The Citizen (KZN)

Regis: football mourns star

- London

– English football mourned former West Bromwich Albion, Coventry City and England striker Cyrille Regis (above) yesterday as a role model and pioneer for the country’s black footballer­s after his death at 59.

Local media said he died of a heart attack on Sunday.

Born in French Guiana but moving to London as a boy, Regis joined West Brom in 1977 and scored 112 goals in 297 appearance­s for the club before going to Coventry in 1984, where he won the FA Cup three years later.

He went on to play for Aston Villa, Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers, Wycombe Wanderers and Chester City before hanging up his boots in 1996.

Apart from being a powerful and talented striker, Regis inspired a generation of black players at a time when they were a rarity in the top echelons of English soccer and were regularly subjected to racial abuse from crowds.

“Devastated, my hero, my pioneer, the man behind the reason I wanted to play football has passed away,” former England striker Andy Cole said on Twitter.

Together with Brendon Batson and the late Laurie Cunningham, Regis formed part of a West Brom trio nicknamed “The Three Degrees” by manager Ron Atkinson after the American female singers visited The Hawthorns.

“He was the best centre forward I’ve ever had and I’ve had some top players. But I also think he was a better bloke than a player. He was an unbelievab­le guy.”

Regis quickly became a fan favourite and scourge of rival defences as an explosive striker with a powerful physical presence.

Regis returned to West Brom as a coach before becoming a football agent. –

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