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RIP AUGUST

Discussion in 'Hull City' started by Tigerglenn, Aug 4, 2025.

  1. rovertiger

    rovertiger Well-Known Member

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    That was Sharon Duce, always had a thing for her.
     
    #21
  2. Tigerglenn

    Tigerglenn Well-Known Member

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    Long-serving Blue Peter editor Biddy Baxter, who turned the children's show into a television institution, has died at the age of 92.

    Over more than two decades, she introduced generations of children to the pleasures of sticky-backed plastic, on-screen pets, presenters' adventures and charity appeals - a recipe that stood the test of time.

    She was also passionate about getting her viewers involved in the programme, long before audience participation became an industry mantra.

    But during her tenure, which lasted from 1965 to 1988, she also gained a reputation as a formidable figure - a tyrant who fell out with presenters and jealously guarded the Blue Peter brand.
     
    #22
  3. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    RIP
    Derby County is saddened to confirm the passing of its former player Terry Hennessey at the age of 82.



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    The club was informed of the sad news by his family on Friday morning.

    Hennessey joined Derby County under the management of Brian Clough in the early stages of 1970 from Nottingham Forest.

    His move across the East Midlands saw Hennessey enter the history books by becoming the Rams’ first-ever £100,000 signing as the side finished fourth in the top-flight in 1969/70.

    Hennessey played 18 times in the club’s historic 1971/72 title-winning campaign, while he also featured significantly in the Texaco Cup winning team in the same season.

    The Wales international defender, who gained 39 caps for his country, also played four times in the club’s run to the Semi-Final stage of European Cup during the 1972/73 season.

    Hennessey played 82 times for the club in all competitions and scored five goals and left the club in 1973 and retiring due to injury, bringing down the curtain on his impressive professional career.

    Derby County’s deepest condolences and thoughts are with the family and friends of Terry Hennessey at this difficult time.

    Statement from the family of Terry Hennessey
    We Mourn the Passing of Terry Hennessey (1942-2025)

    It is with deep sadness that we announce the passing of William Terrence “Terry” Hennessey, the legendary Welsh international footballer and former club captain, who died peacefully on the 8th of August 2025, at the age of 82.

    Born on 1st September 1942 in Llay, near Wrexham, Hennessey became one of Wales’ most respected footballers of the post-war era. A commanding presence at the heart of defence, his career spanned over a decade and a half at the highest levels of the game.

    Terry began his professional journey with Birmingham City in 1959, making over 170 league appearances and helping the club to victory in the 1963 Football League Cup Final. He went on to captain Nottingham Forest, earning admiration for his leadership and consistency over 159 appearances. His final English club was Derby County, where he played a pivotal role under Brian Clough in the club’s historic 1971–72 First Division title-winning season.

    On the international stage, Hennessey proudly earned 39 caps for Wales between 1962 and 1972, captaining his country on 20 occasions, marking the legendary Pelé at just 19 years old in 1961, and serving as a role model for future generations of Welsh players.

    After retiring due to injury, Terry transitioned to management and coaching, leaving his mark overseas. He found success in the North American Soccer League (NASL), most notably guiding the Tulsa Roughnecks to the 1983 Soccer Bowl championship. His coaching journey later took him to Australia, where he continued to contribute to the game through roles with Melbourne Croatia and Heidelberg United.

    A man of humility and passion, Terry Hennessey was not only a footballer of great stature but also a devoted ambassador of the sport across continents. He spent his later years on the beautiful Mornington Peninsula in Australia, where he remained closely connected to football as both a mentor and enthusiast.

    Terry was a devoted husband to the late Sandra for over 44 years. Terry is survived by his son Dean, daughter Samantha and son-in-law Jim. Terry was a loving grandfather of six grandchildren and four great grandchildren.

    We pay tribute to a man whose influence transcended borders and whose legacy will endure through the many lives he touched on and off the pitch.

    Rest in peace, Terry. You will forever be part of football’s proud history and much-loved family man.
     
    #23
  4. x

    x Well-Known Member

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    #24
  5. Cityzen

    Cityzen Well-Known Member

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  6. originallambrettaman

    originallambrettaman Mod Moderator
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    Joe Caroff, the unheralded graphic designer whose iconic creations included James Bond's 007 gun logo, posters for West Side Story and A Hard Day's Night and typography for Last Tango in Paris, Manhattan and Rollerball, died on Sunday aged 103.

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    He got paid $300 for this, it was supposed to be for a letterhead for the launch of the first film, but has been used for every Bond film since...

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    #26
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  7. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    #27
  8. Cityzen

    Cityzen Well-Known Member

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    #28
    TwoWrights and rovertiger like this.
  9. x

    x Well-Known Member

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    15th: bob simpson, australian cricketer, allrounder and national captain, 89.

    A key figure in Australian cricket for more than four decades, as cricketer, captain, coach and commentator, Bob Simpson first toured with Australia in 1957-58 as an allrounder, bowling legbreaks and fielding infallibly at slip. He subsequently became a first-rate opening batsman, although it wasn't until his 30th Test, by which time he had succeeded to the captaincy, that he first posted a Test hundred. He made this breakthrough innings at Old Trafford count, by turning it into 311 in almost 13 hours. In all he made 1381 Test runs in 1964, a record at the time. Hard-bitten and immensely dedicated, he steadily rationalised his repertoire of strokes, eschewing the hook, but excelling as an acquirer of singles; Australia has had no more productive an opening pairing than Simpson and Bill Lawry. With the advent of World Series Cricket in April 1977, Simmo emerged from retirement at 41 to lead Australia again, against India, where his old powers against spin were evident, and West Indies, whose fast bowlers proved more taxing: his captaincy record, ultimately, was rather modest. When Australia went looking for a fulltime coach in the mid-1980s, he was again the Board's choice, and gave Allan Border's team a taste of the discipline to which he had always submitted himself as a player. A martinet where fitness, fielding and batting technique were concerned, he held the job for a controversial but successful decade, during which time the team won the World Cup and regained both the Ashes and the Frank Worrell Trophy. He also had stints in county cricket, coaching Leicestershire and Lancashire.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Simpson_(cricketer)
     
    #29
  10. StubbDave

    StubbDave Well-Known Member

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    I was there to see all 13 hours of his 311 at Old Trafford in 1964.
     
    #30

  11. londontiger

    londontiger Well-Known Member

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    He didn’t actually design this actual one, I redid this just after Tomorrow Never Dies, although it’s very close, went through soooo many designs and it was just tweaked over the previous one.
     
    #31
  12. Chazz Rheinhold

    Chazz Rheinhold Well-Known Member

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    Can’t say I remember him
    RIP
    Charlie Partridge
    My father, Charlie Partridge, who has died aged 72 after suffering complications from cancer, was a journalist, broadcaster and champion of local media.

    Having begun his career at
    Radio
    Trent, he moved to the BBC’s Radio Nottingham in 1978 before joining Radio Humberside, eventually presenting the breakfast show. Always up for an attention-grabbing stunt, he once broadcast from a RAF Lightning fast jet, and on one April Fools’ Day claimed the town of Goole would be rebranding itself as “Go Olé”.

    He moved on to become news editor at BBC Essex and despite being serious about his journalism he also starred in a regular feature on the station in which listeners would have to guess what song he was performing “in a pub singer style”.

    In 1999 Charlie became managing editor of BBC Radio Lincolnshire, where his belief in the power of local media to create and bind communities together led to campaigns, alongside Lincolnshire Life magazine, for a Lincolnshire flag and a Lincolnshire Day (now marked on 1 October).

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    The county flag of Lincolnshire. Illustration: Alamy
    Unusual sightings of the flag became a fixture of our family’s WhatsApp group, with it appearing in the crowd at Glastonbury and at the Tour de France, and inspiring a number of Lincoln City FC away shirts.

    His biggest source of professional pride, however, was the number of successful journalists he had either trained or worked with early on in their BBC careers.

    Born in Plymouth to Ronald Partridge, a civil servant, and Vera (nee Harrington), Charlie moved with his family to Gloucester at the age of seven. He was educated at the Crypt grammar school and then the University of Nottingham, where he studied politics.

    It was in Nottingham that he alighted on the world of radio as a career, after a short detour into teaching. There, too, he met Jill Rowland, whom he married in 1981, and who later worked as an academic librarian at the University of Lincoln. They went on to have three sons, Simon, Dominic and me.

    A lifelong football fan, Charlie’s passion for the game was sparked by childhood visits to Home Park and later on he was, I’m pretty sure, the only Plymouth Argyle supporter with a season ticket for Lincoln City, whose games he attended alongside his sons. He was also a keen skier and cyclist.

    Retiring from the BBC after 42 years amid the pandemic in 2020, he went on to work as mayor’s officer at the Guildhall in Lincoln, where his duties included carrying the mace as part of the lord mayor’s procession.

    He is survived by Jill, Simon, Dominic and me, and his grandchildren, Finlay and Anna, and sister, Caroline.
     
    #32

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