There’s a pretty good book called “29 mins from Wembley” which highlights the 80-81 season and Thompson states he didn’t want to leave because he’d just got married and bought a house but Jimmy Hill wanted him to move on. Might be wrong on this because haven’t read it in a while but I think part of his signing on fee was in suits, not money, because he liked going out and I think it was Jimmy who told him that he’d be paid that way. I’ll check it out again when I get a chance.
Hill caused as much damage to ccfc than he did good, no great things as manager. A number of his policies cost us money we could ill afford, the all-seater fiasco cutting our average gates at a stroke and remember this all seater wasn’t new posh stands like what happens now it was seats on existing terracing with no roof. I believe this was the biggest cause of the decline in our gates which got as low as 8/9000
The American venture with Washington Diplomats more debt, the only thing we got out of that was David bloody Bradford I’ll say no more
The selling of Ian Wallace for an at the time massive £1.25million severing our prolific and vital goalscoring partnership with Mick Ferguson. That money could have bought three or four very good players but no he spent it on the white elephant and poorly equipt Sky Blue Connexion which was eventually hived off for less than a third of what it cost to build.
The Saudi Arabian venture ! never really got what that was all about if we had ended up with a billionaire sheik it might have been okay, I suspect JH made more dosh out of that than ccfc did.
And then the sales of the likes of Garry Thompson, Steve Hunt and others, cruelty singaling Hunt over the tannoy in front of thousands of fans while kicking about before a match and cutting the affectivness of our squad these were our top players, Hunt got capped for England afterwards.
And while I’m at it remember on the eve of our big kick-off in our debut season everybody bubbling, he out of the blue resigned never signed any new blood for the campaign, leaving his eventual successor Cantwell having to do that throughout the season. I worked with Ron Farmer and Ernie Machin at Massey-Ferguson and they both told me they hadn’t an inclin that was about to happen and gutted them at the time.
But I will say he was a brilliant football manager and took us from the gutter to the top division in just 5 seasons.