to Dunfermline, Queens Park and Queen of the South it was never dull following Dons under JC. Lost count of the number of times the words what the fuck were uttered when folk saw his team selections. Dementia is horrible disease and football needs to start looking after former players who are suffering from it. RIP Jimmy. 3 Quote
wee toon red Posted Monday at 17:15 Report Posted Monday at 17:15 RIP Jimmy, a character who made a better fist of the Dons job than many. Quote
manc_don Posted Monday at 17:25 Report Posted Monday at 17:25 Not into sharing Twitter these days, but this is a tribute befitting of the man. 3 Quote
Slim Posted Monday at 18:16 Report Posted Monday at 18:16 Good watch that, although probably would have left out the QOTS clip, tributes don’t need to be balanced. 2 Quote
BigAl Posted Monday at 19:27 Author Report Posted Monday at 19:27 1 hour ago, manc_don said: Not into sharing Twitter these days, but this is a tribute befitting of the man. Watched that with tears in my eyes. I come back to my opening post on this thread Thanks for the memories 1 Quote
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