THIS WEEK began badly, with the news of the death of my fellow Ayrshireman, legendary Scottish Rugby Union Captain Peter PC Brown. It has ended with equally sad news, with the passing of the one, the only Denis Law.
You can argue all you like about Scotland's Greeatest-Ever Player “The Tartan G.O.A.T.” but, what you cannot argue against is Denis's right to be in the conversation. He was our youngest debutant of the 20th Century, when first capped, against Wales in 1958; he set a national record when winning his 55th and final cap, against Zaire in 1974. He scored a record 30 international goals, a mark which still stands while individually he was the first Scot to win the Ballon D'Or in 1964. Had he been English, I am sure he would have been knighted, but as a Scot he only got a CBE from the British Establishment.
He joined Huddersfield Town as a 15-year-old from Aberdeen, a fisherman's son. He had a sight impediment, which required surgery to correct it and, aged just 16, he was in the Town first team, encouraged by the coaching of one Willie Shankly.
Some wanted him in the Scotland squad for the 1958 World Cup, but, the selectors of the time would not pick him, although, still only 18, he was in the team in the first international after those 1958 finals.
Huddersfield could not hold him, but Manchester Cioty had to pay a record transfer fee to entice him away. Perhaps his finest moment in a City shirt in that spell came when he scored seven goals in an FA Cup tie against Luton Town – six in the first game, which was abandoned, then another goal in the replayed game, which Luton won. But, City were the second team in Manchester at the time and in 1961, he was signed by Italian side Torino, alongside England centre forard Joe Baker, of Hibs.
His time in Italy was short-lived and disappointing. He and Baker were injured in a car crash, while Law relished the story of the Turin taxi driver, taking a party of Scottish football writers to a game in that city, who was disparaging about him. The taxi-man adored Baker but said: “Law, all he do is kick people.”
Football at the time was tough and the slight Law belied his lack of physique with his quicksilver speed, his instincts in the penalty area and his ability to meet fire with fire when defenders kicked him. This landed him in particular bother following Scotland's disastgrous 3-9 loss to England, at Wembley in 1961.
Law was dropped after the game, allegedly for kicking the future Sir Bobby Robson, right in front of Queen Elizabeth II, sitting in the Royal Box. Law always insisted, Robson had kicked him first.
He was soon back in the national side, where he and Jim Baxter were the outstanding talents in a golden age for the side, marked by three successive wins over England and a wonderful 6-2 win over Spain in the Bernabeau; and, of course, the day Scotland beat World Champions England, at Wembley in 1967.
Years later, interviewing Denis, I asked him aboujt that game. He said the result still annoyed him; a survivor of 1961, Law wanted to score goals that day to emphasise how good that Scottish side was, but, as he said ruefully: “I was over-ruled by Baxter and Bremnerf, who wanted to humiliate them 1-0.”
Law and Baxter were picked for the FIFA side to face England in the FA Centenary International in 1963, the year in which, back in Manchester, with United, he helped them win the FA Cup, their first trophy since the days of the fabled Busby Babes.
Law, Munich survivor Sir Bobby Charlton and a young Northern Irish genius named George Best formed The Golden Trinity during a golden era for a United team managed by Busby, capped by the European Cup win in 1968. Law was Club Captain, but injury kept him out of that game and as the years of abuse he took at the hands of uncompromising defenders took their toll, over the final half dozen years of his playing career, he was as often injured as playing.
He ran down his career back at City, sold by Tommy Docherty, memorably scoring his 303 and final club goal with a back-heeler, in a Manchester Derby – he did not celebrate.
The gap in his Scotland record was the national team's failure to qualify for the 1962, 1966 and 1970 World Cups. He was passed his peak when Scotland finally did get the non -qualifying monkey off their backs in 1974 and perhaps there was an element of a sympathy selection when Willie Ormond selected him for the opening game, against Zaire. But, at least, it meant he got to strut his stuff on the game's highest stage – it was his final match.
Law opted out of a post-playing career in coaching. He had a lengthy career as a media talking head, as well as working diligently for several charities. His daughter Diane, one of his five children had almost as long a Manchester Unitd career as her father, as a popular member of the club's Press Office team.
Another great Law story was told by Fred Eyre, once a club-mate at City. Eyre was never more than a journeyman player, before setting-up his own office equipment company and becoming a millionaire. Eyre's first order for his new company was for a load of stationery, unfortunately, he had broken a leg and was wondering how he might get the order from his van to the customer – when who would appear down the street but Denis, who readily agreed to help his old team mate out by carrying in the order.
Eyre always insisted: “When the customer saw who my van driver was, they immediately gave me a massive order for new desks and chairs and I never looked back.”
Denis fought and beat Prostate Cancer, but he could not beat Alzheimer's, he has gone now, but, to those of us fortunate enough to see him in his pomp, for club and mre-so for country, the sight of The Lawman in full cry was something to behold.
We shall not see his likes again – he was a very-special player and a very-special man.