The Scotsman

Tom Forsyth

Popular Rangers and Scotland football player

- MATT VALLANCE

Thomas Forsyth, Rangers footballer and Scotland captain. Born: 23 January, 1949 in Glasgow. Died: 14 August 2020 in Strathaven, aged 71

The best-known quote about Tom Forsyth, who has died from complicati­ons from pancreatic cancer, is Tommy Doc herty’ s rather unkind de sc ription of him as “a Clydesdale,” in comparison to Docherty’s then club captain, Martin Buchan – “a thoroughbr­ed,” according to the Doc.

That descriptio­n tickled Forsyth. As he explained to The Scotsman’s Aidan Smith in a 2017 interview, he was the son of a “stallion walker,” whose job was to take Clydesdale stallions around farms to service mares.

It was in the course of his work that Forsyth’s father met his mother; that and the fact he was raised in that par t of Lanarkshir­e known as Clydesdale, rather tickled the footballer.

He may have been born in Glasgow, but, Forsyth,o ne half of a set of twins with brother Robert, was raised in Stonehouse, where he learned his football with Glen av en Amateurs, before a brief spell in the juniors with Stonehouse Violet, from whom he went upstairs to Motherwell in 1967.

Forsyth’s breakthrou­gh year was 1971. In February he made his Scotland Under-23 debut in a 2-2 Hampden draw with England. In March, he was in the Scottish League XI which played the English League and, in June, he made his full Scotland debut, in a 0-1 loss to Denmark, in Copenhagen.

Legend has it, so few players wanted to play for Scotland back then, on offering Motherwell captain Bobby Watson the chance to go on the end of season trip to Denmark and Russia, manager Bobby Brown asked him if any other Mother well players might be able to go. Watson suggested Forsyth and the youngster duly made his debut against Denmark.

Brown was sacked as Scotland boss after those two games and replaced by Tommy Doc her ty. So, it is hardly surprising that Forsy th dropped out of Scotland contention until, after 150 games for Motherwell, he was transferre­d to Rangers in October, 1972, for a reported £40,000 fee.

At Ibrox he was transforme­d from the thrusting midfielder he had been at Motherwell, to a second centre half, forming a formidable unit for club and country with Colin Jackson. His club form won him a recall to the Scotland team from Willie Ormond, for the “dead” rubber final qualifying game for the 1974 World Cup, against Czechoslov­akia, in Bratislava, which the Czechs won 1-0.

He then dropped out of Scotland contention until Ormond brought him back for a Hampden friendly against Switzerlan­d, in April, 1976, when an experiment­al Scotland team – seven players, including Alan Rough, made their debut that night – and won 1- 0. Not only was Forsy th back, his form that season in a Rangers’ team, which won a domestic Treble, saw him handed the captaincy.

After that, under Ormond, then Ally Mac Leod, Forsyth was a regular pick in the national side. He had become a Tartan Army legend, in only his sixth cap, with his matchsavin­g tackle on Mick Channon, which ensured a 2-1 win over England, at Hampden.

He was not initially an automatic pick for Scotland. Gordon Mcqueen was seen as the main man in central defence, with either Forsyth, Buchan, Hibs’ John Blackley or Kenny Burns as the second centre - half. However, while his first three caps were spread over 44 internatio­nals, his last 20 came over 24 games and, with Macleod as manager, he was definitely Scotland’ s firstchoic­e central defender.

He was paired with Jackson in three games – their club understand­ing helping Scotland win all three. He linkedup thrice also with Blackley and Burns, while he played five internatio­nals as a pairing with Buchan and five in tandem with Mcqueen. In his 22 internatio­nals, Scotland only lost five times, which is a good return by any standards.

He was a major figure in the ultimately disappoint­ing 1978 World Cup campaign, where, in the final game against the Netherland­s, he fired a header straight at goalkeeper Jan Jongb lo ed. As he admitted years later, had that gone in, it would have been 4-1 to Scotland and the tragedy of Argentina might have been so different.

That was his final cap, but, he soldiered on with Rangers until 1982, when injury forced him to retire, having won three Scottish League titles, four Scottish Cups and three League Cups. The mostfamous of those wins was in the 1973 Centenary Scottish Cup Final, where his legendary“long-range rocket ”– estimates of how far he hit the ball vary from five to seven inches – clinched a 3-2 win for his club over Celtic. It was his first goal for the club.

After Rangers he had a brief spell as manager at Dunfermlin­e Athletic, before deciding he preferred being a Number Two to a manager and spent more than a decade as assistant to former Rangers’ teammate Tommy McLean at Morton, Mother well, where he helped his old club win promotion back to the Premier League in 1985 and the Scottish Cup in 1991, then Hearts.

But, as if to prove the old saying ,“Once a Ranger, always a Ranger ,” Forsyth’ s longest spell in the game after playing was as a popular match- day host back at his old club.

As a player, his uncompro - mi sing style and ferocious tackling earned him the nickname “Jaws,” but in the corporate suites his avuncular manner and ready smile made him a hugely popular host.

He continued to live in Lanarkshir­e with wife Linda, who pre-deceased him last year, settling in Strathaven, where he grew begonias and chrysanthe­mums in his garden and got rid of any lasting sporting frustratio­n son the bowling green and golf course.

There, he passed away quietly, surrounded by his family, son David, daughters Karen and Julie and his grandchild­ren.

Thoroughbr­eds maybe the flashy, stars of the equine world. However, it is the heavy horses such as the Clydesdale­s who get the job done, and for club and country–Tom Forsyth did the job of defending better than most.

DETERMINAT­ION

As a player, his uncompromi­sing style and ferocious tackling earned him the nickname ‘Jaws’

 ??  ?? 2 Tom Forsyth at a training session in May 1978
2 Tom Forsyth at a training session in May 1978

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