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The RIP Thread

Discussion in 'Queens Park Rangers' started by durbar2003, Feb 3, 2016.

  1. qprbeth

    qprbeth Wicked Witch of West12 Forum Moderator

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    RIP Gordon possibly our best ever manager definitely our most innovative.

    A forward thinker and initiator of the modern game
     
    #5761
  2. Stroller

    Stroller Well-Known Member

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  3. Taffvalerowdy

    Taffvalerowdy Well-Known Member

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    A ‘proper’ football Manager.

    RIP <rose>
     
    #5763
  4. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    Certainly one of the most forward thinking coaches of his era. Built most of our greatest team and had the vision to allow TV to coach as well. The progress he oversaw left his successor the perfect platform to play exciting attacking football that was way ahead of it’s time. We owe him so much. RIP...
     
    #5764
  5. Hoops Eternal

    Hoops Eternal Well-Known Member

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    Really sad news. Laid the foundations of the greatest team we've ever had, they were exciting times to be a hoop.
    RIP Gordon and thanks for the fantastic memories.
    <rose>
     
    #5765
    Last edited: Jul 6, 2025
    Flanman, UTRs, Kilburn and 7 others like this.
  6. QPR Oslo

    QPR Oslo Well-Known Member

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  7. Taffvalerowdy

    Taffvalerowdy Well-Known Member

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    upload_2025-7-6_16-51-16.png
     
    #5767
  8. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    #5768
  9. Trammers

    Trammers Well-Known Member

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    Can't add anything else to what's been said already....

    RIP Gordon <rose>
     
    #5769
  10. Kilburn

    Kilburn Well-Known Member

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    I would put Alec Stock up there too. Just bought the Gordon Jago autobiography on Amazon.

    Screenshot_20250707-042654_Amazon Shopping.png

    Screenshot_20250707-042749_Amazon Shopping.png

    Screenshot_20250707-042818_Amazon Shopping.png
     

    Attached Files:

    #5770
    Last edited: Jul 7, 2025
  11. QPR999

    QPR999 Well-Known Member Staff Member

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    #5771
  12. stanleyparkerbowles

    stanleyparkerbowles Well-Known Member

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    Great article
     
    #5772
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  13. QPRski

    QPRski Well-Known Member

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    One of our best ever managers who took us a quantum leap forward and build the foundation our legendary '75/76 team.

    May he Rest in Peace.
     
    #5773
  14. Star of David Bardsley

    Star of David Bardsley 2023 Funniest Poster

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    Norman Tebbit…
     
    #5774
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  15. Sooperhoop

    Sooperhoop Well-Known Member

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    'The Chingford Skinhead', one of Maggie's right hand men. Famously made an arse of himself with his 'Cricket test' where he claimed children born here to immigrant parents should support England, he should have tried England v Windies at the Oval where most of Brixton decamped a mile up the road to produce the best atmosphere you'd ever get at cricket in the 60s & 70s.

    One of the last of that era to pass away it's a very different England now. RIP...
     
    #5775
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  16. Hoops Eternal

    Hoops Eternal Well-Known Member

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    Also famously represented on Spitting Image.
    Maggie's hatchet man.
    RIP
     
    #5776
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  17. kiwiqpr

    kiwiqpr Barnsie Mod

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    Connie Francis: Pretty Little Baby singer dies at 87
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    Connie Francis sold millions of records, and was the first female recording artist to top the US Billboard Charts
    Connie Francis, who was at one time the world's biggest-selling female artist, has died at the age of 87.

    The musician, whose hits included Stupid Cupid and Who's Sorry Now, had recently enjoyed a resurgence after her 1962 song Pretty Little Baby went viral on TikTok.

    Francis had recently been treated for pelvic pain caused by a fracture. During her stay in hospital, she was diagnosed with pneumonia and died on Wednesday night, the president of her record label, Ron Roberts, told BBC News.

    Roberts had previously announced the star’s death on Facebook, “with a heavy heart and extreme sadness.”


    "I know that Connie would approve that her fans are among the first to learn of this sad news,” he added.

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    The singer had recently been active on Facebook, updating fans about her health

    The star's death comes just months after Pretty Little Baby became a trending song on TikTok.

    Millions of people, including Kim Kardashian and Kylie Jenner, lip-synced to the easy listening ballad, while showing off their children and pets, or making displays of affection.

    One video, by social media influencers Brooke Monk and Sam Dezz, was watched more than 158 million times.

    ABBA singer Agnetha Fältskog also posted the song, saying that Francis had long been her favourite singer. And the actress Gracie Lawrence, who is currently playing Francis in the Broadway musical Just in Time, also shared a video of herself singing the track, while dressed in character.

    Speaking last month, Francis said she had been surprised by the sudden success of a track that had originally been a b-side.

    "To tell you the truth, I didn't even remember the song!" she told People magazine.

    "I had to listen to it to remember. To think that a song I recorded 63 years ago is touching the hearts of millions of people is truly awesome. It is an amazing feeling."



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    The singer was the biggest-selling female artist in the world in the early 1960s

    Francis was born Concetta Rosemarie Franconero and grew up in a working-class Italian American family in Brooklyn, New York.

    Encouraged by her father, she started playing the accordion at the age of three. By the time she was a teenager, she had changed her name to Connie Francis, and was making regular appearances on the US TV variety show Startime Kids.

    Early attempts to launch a singing career were not successful.

    She was turned down by almost every record label, only securing a contract with MGM Records because her demo song was called Freddy - which happened to be the name of the president's son.

    Her initial recordings failed to find an audience, and Francis accepted a place to study medicine at university.

    But she scored a breakout hit with her last contracted recording for MGM - a cover of the 1923 song Who's Sorry Now?, that she only recorded at her father's insistence.

    "I had 18 bomb records," Francis told UPI in 1996. "He wanted me to record a song written in 1923. I said 'Forget about it - the kids on American Bandstand would laugh me right off the show.'

    "He said, 'If you don't record this song, dummy, the only way you'll get on American Bandstand is to sit on the TV'."

    It was almost prophetic. In 1958, Dick Clark championed the track on American Bandstand, telling viewers: "There's no doubt about it, she is headed straight for the number one spot."

    Francis, who was watching at home, had no idea the song was going to feature on the show.

    "Well, the feeling was cosmic - just cosmic!" she wrote in her diary that night.

    "Right there in my living-room, it became Mardi Gras-time and New Year's Eve at the turn of the century!"

    Pop icon turned victims' advocate
    Over the next couple of years, Francis became a true pop icon.

    She sold millions of records - including teen hits like Lipstick On Your Collar and Everybody's Somebody's Fool.

    In 1960, she became the first woman to top the Billboard Top 100, with the bluesy ballad Everybody's Somebody's Fool.

    Francis also had an affinity for languages, and was one of the first stars to record in multiple dialects.

    Her title song from the 1961 movie Where the Boys Are, for example, was released in seven different languages - English, German, French, Italian, Japanese, Neopolitan and Spanish.

    In 1963, she also recorded one of the first known charity singles, In The Summer Of His Years, a tribute to the assassinated US president John F Kennedy.

    Her popularity waned in the mid-60s, as acts like The Beatles and Bob Dylan took over the pop charts; and she briefly lost her voice as a result of nasal surgery.




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    The singer spoke about her rape in a moving interview with Terry Wogan in 1989
    In 1974 Francis mounted a comeback at the Westbury Music Fair in New York, but after the performance she was beaten and raped at knife point in her motel.

    Traumatised, she became a recluse and spent several spells in psychiatric hospitals (she later said she had been admitted against her will by her father).

    At her lowest point, the star tried to kill herself with sleeping pills.

    "I just felt that there was nothing for me to live for," she told Terry Wogan on his BBC One chat show in 1989.

    "I had this free-floating fear of life in general after the rape, and I just said, 'Well, that's it, I'm going to check out'."

    Francis said it was her adopted son, Joey, who saved her life.

    "I was looking at this bottle of sleeping pills... and my son knocked at the door of the bathrooom and he said, 'Mommy, you're the best mommy I ever had'," she told Wogan.

    "And that was it. I took the pills and threw them right down the toilet."

    The singer later won $1.5 million (£1.1 million) in a lawsuit against the Howard Johnson's motel chain for failing to provide safe locks on the glass door through which her attacker entered.


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    The musician recorded more than 70 albums over her career
    Francis had just begun her return to the stage in 1981 when her younger brother George Franconero, who had testified against the mafia, was shot to death in front of his house.

    The incident plunged her deeper into depression, and she spent much of the next decade receiving treatment, during which time she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

    However, she also became a prominent voice in crime victims' advocacy groups, including Women Against Rape, and the Victims' Assistance Legal Organisation, and became a spokesperson for Mental Health America.

    She resumed her recording career in 1989, and continued to sing for sold-out audiences until she was in her 70s.

    Earlier this month, she told fans she had been admitted to hospital due to ongoing hip pain, but remained in good spirits.

    Her death came after a short illness, said her friend and label boss Ron Roberts, adding that more details would be released at a later date.

    Looking back over her life and career in 2010, she said that "with the exception of my brother's murder, I would do it all over again.

    "Because although there were some terrible lows, there were also exhilarating highs that I would have never felt in any other profession."
     
    #5777

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