baildon blue said:Blooming eck hes changed a lot loved him though.He was are answer to kevin keegan at newcastle.I remember him scoring a great goal at chelsea away.Jim Tolmie's Underpants said:He's a taxi driver in Scotland.
Some images of the great man and his iconic hair:
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Sadly his best hair days are behind him now...
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I remember that goal too. i seem to recall we were second best all game then he scored from a free kick. At least thats how i remember it. its now getting a long time ago!
-- Tue Sep 04, 2012 10:59 pm --
Blooming eck hes changed a lot loved him though.He was are answer to kevin keegan at newcastle.I remember him scoring a great goal at chelsea away.Jim Tolmie's Underpants said:He's a taxi driver in Scotland.
Some images of the great man and his iconic hair:
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Sadly his best hair days are behind him now...
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He's got two ears on the right hand side of his head!spam1967 said:Jim Tolmie's Underpants said:baildon blue said:I remember him scoring a great goal at chelsea away.
Here it is at 2.28 secs:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5woKgDiwS3E[/youtube]
the only thing i can think of about him.
was it natural or a perm.
i'm going with a perm. only cos i've just seen taxidriver + drink problem + wrapover, similar to his ex-chairmans!
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look at that twat niven!
Derek parlane's son lives in Manchester and goes in Colin bell lower now and again, seen Derek there an odd timeblack mamba said:Tolmie was such a talented player , a really good footballer ...... his partnership with Derek Parlane was a very effective one , full of goals.
tolmieblue said:Some of the rubbish on here is amazing, jim is my brother and he doesnt have a drink problem lol, who makes this stuff up.
The bar staff of the Sandpipertolmieblue said:Some of the rubbish on here is amazing, jim is my brother and he doesnt have a drink problem lol, who makes this stuff up.
Correct....I was always scared to death that one of the so called big clubs would have taken Jim Tolmie from us....McNeil to be fair should get some credit for the signings of Parlane and Tolmiechabal said:We owe a lot to Billy McNeill and Jim Tolmie.
When we got relegated in 1983 we had a poor squad, the better players left (e.g Corrigan) and the club was facing bankruptcy. We could easily have done a "Wolves" and slid right down the divisions.
McNeill did a hell of a job in actually making us promotion contenders when we could easily have got relegated again.
Tolmie and Parlane were a hell of a combination. Parlane was useles outside of the 6 yard box but alongside Tolmie he was lethal. Jim Tolmie had it all, including a haircit and a lifestyle. But in the grim 80s when we had to get used to playing the likes of Grimsby and Cambridge United he brought a touch of class to proceedings.
Inconsistent but genuine quality. I wish him well- he brightened up many
saturday afternoons.
oakiecokie said:Jim Tolmie (born 21 November 1960 in Glasgow) is a retired Scottish footballer who played for clubs including Morton, Lokeren and Manchester City.
He started his career at Morton and made his senior debut on 28 October 1978. Then he was sold to Belgian side Lokeren in 1981, playing 18 games without scoring before returning to Britain in 1983.
Tolmie was signed by Billy McNeill for City from Lokeren for £30,000. Jim was the third signing in nine days made by McNeill, who had himself just joined City from Celtic. He left Manchester City and spent a summer playing in Sweden with Markaryd IF, before returning to Morton in 1991. He retired in 1994.
Thats about it mate.
Mike D said:oakiecokie said:Jim Tolmie (born 21 November 1960 in Glasgow) is a retired Scottish footballer who played for clubs including Morton, Lokeren and Manchester City.
He started his career at Morton and made his senior debut on 28 October 1978. Then he was sold to Belgian side Lokeren in 1981, playing 18 games without scoring before returning to Britain in 1983.
Tolmie was signed by Billy McNeill for City from Lokeren for £30,000. Jim was the third signing in nine days made by McNeill, who had himself just joined City from Celtic. He left Manchester City and spent a summer playing in Sweden with Markaryd IF, before returning to Morton in 1991. He retired in 1994.
Thats about it mate.
He was shit if we are all being honest.
No he fucking wasn't....he was a bit of light in a shit side, fair enough it didn't last long but as a kid which I was at that time who didn't have the luxury of Bell, Lee, Sumerbee, he was top draw for me....put it this way if I could have had a name on the back of my shirt in them days, it would have been Tolmie and I bet I wouldn't of been aloneMike D said:oakiecokie said:Jim Tolmie (born 21 November 1960 in Glasgow) is a retired Scottish footballer who played for clubs including Morton, Lokeren and Manchester City.
He started his career at Morton and made his senior debut on 28 October 1978. Then he was sold to Belgian side Lokeren in 1981, playing 18 games without scoring before returning to Britain in 1983.
Tolmie was signed by Billy McNeill for City from Lokeren for £30,000. Jim was the third signing in nine days made by McNeill, who had himself just joined City from Celtic. He left Manchester City and spent a summer playing in Sweden with Markaryd IF, before returning to Morton in 1991. He retired in 1994.
Thats about it mate.
He was shit if we are all being honest.
chabal said:We owe a lot to Billy McNeill and Jim Tolmie.
When we got relegated in 1983 we had a poor squad, the better players left (e.g Corrigan) and the club was facing bankruptcy. We could easily have done a "Wolves" and slid right down the divisions.
McNeill did a hell of a job in actually making us promotion contenders when we could easily have got relegated again.
Tolmie and Parlane were a hell of a combination. Parlane was useles outside of the 6 yard box but alongside Tolmie he was lethal. Jim Tolmie had it all, including a haircit and a lifestyle. But in the grim 80s when we had to get used to playing the likes of Grimsby and Cambridge United he brought a touch of class to proceedings.
Inconsistent but genuine quality. I wish him well- he brightened up many
saturday afternoons.
Bit cynical aren't we?Mike D said:oakiecokie said:Jim Tolmie (born 21 November 1960 in Glasgow) is a retired Scottish footballer who played for clubs including Morton, Lokeren and Manchester City.
He started his career at Morton and made his senior debut on 28 October 1978. Then he was sold to Belgian side Lokeren in 1981, playing 18 games without scoring before returning to Britain in 1983.
Tolmie was signed by Billy McNeill for City from Lokeren for £30,000. Jim was the third signing in nine days made by McNeill, who had himself just joined City from Celtic. He left Manchester City and spent a summer playing in Sweden with Markaryd IF, before returning to Morton in 1991. He retired in 1994.
Thats about it mate.
He was shit if we are all being honest.
Deepest Blue said:Bit cynical aren't we?Mike D said:oakiecokie said:Jim Tolmie (born 21 November 1960 in Glasgow) is a retired Scottish footballer who played for clubs including Morton, Lokeren and Manchester City.
He started his career at Morton and made his senior debut on 28 October 1978. Then he was sold to Belgian side Lokeren in 1981, playing 18 games without scoring before returning to Britain in 1983.
Tolmie was signed by Billy McNeill for City from Lokeren for £30,000. Jim was the third signing in nine days made by McNeill, who had himself just joined City from Celtic. He left Manchester City and spent a summer playing in Sweden with Markaryd IF, before returning to Morton in 1991. He retired in 1994.
Thats about it mate.
He was shit if we are all being honest.
City were in deep sh*t at that time and we needed to make the best of virtually no transfer funds to replace the big money earners who had departed.
McNeill brought him back from a small club in Belgium and he did us proud.
Parlane and Nicky Reid were heroes too who helped us back into the top flight.
They did their jobs and did them well.
Players like Dickov, Horlock, Morrison and Goater were nowhere near the quality we have today but they all were more important players for us than say Elano and Ireland.
So there.