Gio Kinkladze Documentary

cyberblue

Well-Known Member
Joined
24 Dec 2005
Messages
9,608
I have been asked to take part in the documentary which is being organised by City
I have met him a few times and always thought he was a great bloke
We once went over to Amsterdam to meet him and he was brilliant with all of us
Just wondering what the esteemed Bluemooners take on him was
 
Last edited:
I have been asked to take part in the documentary which is being organised by City
I have met him a few times and always thought he was a great bloke
We once went over to Amsterdam to meet him and he was brilliant with all of us
Just wondering what the esteemed Bluemooners take on him was

Love him. Always my hero growing up and was lucky enough to meet him as a 7 year old mascot at Maine Road.
 
Had a quick chat with him once in the casino in Stockport (think it was Stakis casino then), he was in with Paul McGrath. Seemed nice enough fella, was the only reason I carried on turning up in the late 90's to be honest. It certainly wasn't to watch Darren Wassall and Ged Brannan
 
Childhood idol. When United were winning trophies for fun the one thing we had that they didn't was kinky. Was too good for us and should have moved on a lot early than he did for the good of his career but I'm so grateful he didn't.
 
Total Genius
Never ever seen anything like him at the time
Sublime Strikes and brilliant provider
Shame he never went onto the glory he deserved at City
Shame too Joe Royle slated him
 
When he turned it on boy was he great to watch. Remember the Southampton game (ironically) he weaved in and out of about 5 players, went back and did it again and scored. Fantastic albeit for such a short period. My Son worshipped him, wore his shirt to death.
There was a guy sat near me who, every time Gio got the ball just used to go "Here we go, Southampton..."
 
My overwhelming memories of him were either a one man wonder show or passes that disappeared off the pitch or to opposition players.

Not because they were stray passes but they were passes where players should have continued their run to, he would stand waving his arms pointing where he was going to pass it and yet the rest of the team just seemed to be 10 yards off his thinking or plainly three or four levels below him quality wise.

This guy would walk into today’s side and I would have loved to see him in blue with quality around him that we have today
 
Had a quick chat with him once in the casino in Stockport (think it was Stakis casino then), he was in with Paul McGrath. Seemed nice enough fella, was the only reason I carried on turning up in the late 90's to be honest. It certainly wasn't to watch Darren Wassall and Ged Brannan
I'll bet there was a tale behind his friendship with McGrath - was Kinky a big drinker?
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top