Bobby Cox (footballer)
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Robert Cox | ||
Date of birth | 24 January 1934 | ||
Place of birth | Dundee, Scotland | ||
Date of death | 20 February 2010 76) | (aged||
Place of death | Scotland | ||
Playing position | Defender | ||
Youth career | |||
Dundee Osborne | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps† | (Gls)† |
1956–1968 | Dundee | 327 | (2) |
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Robert "Bobby" Cox (24 January 1934 – 20 February 2010) was a Scottish footballer who played for Dundee from 1955 to 1969 and was their captain when they won their only Scottish league title in 1962.[1]
Manager Willie Thornton signed Cox in 1955 and began what was to be a 14-year playing association with the club that he supported all his life.
He made the first of what were to be more than 400 appearances for The Dee in a 3–1 Dens Park win over Queen's Park, on 20 October 1956 after only four matches for the reserve side.
For the remainder of his career only injury and illness would prevent him from wearing the number three shirt. Doug Cowie was one of the mainstays of the team that Cox came into and when Cowie left, Cox succeeded him as captain. Cox would eventually notch up the second highest number of appearances for Dundee and his 433 starts are only bettered by the man who he succeeded as captain.
The Club had waned from the halcyon early 1950 days of Billy Steel and co., but at the start of the next decade, as manager Bob Shankly introduced youngsters Alex Hamilton, Ian Ure, Andy Penman, Alan Gilzean, and Hugh Robertson and brought in experience in the shape of Bobby Seith, Bobby Wishart and Gordon Smith, the Dark Blues became genuine contenders for the major prizes.
In 1962 they surpassed anything accomplished by a previous Dundee side, winning the Scottish League title by three points from Rangers – who they had the audacity to thrash 5–1 at Ibrox en route to the big prize.
Saturday, 28 April 1962 became a date to remember for Dundee fans as Cox led his troops to the League Flag following a 3–0 win over St Johnstone at Muirton Park. At the end of the match, the Dundee support steamed their way onto the pitch to acclaim their triumph and the pictures of the fans lifting their captain onto their shoulders as he held arms up in the air are synonymous with Dundee's greatest day. Cox and his side's place in Tayside legend were assured.
The following season, Dundee set off on a memorable European odyssey as Bobby Cox led the Club into its first foray into continental competition. As they took their European Cup challenge to a semi-final against AC Milan, they showed that the classic Scottish passing game which they played, could work as well in Europe as in Scotland. Their campaign began with an 8–1 thumping of second favourites Cologne, before a bruising rematch in Germany. Sporting Lisbon and Anderlecht were also despatched before, significantly, with Cox injured and unable to play, AC Milan ended the dream in the San Siro.
That team then began to break up, but in 1964, whilst owner of the aptly named public house, 'The Sliding Tackle' in Broughty Ferry (he was renowned for his trademark sliding tackle with the outside of his right foot), he once again captained the team to another memorable occasion as Dundee played Rangers in the Scottish Cup Final. It was Dundee's first appearance in the Final for twelve years but there was to be no fairytale ending for 'Coxer' as two late goals from Rangers cruelly denied the Dark Blues a replay.
Cox was again involved in another classic Cup Final three years later when he was on the bench for the 1967 League Cup Final against Celtic but he was to be again denied a cup winning medal when the newly crowned Lisbon Lions ran out winners by five goals to three.
That same season, Dundee reached a European semi for a second and Cox was part of the squad which faced Leeds United in the Inter-Cities Fair Cup, the forerunner of the U.E.F.A. Cup. Cox didn’t play in either leg against the men from Elland Road but he did play in the first two rounds again Dutch side DWS Amsterdam and Royal Liege from Belgium.
To have been an established member and skipper of at one stage the best team in the country, it is disappointing to note that Bobby did not receive the full recognition of his country. His only representative honour was for a Scottish League XI against the Scotland national side in a 'trial' international at Parkhead in 1961 but it was a match in which no caps were awarded. He was named as reserve on no fewer than twelve occasions but was repeatedly overlooked for that elusive cap.
Many observers of these times will tell you that Cox was of genuine international class as a left back. Unfortunately, his career spanned the same time period as that of Eric Caldow, arguably Scotland's finest full back. Caldow's international career-ending broken leg at Wembley in 1963 ought to have opened the door for Cox: a left back with a proven track record as a team captain, but the Scottish selectors and manager Ian McColl turned instead to Hearts' David Holt to succeed Caldow. There is no doubt that if Bobby Cox had been playing today, he would have been one of the first names on the squad list for every single match.
When Cox eventually retired in 1969, Dundee were still the top team on Tayside but that was by no means the end of his Dark Blue association. He was always a welcome guest at Dens Park, to which he returned on a more regular basis after chairman Angus Cook brought him back in 1989 as a match day host alongside friend and full back partner Alex Hamilton. It was a role he fulfilled with honour, entertaining a new generation of fans until he died in February 2010.
His place in Dens Park folklore was further cemented when, thanks to the S.P.L.'s requirements regarding all-seater stadia, the Provost Road end became a grandstand and the fans voted that it be named 'The Bobby Cox Stand'.
At 5 ft 7in, Cox was a small but mighty defender. A rugged Dundonian, born and bred a few hundred yards from Dens Park in Wedderburn Street on 24 January 1934, he was described by Shankly’s right-hand man, trainer Sammy Kean, as a ‘a real tiger, a born winner who never gave up and whose influence was immesnse.’
Great teams do not necessarily need a great captain, but, in Cox Dundee had such a man. He led from the front, set the standard and made sure his team mates maintained it.
He continued to be an inspiration to the players who followed in his footsteps and he regularly travelled to away matches on the team’s coach. He also accompanied Jim Duffy’s squad on their European trips to Shkodër and Perugia in 2003 and was as proud as any Dee of their return to Europe after twenty-nine years, having led Dundee into their first campaign just over forty years previously. The venerable captain of the club's greatest team played down the honour, but he was secretly chuffed to bits.
Bobby Cox was a one club man, giving the Club over fifty years loyal service and to many he was ‘Mr Dundee’. No football team could count themselves more fortunate.
The fans loved him, that's for certain, referring to him as ‘Sir’ Bobby Cox and he was inducted into the inaugural Dundee F.C. Hall of Fame in 2009 to arguably the loudest cheer of the night. For many, Cox had simply lived our dream and we loved him for it.
In 1999 fans voted to have one of the new stands at Dens Park named after Cox and was inducted to the Dundee F.C. Hall of Fame in 2009.[2][3]