I don't think too many will argue with that Andy. Hard as nails, fair and liked by all.
David Craig Mackay 1934 - 2015.
Dave Mackay was already a hero at two clubs, Hearts and Spurs, when Brian Clough painted him a picture of what an Indian Summer in the midlands might look like. Mackay was on the on the cusp of leaving Spurs, with whom he’d won the double in ‘61 and battled back from two broken legs, for a player manger role at Hearts where he’d won every Scottish trophy going, when Clough went knocking, but Clough’s silver tongue and an unauthorised wad of cash won the day and Mackay was Derby bound. For the next 122 games we lucky fans witnessed a masterclass as Mackay, from a deeplying sweeper role, became the mentoring, cajoling, sometimes frightening catalyst for a team of young wannabes and last chance salooners who rocketed from the yawning gap signposted div 3 to the top echelons of the world’s best league. PFA Player of the year came his way but maybe of more value he won the hearts of every single Derby fan, and three years after his fanfared departure he took on one last challenge, to turn around the post-Clough mutiny as manager, improve on Clough’s team and deliver a second League Championship.
Dave Mackay is a legend of the Rams.
Anyone?
I don't think too many will argue with that Andy. Hard as nails, fair and liked by all.
Before my time Andy, but from everything I’ve heard, read and subsequently seen he has to be up there with the best.
No coincidence that he was always a superb role model and went on to be a great ambassador for the club right up until his death. Special character, not many around in football nowadays.
I remember one Saturday during our promotion season we had only drawn at home and I was waiting for a train home to Buxton as a sad 12 year old. Dave must have been heading home after the game at the same time too, but he took the time to sit next to me and console the young Ram with wise words and a promise to win promotion for me, come what may. He put an arm round me, signed an autograph and we went our separate ways.
But he lived up to his words and he inspired the team to push on to promotion for me. I never did shout at him from the terraces for being and old slow Scotch Bxxxxxx again.