by LUX » 16 Dec 2010 22:07
by RoyalBlue » 16 Dec 2010 22:51
RichieBowman I saw Friday when i was a child and can still remember the excitement of seeing him play. I think that he and Michael Gilkes are my most exciting players to have played for the club.
The Paulo Hewitt book is crap and i could not bring myself to read it. !
RichieBowman Would Robin Friday have made an impact in the game today ? I guess it would really be down to the man management. He would have been better protected by the ref than he would have been in the 1970' s.
Football focus had a feature on Robin Friday and Gruff from Super Furries speaks with fondness of Robin being a crazy but a great footballer. Cant top that really !
by Ark Royal » 17 Dec 2010 04:11
LUX he is my favourite ever footballer, the player that got me hooked on RFC, I'll never forget him. But let's not lose sight of the fact that he was playing for us in the old Fourth Division. When we went up in 76-77, iirc he did not do that well in the third division. Around Xmas he signed for Cardiff, who were old second division, played, scored and created a legend there over a few months, then it was over.
Is my memory correct?
by LUX » 17 Dec 2010 20:49
by Mid Sussex Royal » 17 Dec 2010 22:08
by Sir Roger Blake » 17 Dec 2010 22:49
RoyalBlueBandiniThe legend of ROBIN FRIDAY
It’s 20 years since Robin Friday, the patron saint of lower division bad boys, died at the age of only 38. Since then his legend has mushroomed into the worlds of publishing, music and fashion. He is recognised way beyond the fans of Reading and Cardiff City, the two League clubs he played for in the 1970s.
In this 50 page photo-essay Roger Titford traces exactly how the legend of ‘the greatest footballer you never saw’ came about and where it’s turning into pure myth. It crystallises Friday in his prime, examines the utterly different attitudes to the game existing not that long ago and the fascination that the modern fan has with his era. Gloriously illustrated with the best-ever collection of images of Robin in action.
Published in association with When Saturday Comes and available exclusively in digital viewing format for just £3.
http://www.exacteditions.com/exact/browse/378/1224
Has anyone paid the three quid? Is it worth paying for or is it just a rework of everything else that has been written, particularly the book by the bloke from Oasis?
My 16 year old daughter was asking about Robin Friday the other day. She was interested to hear how we came to sign him from Hayes, why he was regarded as the bad guy from football, and to learn that he died and was cremated just a few miles from where we live. The fact that youngsters from this generation are asking about him would suggest that the legend does live on.
by Gordons Cumming » 23 Dec 2010 08:45
by fridays child » 23 Dec 2010 10:36
Gordons Cumming The genius died 20 years ago today.
RIP Robin ( I trust you are )
by Man Friday » 23 Dec 2010 12:21
by Harpers So Solid Crew » 23 Dec 2010 12:49
by East Grinstead Royal » 23 Dec 2010 13:35
by RoyalBlue » 23 Dec 2010 14:03
Sir Roger BlakeRoyalBlue Has anyone paid the three quid? Is it worth paying for or is it just a rework of everything else that has been written, particularly the book by the bloke from Oasis?
My 16 year old daughter was asking about Robin Friday the other day. She was interested to hear how we came to sign him from Hayes, why he was regarded as the bad guy from football, and to learn that he died and was cremated just a few miles from where we live. The fact that youngsters from this generation are asking about him would suggest that the legend does live on.
It doesn't really add very much but definately worth £3 for its insightful analysis of how the Robin Friday legend has emerged since the great man's untimely and squalid death. It seems The Hewitt Guigsy book was prompted by a Goal magazine article which cribbed from Titford & Dumphy's book about the Robin Friday spearheaded 1976 promotion season, 'More than a Job'. Hewitt is a good writer and a top geezer but his book is purely reportage and Sir Roger Blake reckons that if he got to it first, Roger Titford would have written a much more complete book about Robin Friday. For instance the article picks up on the significance of Robin's near death on a building site: Nothing like a metal spike up your arse to focus the mind. The greatest book Titford never wrote.
by Trainspotter » 23 Dec 2010 15:58
by biscuitman » 23 Dec 2010 16:08
All geniuses are tainted. Robin Friday certainly was. But he was and is a legend. He elevated Reading FC from the ordinary.
I saw his debut at Northampton in a Sunday 3 - 3 draw. He looked special then. His Tranmere goal was pure magic. So were many of his goals - and his antics!
I once met this delightful lady at the school where I used to teach. When talking to her she revealed she was Robin Friday's daugher, Bella. It was like meeting one of Jesus' disciples. I was dumbstruck!
Reading FC has had some good players since the days when Robin played but none quite like him. He was unique. It was an honour to have seen him play.
RIP Robin
by rfcjoe » 23 Dec 2010 16:10
by Gordons Cumming » 23 Dec 2010 16:12
by Einstein agogo » 23 Dec 2010 17:16
by Harpers So Solid Crew » 23 Dec 2010 17:29
by RoyalBlue » 23 Dec 2010 18:42
Harpers So Solid Crew Well worth adding that it was before the days of the internet, and instant information, the tannoy was dire, if you could even hear it, team news was as listed in the program, and often you did not know the team until they appeared from the tunnel. Most games you would be lucky to see 3 or 4 pictures in the Post and Chronicle, very little television coverage. There was no local radio either, and we barely got a mention in national media. The main knowledge was from being there, and I would say that everyone knew Friday would have been a top league player, had he been the type to knuckle down and conform, I am damned glad he did not.
Rodney Marsh
Charlie Cooke
George Best
Friday was there in the same league, if not the same division.
by Man Friday » 23 Dec 2010 21:00
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