mrbelfry
Well-Known Member
Ellegaard was better than both
Asian Blue said:Last game I went to at Main Road was City v Derby in the season they got relegated..........Dean Saunders, who had not missed a penalty all season, steps up to take one against Quinny, (after Coton had been sent off) and he bloody well saves it , after scoring what was to be the only goal of the match.bluewales said:NIALL QUINN WAS BETTER THAN ELKIE IMAC
Memories !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
<br /><br />-- Thu Nov 25, 2010 9:51 am --<br /><br />I could never claim to be ITK now, but back in the mid nineties I was. Did a job that brought me into contact with a lot of the goings on at MCFC. (Rather depressing it was too, because the more you found out, the clearer it became just how badly f**ked the club was).
Anyway, one day in January 1996, I was asked to review a facility agreement from a major bank under which they would advance City the first instalment on the purchase of Nigel Clough on condition (spelled out explicitly in the agreement) that City paid it back through the sale of Tony Coton for GBP 470K. Looking back at Soccerbase, the Clough deal went through on 24 January and the Coton deal went through on 31 January, with the player taking a lot of persuading. City were desperate for the deal with United to go ahead.
I was told that Sunderland had offered GBP 500K for Coton and he wanted to go there, but they wanted to pay GBP 250K up front and the rest over 12 month. We needed GBP 470K up front to pay the bank back, and the Rags had enough cash to offer that all up front in one payment. Coton was basically, as I understand, told that he'd be training with the kids if he stayed and would never play even as a last resort.
Ferguson promised Coton that he could go to Sunderland in the summer, and that swung it. Coton decided that he'd rather spend the next four months on the bench at a club challenging for trophies, make a few quid from the signing on fee and then get the move he wanted. Sadly for him, injury finished his career after only a few games for the Mackems.
When the alternative was to be a pariah at a badly run club in the process of going down the pan, can you really blame him? And after that, when he was offered a coaching job at a successful club where he was well thought of in an area of the country where he was settled when no comparable vacancy existed for him at City anyway, why shouldn't he take it? He has to make a living, after all.
People really need to grow up with their view of some of this stuff. Tony Coton is a football professional and he's entitled to make choices based on what's based for his career. He owes City fans nothing when he exercises that judgement, especially as he was treated like crap by our club anyway.
goatbinfed said:Asian Blue said:Last game I went to at Main Road was City v Derby in the season they got relegated..........Dean Saunders, who had not missed a penalty all season, steps up to take one against Quinny, (after Coton had been sent off) and he bloody well saves it , after scoring what was to be the only goal of the match.
Memories !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I thought David White scored as well although I might be mistaken. I remember beating Sunderland in the game after as well at home, last game of season and knocked them down as well. That was the best atmosphere I have ever seen at Maine Road and the kippax was rocking
Dyed Petya said:On TC - unfairly maligned by the City fans, he was treated like crap and forced out of the club, and the club wanted him to go to United so we could sign Nigel Clough (that worked out well, didn't it?).
I don't think Immel was quite as bad as some people say and he did a decent job as a stand-in despite the very tough circumstances at the start of 1995/6. However, I agree that T should have been straight back in the side when fit and if he'd played in the second half of that season then we wouldn't have gone down.
There was a thread on this a while back: http://www.bluemoon-mcfc.co.uk/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=136021.
FWIW, my contribution was this:
I could never claim to be ITK now, but back in the mid nineties I was. Did a job that brought me into contact with a lot of the goings on at MCFC. (Rather depressing it was too, because the more you found out, the clearer it became just how badly f**ked the club was).
Anyway, one day in January 1996, I was asked to review a facility agreement from a major bank under which they would advance City the first instalment on the purchase of Nigel Clough on condition (spelled out explicitly in the agreement) that City paid it back through the sale of Tony Coton for GBP 470K. Looking back at Soccerbase, the Clough deal went through on 24 January and the Coton deal went through on 31 January, with the player taking a lot of persuading. City were desperate for the deal with United to go ahead.
I was told that Sunderland had offered GBP 500K for Coton and he wanted to go there, but they wanted to pay GBP 250K up front and the rest over 12 month. We needed GBP 470K up front to pay the bank back, and the Rags had enough cash to offer that all up front in one payment. Coton was basically, as I understand, told that he'd be training with the kids if he stayed and would never play even as a last resort.
Ferguson promised Coton that he could go to Sunderland in the summer, and that swung it. Coton decided that he'd rather spend the next four months on the bench at a club challenging for trophies, make a few quid from the signing on fee and then get the move he wanted. Sadly for him, injury finished his career after only a few games for the Mackems.
When the alternative was to be a pariah at a badly run club in the process of going down the pan, can you really blame him? And after that, when he was offered a coaching job at a successful club where he was well thought of in an area of the country where he was settled when no comparable vacancy existed for him at City anyway, why shouldn't he take it? He has to make a living, after all.
People really need to grow up with their view of some of this stuff. Tony Coton is a football professional and he's entitled to make choices based on what's based for his career. He owes City fans nothing when he exercises that judgement, especially as he was treated like crap by our club anyway.
-- Thu Nov 25, 2010 9:51 am --
goatbinfed said:I thought David White scored as well although I might be mistaken. I remember beating Sunderland in the game after as well at home, last game of season and knocked them down as well. That was the best atmosphere I have ever seen at Maine Road and the kippax was rocking
Yes, we beat Derby 2-1 in the game in which Quinn scored and then saved a penalty (a result that sent Derby down). White scored in the second half to make it 2-0 and Derby pulled one back in the last minute. A pity, as Quinny deserved the clean sheet.
Most impressive thing was the way he handled the corner that resulted from the penalty save. Came out and claimed it with a really confident catch on the penalty spot.
I've seen the likes Bobby Mac and Nigel Gleghorn put in heroic performances as an outfield player in net but Quinn was on a different level. He actually looked like a proper goalkeeper.
howfen blue said:Best keeper I've seen in a city shirt Tony turncoat!!
Prestwich_Blue said:I think I was better than Eike Immel.
Cityisland said:Dont give a fuck. Danny Tiatto was better than Danny Granville. Discuss...
Dyed Petya said:On TC - unfairly maligned by the City fans, he was treated like crap and forced out of the club, and the club wanted him to go to United so we could sign Nigel Clough (that worked out well, didn't it?).
I don't think Immel was quite as bad as some people say and he did a decent job as a stand-in despite the very tough circumstances at the start of 1995/6. However, I agree that T should have been straight back in the side when fit and if he'd played in the second half of that season then we wouldn't have gone down.
There was a thread on this a while back: http://www.bluemoon-mcfc.co.uk/Forum/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=136021.
FWIW, my contribution was this:
I could never claim to be ITK now, but back in the mid nineties I was. Did a job that brought me into contact with a lot of the goings on at MCFC. (Rather depressing it was too, because the more you found out, the clearer it became just how badly f**ked the club was).
Anyway, one day in January 1996, I was asked to review a facility agreement from a major bank under which they would advance City the first instalment on the purchase of Nigel Clough on condition (spelled out explicitly in the agreement) that City paid it back through the sale of Tony Coton for GBP 470K. Looking back at Soccerbase, the Clough deal went through on 24 January and the Coton deal went through on 31 January, with the player taking a lot of persuading. City were desperate for the deal with United to go ahead.
I was told that Sunderland had offered GBP 500K for Coton and he wanted to go there, but they wanted to pay GBP 250K up front and the rest over 12 month. We needed GBP 470K up front to pay the bank back, and the Rags had enough cash to offer that all up front in one payment. Coton was basically, as I understand, told that he'd be training with the kids if he stayed and would never play even as a last resort.
Ferguson promised Coton that he could go to Sunderland in the summer, and that swung it. Coton decided that he'd rather spend the next four months on the bench at a club challenging for trophies, make a few quid from the signing on fee and then get the move he wanted. Sadly for him, injury finished his career after only a few games for the Mackems.
When the alternative was to be a pariah at a badly run club in the process of going down the pan, can you really blame him? And after that, when he was offered a coaching job at a successful club where he was well thought of in an area of the country where he was settled when no comparable vacancy existed for him at City anyway, why shouldn't he take it? He has to make a living, after all.
People really need to grow up with their view of some of this stuff. Tony Coton is a football professional and he's entitled to make choices based on what's based for his career. He owes City fans nothing when he exercises that judgement, especially as he was treated like crap by our club anyway.
Goats left knee said:that was never a penalty at the swamp