The Scotsman

Neil ‘Norrie’ Martin

Outstandin­g player who was dogged by injury and never won a medal with Rangers

- Stephen halliday

n neil ‘norrie’ Martin, goalkeeper. born: 7 May, 1939, in Ladybank, Fife. died: 11 October, 2013, in Prestwick, ayrshire, aged 74.

THE fine margins which separate a solid career from a highly successful one in profession­al football have seldom been more clearly illustrate­d than by Norrie Martin’s 12-year spell as a Rangers player.

Despite making more than 100 first team appearance­s for the Ibrox club during a period which saw them collect 13 major honours, the unfortunat­e Martin did not have a single senior winners’ medal to show for his efforts. Nonetheles­s, he had no shortage of memories to savour from his time as a reliable goalkeeper which included his participat­ion in the 1967 European Cup Winners’ Cup final which Rangers narrowly lost to Bayern Munich.

Martin, who died at his home in Prestwick earlier this month at the age of 74, just six weeks after being diagnosed with lung cancer, was born in the Fife village of Ladybank but moved to the Ayrshire town in the 1950s when his father bought the popular Towans Hotel.

After starting his career with Dalry Thistle, Martin made one league appearance for Hamilton Accies in the 1957-58 campaign before being signed by Rangers as back-up for more experience­d goalkeeper­s George Niven and Billy Ritchie.

But there was an early opportunit­y for the teenage Martin to impress when manager Scot Symon handed him his first team debut in a League Cup tie against Hearts at Tynecastle in August 1958. Martin earned plaudits for his display before suffering a serious injury in a clash with Hearts striker Ian Crawford. When Martin was carried off on a stretcher, Rangers captain Bobby Shearer took over in goal and Hearts went on to win the match 2-1.

It was indicative of the bad luck which would dog Martin throughout his Rangers career. As Ritchie went on to establish himself as the club’s first choice keeper, Martin had to wait until the end of the 1962-63 season to make his league debut. He played in a 1-0 defeat against Kilmarnock at Rugby Park, selected only because Ritchie was rested in advance of the Scottish Cup Final replay against Celtic at Hampden two days later which Rangers won 3-0.

It was not until the end of the 1964-65 campaign, during which he played outfield for Rangers in a Glasgow Cup tie against Celtic after suffering a hand injury which forced him to swap places with full-back Davie Provan, that Martin had another sustained opportunit­y to stake a claim for the number one jersey.

He replaced Ritchie for the final seven league games of what had been a grim season for Rangers, who finished fifth in the championsh­ip race, and duly began the following campaign as Symon’s first choice. But Martin’s ill fortune struck again just three games into the season when he fractured his skull in a League Cup tie against Aberdeen at Pittodrie in August 1965.

His resilience and patience saw him reclaim his place in October the following year and remain in the side for the rest of one the most tumultuous seasons in Rangers’ history. Martin played in the League Cup final at Hampden against Celtic which Rangers were considered unlucky to lose, Bobby Lennox scoring the only goal of the match for Jock Stein’s burgeoning side.

But there was no escape from the most intense criticism and scrutiny for Rangers in January 1967 when they sustained the worst defeat of their history, losing 1-0 to lowly Berwick Rangers in the first round of the Scottish Cup. Martin was blameless for Sammy Reid’s famous winning goal for the Borderers, with strikers Jim Forrest and George McLean made the scapegoats.

Rangers recovered to mount a sustained challenge to Celtic for the title, missing out in their last fixture when they could only draw 2-2 at home to their great rivals. But an outstandin­g European campaign, which had seen Martin produce some of his best displays for the club in keeping clean sheets away from home against Borussia Dortmund and Slavia Sofia, offered salvation.

Sadly for Martin and his team-mates, the Cup Winners’ Cup final in Nuremberg on 31 May, 1967 – the week after Celtic had lifted the European Cup in Lisbon – proved an anti-climax. In a closely contested affair, Franz Roth looped the only goal of the evening beyond the helpless Martin in the second half of extra time.

The signing of Danish internatio­nal goalkeeper Eric Sorensen from Morton for £25,000 in the summer of 1967 saw Martin restricted to just four league appearance­s the next season, but he bounced back yet again to become first choice in the 1968-69 campaign.

Martin again excelled in Europe, helping Rangers reach the semi-finals of the Fairs Cup, but domestic success continued to elude him. Despite defeating Celtic at home and away in the title race, the Ibrox men eventually finished five points behind Stein’s dominant side and were then crushed 4-0 by their Old Firm rivals in the Scottish Cup Final at Hampden.

It would be the last high profile appearance of Martin’s career. He played just once more for the first team, in a 3-1 home defeat against Hibs in October 1969, before being part of a clear-out by new manager Willie Waddell in April 1970 when he was given a free transfer along with Jim Baxter and several other players.

Although still relatively young for a goalkeeper at 31, Martin’s career petered out in the 1970-71 season when he had brief spells at East Fife, Queen of the South and then Hamilton Accies. He did play a cameo role in East Fife earning promotion that year and will be fondly remembered by his old team-mates who are gathering for a reunion at Bayview on 16 November.

Martin retired from football to take charge of the Towans Hotel until it was destroyed by fire in 1996.

Pre-deceased by both his first wife Barbara and second wife Inge, he had been with partner Mary for the final 12 years of his life. Martin is survived by son Andrew, his second child from his first marriage. His older son Norman died in January this year. Martin is also survived by five grandchild­ren. 1295: Treaty between King John Balliol of Scotland and King Philippe le Bel of France, made at Paris for military help against the English – “the Auld Alliance.” 1707: The first Parliament of Great Britain met. 1822: The Caledonian Canal, 60 miles long, was opened. 1897: First Post Office motor van, a Daimler, went into service in London. 1911: Winston Churchill took over as First Lord of the Admiralty. 1917: United States troops saw first action in First World War near Luneville, France. 1922: Lilian Gatlin became first woman to fly across the United States, in 27 hours 11 minutes. 1941: Premiere of the Walt Disney cartoon film Dumbo, about a flying elephant, in New York. 1942: The Battle of El Alamein in Egypt began. 1946: First meeting of United Nations General Assembly took. 1958: Soviet Union approved loan to United Arab Republic for Aswan Dam, in Egypt. 1962: Soviet Union issued warning that a US quarantine of arms shipments to Cuba risked a thermonucl­ear war. 1970: World record speed for rocket-engine car set at 631mph by American Gary Gabelich on Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah. 1972: Access credit cards were launched in Britain. 1975: Leading cancer expert Professor Gordon Fairley was killed when a car bomb exploded as he walked past the parked Jaguar of his next-door neighbour, Hugh Fraser, MP. 1983: Suicide bombers blew up US Marine headquarte­rs building at Beirut Airport, Lebanon, and nearby French headquarte­rs with bomb-laden trucks, killing 241 marines and 58 Frenchmen. 1987: Lester Piggott, 11 times champion jockey and later a top trainer, was jailed for three years for tax evasion. He was later stripped of his OBE.

Scotsman archive

CHALLENGE TO LAWYERS 23 October, 1950 REFERENCE to the “increasing influx” of new legislatio­n and regulation­s, and the challenge which it presents to the legal profession, was made in Edinburgh on Saturday by the Lord Advocate Mr John Wheatley, KC MP. Speaking at the annual dinner of the Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland, he said that from time to time it was remarked that not only the Bench but the profession as a whole was being 1989: In Leipzig, East Germany, 200-300,000 people marched through the city demanding reforms. 1991: The House of Lords ruled that husbands could legally be convicted of raping their wives. 2001: Apple announced launch of the iPod. 2004: Earthquake hit Niigata prefecture, northern Japan, killing 35 people, injuring 2,200 and leaving 85,000 homeless. 2009: Due to a strike, the Royal Mail was forced to admit it had a backlog of 30 million letters. 2012: BBC Ceefax, the world’s first teletext service, was turned off as the UK’s digital switchover was completed. Pelé (born Edson Arantes do Nascimento), Brazilian footballer, 73; Cat Deeley, television presenter, 37; Briana Evigan, actress, 27; Izabel Goulart, model, 29; Steve Harmison, cricketer, 35; Ang Lee, film director, 59; Martin Luther King III, human rights advocate, 56; Sam Raimi, film director, 54; Ryan Reynolds, actor, 37. Births: 1773 Lord Jeffrey, judge and literary critic; 1817 Pierre Larousse, lexicograp­her and encyclopae­dist; 1844 Robert Bridges, Poet Laureate in 1913; 1906 Gertrude Ederle, first woman to swim the Channel; 1924 Michael Crichton, best-selling author; 1931 Diana Dors, actress; 1942 Dame Anita Roddick, Body Shop founder. Deaths: 42BC Brutus (fell on his own sword in Rome); 1921 John Boyd Dunlop, Scottish vet and pioneer of pneumatic tyre; 1939 Zane Grey, writer of western novels; 1950 Al Jolson, singer; 1998 Christophe­r Gable, dancer, actor and choreograp­her; 2006 Sir Malcolm Arnold, composer. inflicted with a multitude of laws and regulation­s. “This is perfectly true,” he continued, “but there is nothing new about it. This has been of growing momentum in the lifetime of most of us, and the simple explanatio­n is that, in the developmen­t of a complex society such as ours has become, we find that the old Common Law is not sufficient to meet the new developmen­ts, and so it has to be superseded by legislatio­n and I know to many of you regretfull­y – by regulation­s.” l archive.scotsman.com

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 ??  ?? The Battle of El Alamein began in Egypt on this day in 1942
The Battle of El Alamein began in Egypt on this day in 1942
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