Anybody the Tommy Hughes calamity performance in the table topper vs Notts County in 1971/72 at home - he'd had an absolute howler of a game but topped it off with a late penalty save from was it Don Masson to preserve our 1-0 win (courtesy of a Ray Graydon header)Incidentally didn't Don Masson miss a penalty for Scotland in the 1978 World Cup against the mighty Peru ? If memory serves me right it would've put the Jocks 2-1 up in a game they went on to lose 3-1. This from a team that was going to "Win" the World Cup and yet could afford not to even include Andy Gray in their squad.
Bosnich on his day was the best I've seen. Bit erratic sometimes and lousy kicker but still a top keeper. Spinksy was good, James OK except for the final. Schmeichel made a lot of mistakes in the second half of his season. Friedel the best in recent years.
Ron Manager helped me out with the Christian name of goalie Mike Pinner, the very last amateur ever to play for our first XI. He played most of the time for Pegasus which was the team of the combined Oxford and Cambridge Universities. He was rubbish, straight out of Brideshead Revisited. Nigel Sims (one M) was hugely popular with the fans and the two true legends about him, both seen by me as a youth were the game against Tottenham when hotshot tearaway cockney centre forward Bobby Smith ran from the half way line at full speed to try to shoulder barge Nigel over his own line. Nigel assumed the railway buffers position, all twenty stone of him. It took a full five minutes of cold water and smelling salts to get Smith back on his feet. The second legend was when Nigel got injured but rather than go off he played centre forward and Stan Lynn went in goal. Nigel had an old tatty Villa shirt under his jersey and it was full of great big holes. He charged around the field like a demented hippo, flattening everybody in sight, including his own players.Jimmy Cumbes followed in the footsteps of Gil Merrick and was a county standard wicket keeper but the most remarkable goalkeeper we ever produced was Con Martin, equally good at centre half or goalkeeper and capped by Ireland in both positions in his own right. Joe Rutherford was pants but Keith Jones was competent but too small for the game as it was played back in the day. The immortal John Charles was a competent goalkeeper, but then again he was the ultimate footballer so that is no surprise.