Comments on Farewell to the King of the Blues

RIP Bobby. Always was, and always will be a legend at Portman Road. Some tributes here.


Posted by TomC at July 31, 2009 02:56 PM

What does "King of the Blues" mean? I thought this was going to be about a musician!


Posted by Laird at July 31, 2009 03:59 PM

King, because Bobby was their best ever manager, and Blues because this is a nickname for Ipswich Town FC.


Posted by TomC at July 31, 2009 04:47 PM

Yes Laird, I thought it was going to be about BB King - phew! Still, RIP.


Posted by Alisa at July 31, 2009 07:04 PM

JP,
For me Sir Bobby is always black and white. I appreciate what he did for your club (and for England) but for me he was a Geordie through and through.


Posted by Nick M at August 1, 2009 12:24 PM

Some very moving tributes on the telly last night too. I found it odd how thrilling it was to see the replays of the Italia 90 charge, especially that Platt goal against Belgium.

Just a quick question - surely a "brace" means "two"? He managed a whole bunch of them.


Posted by manuel II paleologos at August 1, 2009 02:06 PM

Nick M, of course. I was not trying to downplay Robson's heritage. But it happens to be a matter of hard fact that his longest unbroken spell as a club manager was in East Anglia, not the north-east. And the way in which the top brass sacked a great man who had taken Newcastle to the top six of the Premiership in three consecutive seasons, and into the latter stages of European competition, was and remains a disgrace. It says a lot about Robson that he bore few grudges as a result.

I hope Newcastle, a fine club, is guided by wiser hands in the future. Its fans certainly deserve it.


Posted by Johnathan Pearce at August 2, 2009 11:08 AM

Robson was right about Italia '90 - England should have won it that year. I always think of him as the best England manager since Alf Ramsey.

"Nick M, of course. I was not trying to downplay Robson's heritage. But it happens to be a matter of hard fact that his longest unbroken spell as a club manager was in East Anglia, not the north-east."

I might be thought a tit for saying this, but Bobby Robson was born in County Durham, not Newcastle Jonathan. I too am from County Durham (and yes, I'm a Sunderland fan - but that's irrelevant) and I resent the presumption that, just because someone was born in the North-East, he must therefore - as a matter of "heritage" - be one of the "Geordie Nation".


Posted by mike at August 2, 2009 11:47 AM

I was there in '78, behind the Arsenal goal. Oh happy day, and thank you Bobby.


Posted by Demetrius at August 2, 2009 06:41 PM

Folks, one thing I have learned is how touchy people from the north-east are about the use of the word Geordie!


Posted by Johnathan Pearce at August 3, 2009 07:55 AM

I was stationed at RAF Bentwaters/Woodbridge 68-71 in the USAF and lived for a while in an apt hi-rise with a view of the stadium on Portman Rd. and could actually see part (but alas not all) of the pitch through corner crease in the stadium walls. The Blues were a 2nd div. club in those days and their glory days were yet to come which I unfortunately missed, but have fond memories of the short walk across the street to the stadium and the many afternoons spent cheering on the "locals" in all too many lost causes. Would dearly love to see them return to their glory days, but rural East Anglia and Ipswitch is not a "fashionable" part of the country.

(At one point I was seeing the London-based daughter of a producer for BBC TV whom I had met when she was up to Woodbridge to see an old family friend and he told me one day [circa 1970] about that part of England that: "What you have to realize is you are very fortunate in one way from a historical aspect as that part of the UK is the only place still much like life was lived in the England of 30-40 yrs ago." LOL, so true, so very true!)


Posted by virgil xenophon at August 5, 2009 09:04 PM
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