Archives » 1960s

Andy Jardine

I’ve just seen from the club website that one of Sons’ most loyal servants, left back Andy Jardine, has died.

He played a total of 364 games for the club in the 1950s and 60s – including 309 times with Tommy Govan as his partner at full back.

The pairing more or less picked itself. I can still hear the Boghead announcer intoning, “Robertson, Govan and Jardine,” or “Crawford, Govan and Jardine,” as the first three names on the team sheet.

Andy’s last appearance for the club was historic in another sense. It was in the 5-1 win over Third Lanark which was that club’s last ever game.

My last memory of Andy is of that Christmas Day game at Love Street, Paisley in 1971 when big Roy McCormack scored the best goal I’ve ever seen by a Sons player. Andy wasn’t playing, he was a spectator – can of beer in hand (yes, you could bring beer into the ground in those days) – dispensing ex-player’s wisdom to his successor at left back that day, Billie Wilkinson. “Nice wee nudge, son. Oh, unlucky. He’s seen it.”

Andy Jardine, long-standing left back. So it goes.

Reelin’ In The Years 41: Riders On The Storm

Another early 1970s song from a band who came to prominence in the 60s. This is great stuff.

It was released as a single but this is the long-playing version.

The Doors: Riders On The Storm

Friday On My Mind 27: Mr Armageddon (With a side slice of Rudi’s In Love)

“I am father of a thousand children, mother of a thousand million more.”

Perhaps the fade out goes on just a bit too long.

The Locomotive: Mr Armageddon

It’s astonishing that this piece of brass heavy psychedelia came from the same band as the ska influenced Rudi’s In Love – a hit a year earlier.

Compare and contrast.

The Locomotive: Rudi’s In Love

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