Glasgow Times

Aitken leads tributes to ‘ iconic’ former Celtic team- mate McGarvey

- MATTHEW LINDSAY

CELTIC great Roy Aitken last night paid an emotional tribute to his close friend and former Parkhead teammate Frank McGarvey after it was announced the legendary striker had passed away at the age of 66 following a battle with pancreatic cancer.

Aitken won every major honour in Scottish football playing alongside McGarvey during the early 1980s and believes the forward, who netted 109 times in 245 appearance­s for his boyhood heroes, should be remembered as one of the Glasgow club’s all- time great goalscorer­s.

The Easterhous­e lad’s most famous moment was scoring a late winner in the 1985 Scottish Cup final against Dundee United in front of a crowd of 60,346 in what turned out to be his last game for the team he had grown up cheering on from the terraces.

But the ex- Celtic captain believes that his countryman, who became Scotland’s record transfer when he was signed from Liverpool for £ 250,000 in 1980, was integral to all of the successes which Billy McNeill and Davie Hay’s sides enjoyed during that halcyon era.

“First of all, Frank was a good friend,” said Aitken. “That Celtic team in the early 1980s was a good strong unit. It was a very strong dressing room. There was a lot of camaraderi­e in there between the players. A lot of us had come through the system and were supporters. Frank was very much a part of that. He was a real character.

“Billy brought him in and he stayed on when Davie came in. He memorably scored the winner in the 1985 Scottish Cup final in what proved to be his last game. It was fitting that he bowed out as a hero. A lot of people will remember him for that.

“But he was always a great goalscorer. He scored over 100 goals if I’m not mistaken. He is one of a select few players who have achieved that for the club. He is legendary for what he achieved as a goalscorer.

“He was always reliable. He trained hard, he played hard, he was a good guy to have in the dressing room. He was a good team- mate generally. Successful teams are not just about being good on the pitch. You need to have quality in the changing room. Frank was a strong character, a funny guy, had his own personalit­y.

“He left an impression on everyone who he met. I was involved with him on the park and in the dressing room for years. You live in each other’s suitcases in football. You get to know each other well. He was one of those guys you could trust.”

McGarvey, who was capped for Scotland on seven occasions between 1979 and 1984, enjoyed lengthy spells at St Mirren before and after his time at Celtic and helped the Paisley club to lift the Scottish Cup in 1987.

Aitken admitted that he much

preferred playing with him to against him.

“No doubt about it, Frank was a top player,” he said. “He had the big move to Liverpool early in his career before he came back to Celtic. I played against him many times as well as with him, in his early days at St Mirren and his latter days at St Mirren.

“He was an awkward customer, he was unpredicta­ble. He had a few nicknames over the years – including The Human Eel! As a player, he was an unpredicta­ble, dangerous goalscorer. I was happy to have him on my team in the early 1980s rather than to be playing against him.”

Aitken was devastated when McGarvey told him back in October that he had pancreatic cancer and had only been given a few months to live by doctors – but he recalled how his old team- mate had treated the news with the same bravery he had always shown on the park in his playing days.

“I spoke to him just after he was diagnosed,” he said. “I was out in Dubai and he called me to tell me that he had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and told me about all the complicati­ons that come with that. He gave me the shocking news at the time that he had only been given two or three months to live.

“It was a horrendous diagnosis for someone to get. But even that day when we were talking on the phone he was laughing and joking and going back down memory lane. That was just Frank. We spoke about the laughs we had and the good days that we had together.”

Aitken added: “When I last met him personally, when we went to Parkhead about seven or eight months ago, he was so full of fun, full of form, full on life. He was talking about this and talking about that. He had an opinion on everything. That was just typical of Frank.

“Then he called me three months ago to tell me that he was on borrowed time. It was awful.

“My condolence­s go to his family. It is just so sad. He was iconic.”

 ?? ?? Frank McGarvey scored 109 goals in 245 matches for Celtic
Frank McGarvey scored 109 goals in 245 matches for Celtic

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