Bangkok Post

Gregg, Man U great and Munich crash hero, dies

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LONDON: Harry Gregg — hailed as a hero for saving lives in the air crash which killed eight of Manchester United’s “Busby Babes” in Munich — has died at the age of 87.

Gregg, who was United’s goalkeeper, rescued a mother and her baby daughter, teammates Bobby Charlton and Jackie Blanchflow­er and manager Matt Busby from the wreckage of the plane on Feb 6, 1958.

He was back playing for Manchester United just 13 days later against Sheffield Wednesday.

Gregg became the world’s most expensive goalkeeper when he joined

United in December 1957 for £23,500 and went on to be voted the best at the following year’s World Cup in Sweden.

He was capped 25 times by Northern Ireland and played 247 times for United from 1957-66.

“It is with great sorrow that we inform of the death of Manchester United and Northern Ireland legend Harry Gregg, OBE,” the Harry Gregg Foundation announced on its Facebook page yesterday.

“Harry passed away peacefully in hospital surrounded by his loving family. The Gregg family would like to thank the medical staff at Causeway

Hospital for their wonderful dedication to Harry over his last few weeks.

“To everyone who has called, visited or sent well wishes we thank you for the love and respect shown to Harry and the family.”

Manchester United posted a tribute on their website.

“It is with deepest sadness that we have learned of the passing of former player Harry Gregg OBE,” said the club.

“The thoughts and prayers of everyone at the club go out to Harry’s family and friends.”

Gregg, who legendary United manager Alex Ferguson said was his hero, was humble about his bravery in Munich.

“I would be telling lies if I said that I thought about it all the time. In fact I would go insane,” he said in 2018 before a service marking 60 years since the disaster.

“I know the media would like to talk about what happened on a runway. I don’t blame people for that, but if all I was ever part of, or all I ever achieved was to do with what happened in Germany, in Munich, if that was what my life was all about, it didn’t come to very much.”

It was left to others such as fellow

Northern Ireland great George Best, who cleaned Gregg’s boots, to sum up his courage.

“Bravery is one thing but what Harry did was about more than bravery,” Best wrote in the foreword to Gregg’s autobiogra­phy in 2002. “It was about goodness.”

Carlisle, one of four clubs he managed after he hung up his boots in 1967, also tweeted a tribute him.

“He was the Hero of Munich — returning to the plane repeatedly to help others in what he described as a ‘spur of the moment’ action,” the fourth tier club tweeted.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Harry Gregg attends a match at Windsor Park in Belfast in 2010.
REUTERS Harry Gregg attends a match at Windsor Park in Belfast in 2010.

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