IN
MY lengthy career at the quotes face I have met many of the greats of
management – in a professional capacity. Stein, Souness, Turnbull,
McLean, Ferguson and more. Some were impressive, a couple on that
list above qualify for the use of the C word, but, my favourites were
the “characters” - Jock Wallace, Ally MacLeod, Jim Leishman, and,
of course, John Lambie, who died this morning.
John Lambie (1941 - 2018)
That
BBC documentary segment, of John letting rip at his Partick Thistle
players during a half-time break at Firhill is television gold. My
late father, who was an expert, was once complimented for his use of
“colliery language” by NCB Chairman Lord Robens, was impressed at
Lambie's innovative use of the Anglo-Saxon copulative verb as both
verb, adjective and noun during the piece. Well, his faither was a
miner, who had the good sense to send the teenaged Lambie down
Polkemet Colliery, to see for himself the conditions under which he
and their neighbours in Whitburn earned their daily bread. It worked,
and young John never did have to go doon the pit.
As
a player, he was a journeyman, over some 400 games for Falkirk, whom
he joined as an 18-year-old from Whitburn Juniors, and St Johnstone,
before he turned to his true calling, as a coach, initially with St
Johnstone – where he had been one of the stalwarts of the great
Willie Ormond-managed team which finished third in the old First
Division, reached a League Cup final and took the name St Johnstone
into Europe.
The
next stop for the embryo coach was Easter Road, under Eddie Turnbull,
another coach and manager fluent in bad language and invective. I
would not have liked to have been a player who stepped out of line
with those two around. While at Easter Road, Lambie claimed it was
he, rather than Tony Higgins, who has claimed ownership of the story,
who was sent to drag George Best out of his room at the North British
Hotel, only to find George in bed with one of his Miss Worlds and a
bottle of vintage champagne. If only it went wrong for more of us
that way.
From
Hibs, he went to Hamilton, as assistant to Bertie Auld, eventually
succeeding the Lisbon Lion as manager at Hamilton Accies in January,
1984. Highlight of his nearly five years at Douglas Park was surely
that unforgettable Scottish Cup win over Rangers at Ibrox. Adrian
Sprott got the goal, but goalkeeper Dave McKellar was the real hero
as he defied the Ibrox millionaires.
Adrian Sprott got the goal, but Dave McKellar was the hero of Hamilton's Ibrox win
In
November, 1988, he went to Partick Thistle for the first time, but,
after only 11 months, he was back at Accies. Not for long, however,
five months later, he was back at Firhill for a further five years.
First
club Falkirk then came calling and he returned for an unhappy seventh
month spell at Brockville, a chastening spell which caused him to
turn his back on football for three full years, during which he
concentrated on his true sporting love, racing pigeons – he had 80
at one point, and greyhounds – he once owned 14.
Lambie
said during one interview: “I understand doos better than I do
footballers, but, not as well as I do grehounds.” He also said
looking after his doos and taking his dugs racing relaxed him.
In
early 1999, with Thistle seemingly sliding towards the bottom
division in Scotland, and, some feared, possible liquidation, he was
persuaded back to Firhill for a third and final spell. The old magic
still worked, as he stopped the slide, then guided the Jags back to
the top flight, and kept them there.
There
was no secret to what Lambie did. It was old-fashioned management, he
was as likely to put an arm round a player as give him a “hair
dryer” blast – in which art, many would have backed him against
Ferguson. He particularly succeeded in getting the best out of
allegedly “difficult” players such as Chic Charnley.
Perhaps the son he never had; Lambie with Chic Charnely
In
2003, however, he handed-in his manager's coat and retired. Thistle
put him on the board, and made him honorary vice-president. The
Thistle fans voted him into their Hall of Fame, as did the Falkirk
fans.
If
the press has its way, he will get into the Scottish Football HoF as
well. You see, in this game, getting a useable quote out of some
managers is a bit like pulling teeth, without anaesthetic. Not with
Lambie. Press conferences, particularly in his office at Firhill,
were always joyous affairs; we never knew when it was coming, but, we
knew at some point, he would deliver the quote we needed.
Colin McGlashan - or is it Pele? in action for Partick Thistle
Some
of the quotes were gold dust. We all the story of how, when the
Thistle physio told him Colin McGlashan had concussion and didn't
know who he was, Lambie replied: “Slap up roon the face wi a
fucking wet sponge, tell him he's fucking Pele and send him back oot
there.” A couple of other swear words might have been left out of
that one, but, it remains a classic.
I
remember, after one thoroughly miserable, gale-lashed match at Rugby
Park, he bounced into the press room to tell the assembled hack pack:
“Ah widnae hae sent ma doos oot in that the day.”
After
he retired, he stayed retired, apart from a two-game cameo as Thistle
caretaker boss, in 2004. We missed him, his big cigars and the fog of
cigar smoke at the press conferences. We missed the forthright
opinions, and the knowledge.
He
was a true character. He fell-out with wife Mamie, but, managed to
remain friends, in one of his last interviews, he told The Scotsman's
Aidan Smith how, he still ran Mamie to and from her line dancing.
As
illness took its toll, the doos went, as did the greyhounds, and,
this morning, he was called to the great dug-out in the sky. We will
miss him, and remember him fondly, but, not as much as Mamie, his
three daughters and his grand-children will.
Today,
we lost a giant, and a giant character.
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