I bet you won't think like that when you are 73.
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I cant say that I ever saw him play, but I've read a lot about him - all of it highly complimentary.
In this thread alone there is a number of long-term, very committed and knowledgeable City fans stating - categorically - that he was the best they have ever seen, or otherwise the City player they enjoyed the most in a lifetime.
That's certainly got to stand for something.
RIP.
He would always be the first name on my all-time Cardiff City team sheet.
He almost single-handedly made me a City fan. A picture of Gibbo celebrating a goal at Bolton even adorns my living room (I'm a single bloke, so I can get away with that sort of thing) and my replica jersey is a 1971 version with a number 7 on the back. He's one of those players who, if you didn't watch football in the 60s or early 70s, you probably don't know anything about yet, if you ever saw him playing for your team, you will never forget him. To people of a certain age in Middlesborough, Coventry and Cardiff he was an absolute maestro.
More than forty years after I last saw him play, my eyes stung a bit at the news of his passing.
R.I.P. Ian.
Brilliant player what a shame he has gone! RIP
Just done a tribute to Gibbo on the blog if anyone's interested.
http://mauveandyellowarmy.net/
A very nice read. The blog refers to the cloggers in the 70's and I seem to recall - but could be wrong - that Ian Gibson was a player who hardly ever, if ever, wore shin pads. Perhaps it comes as no surprise that his career in the football league ended prematurely. A fabulous player - definitely my favourite midfielder and probably my favourite player I have witnessed following Cardiff City since the late 1950's.