Happy Birthday Johnny Crossan

City_Shirts

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Wishing a very Happy 87th Birthday to former City skipper Johnny Crossan.

The Northern Irish inside forward would appear 110 times for the club between 1964 & 1967 including skippering Joe Mercer’s 1965/66 Division Two Championship winning side.

Great to see Johnny with his copy of Another 101 match shirts book.

IMG_1888.jpeg
 
Saw him a few times in my early City days but have no real memories of him between 66/67, so I looked him up. Wiki says he played 94 times and had a great goal return of 24 - 1 in 4 for a midfielder/inside forward ain't bad at all.

I had no memory of how or why he was sold as we went into the title winning season - Wiki refers to a car crash and loss of form. How things might have been different for him without his accident - from Captain to gone, and then we became the best in the business.

I wonder who he might have kept out of that title winning team, but for his car crash.
 
I never knew this.

Crossan began his career playing for Derry City, where he played as an inside forward. His talent was spotted by several leading English clubs, including Arsenal and Sunderland. When the latter made a substantial offer, Derry City offered Crossan a payment deal which he rejected, offering his own. When the Sunderland negotiations broke down, Derry City dropped Crossan, who signed for Coleraine. Derry City, still aggrieved by Crossan's actions, reported themselves to the Football League authorities for technical breaches of regulations, thus ensuring that Crossan would face disciplinary action.[1]

In January 1959, a commission of inquiry imposed small fines on Derry and Coleraine, but banned Crossan from all forms of football for life. A partial lifting of the ban was allowed following an appeal, in May 1959 the inside forward signed for Dutch Champions Sparta Rotterdam.
 
My first recollection of Crossan was in January 1964 when he ripped City apart playing for Sunderland .

A few years earlier, he received a life ban from Football for trying to force a move from Derry City to English football. This ban was partially lifted on appeal but he could not play in England and went to Sparta Rotterdam and Standard Liége. Eventually the moronic ban was lifted and Crossan moved to Sunderland.


Meanwhile City were toiling in Division Two and losing money. A director suggested that this could not continue and that players would be sold. Back then the family spent Christmas in Shropshire. I decided to get a supporters bus to watch Wolves play on Boxing Day. I arrived at the match to hear Wolves announce their new signing of David Wagstaffe from City (my favourite player at the time).

City had obviously timed the sale for the Christmas Holiday to limit the backlash. For whatever reason, City went on to sign Crossan in January as a replacement. He soon became a firm fan’s favourite and was a crucial player in the promotion season and the first year in the First Division.

But for the injuries he suffered in a car crash, Crossan could well have been a key figure in City’s title win in 1967-68. Instead he moved to Middlesbrough.
 
My first recollection of Crossan was in January 1964 when he ripped City apart playing for Sunderland .

A few years earlier, he received a life ban from Football for trying to force a move from Derry City to English football. This ban was partially lifted on appeal but he could not play in England and went to Sparta Rotterdam and Standard Liége. Eventually the moronic ban was lifted and Crossan moved to Sunderland.


Meanwhile City were toiling in Division Two and losing money. A director suggested that this could not continue and that players would be sold. Back then the family spent Christmas in Shropshire. I decided to get a supporters bus to watch Wolves play on Boxing Day. I arrived at the match to hear Wolves announce their new signing of David Wagstaffe from City (my favourite player at the time).

City had obviously timed the sale for the Christmas Holiday to limit the backlash. For whatever reason, City went on to sign Crossan in January as a replacement. He soon became a firm fan’s favourite and was a crucial player in the promotion season and the first year in the First Division.

But for the injuries he suffered in a car crash, Crossan could well have been a key figure in City’s title win in 1967-68. Instead he moved to Middlesbrough.
I loved JC. An old fashioned schemer, the David Silva of his day.
 

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