by AthleticoSpizz » 22 Jun 2016 19:44
by AthleticoSpizz » 22 Jun 2016 20:17
by sputnik » 23 Jun 2016 13:17
by Royal1988 » 23 Jun 2016 18:10
by KC Royal » 23 Jun 2016 18:41
by One8Seven1* » 28 Jun 2016 14:39
Lacoste Extremely sad news. A proper football man and a proper Reading FC man who showed us so much class and loyalty over the years.
Always wanted him to be manager every time the job was there for the taking.
Sleep well mate.
by Sutekh » 29 Jun 2016 11:46
by The Cap » 04 Jul 2016 21:45
“Eamonn had a brilliant mind,” said Hammond. “Intellectually he was brilliant. He had that emotional intelligence because he was coming from first-team football at Exeter, but he had also been involved in development.
“He had an understanding of what was required from the first-team manger. That was one of his great strengths because he knew the pressure the first-team manager was under and how difficult it is to play young players.
“But the unbelievable quality that Eamonn had was he understood all of the modern methods. He knew about medical, he knew about sports science - but what he also had, which was key, was he had that old-school tough mentality.
“He could do tough love with the players and sometimes that doesn’t happen in modern academies because of the way the world is.
"But he could do that because the players knew that he loved them. He had such a way with players that they knew the tough love was for their benefit.
“He had a beautiful balance of old-school discipline, against that intellect that gave him knowledge of all the modern concepts and philosophies.
“We brought him in because we thought he would bring all those things - but he brought more.”
Tributes have been flooding in for Dolan since the tragic news of his death was announced on June 21.
Reading have had a book of condolence in place for fans to sign while flags at both Madejski Stadium and Hogwood Park have been flying at half-mast.
His funeral will be held on Tuesday, July 5 at 11am in Wokingham’s Corpus Christi Catholic Church and a huge turn-out is expected from those wanting to pay their respects to the 48-year-old.
“You’ll see at the funeral just what he meant to people,” said Hammond.
“When you look at someone’s life, how do you judge it? For me, it’s the legacy that they leave behind and the people that they’ve touched.
“The legacy that Eamonn left at Reading will go on for years because there is a structure and philosophy in place that will serve the club so well.
“That’s a working legacy. But a greater legacy of Eamonn is his family.
“Erica his wife, Grace and Seamus, his kids, are just a beautiful, beautiful people. He was just so proud of his family.”
Hammond added: “48 is no age for anyone to die, so therefore Tuesday is going to be a very sad day.
“Ultimately it’s about a family who have lost a husband, a father and a brother. It’s going to be a tremendously sad and difficult day - but we’ll get through it because there will be so much togetherness in the room.
“Eamonn used a lot of language that he developed in the academy. Language that he used with the players and staff.
"Probably the word he used more than any other was togetherness. And the togetherness of everyone there on Tuesday will support the family.”
by Unphased Royal » 05 Jul 2016 10:59
by AthleticoSpizz » 05 Jul 2016 20:02
by Ian Herring » 05 Jul 2016 20:50
by floyd__streete » 07 Jul 2016 12:59
by seahawk10 » 02 Aug 2018 19:24