I was lucky enough to interview him last week and what a great bloke he was too. Are there are any older Lifers who saw him play or have any memories of him. Obviously, his managership ended in tears but I still think it's safe to call him a Charlton legend and he still loves the club.
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Understand he keeps in contact with Graham Tutt.
My memories of him are as a rolls royce of a player never looking hurried but always in command of the situation around him. He had a hell of a shot on him too.
I remember one match in particular against Ipswich when Glover got behind the full backs and whipped over low crosses which Eddie volleyed or half volleyed to devastating effect in a 4-0 win for us. This would have been during his second spell around 1964 or 1965.
As has been said on the Liverpool thread re Glass half full's excellent reminiscences these guys were heroes to us even if there were no trophies to show!
As a manager, a strange mix. Nearly got us promoted one year, then just escaping relegation the next. I recall that after we came close to promotion he said that there was too much of a drinking culture amongst the players. This was the 1960s so he didn't use that exact phrase I am sure. He put a ban on heavy drinking right before and after matches and training. The result ? .. near relegation. There is a moral there somewhere.
All in all, the overused accolade 'LEGEND' is truly apt for wonderful Eddie .. a k a 'The Perfect Human'
I'm not trying to say this one shouldn't have been started before someone seeks to misrepresent my motives in linking it!
I thought it might provide more info for youngsters like mattaddick.
http://www.charltonlife.com/discussion/17828/eddie-firmani/p1
Just after that Palace wanted to sign me, but Dad said no! (Charlton through and through)
I didn't even know they had enquired until after he had died and Mum told me!
They came over together as 17 year olds ,both did National Service, and they had a great understanding on the pitch.
As I mentioned once before Eddie made his League debut at left back .
Len - Ipswich 4-0 : I recall such a score in April 65. It was a bright blustery day and the mostly grassless pitch was bone-hard. The ball was as lively as a beachball, except of course to a player with the supreme technique of Eddie Firmani. It was 4-0 in a one-sided first half but sadly stayed that way.
Eddie's return from Italy in Oct 63 was a masterstroke, and his return from Southend in Mar 67 likewise. He was a brilliant player - highly skilful and very tough when circumstances demanded it. Like the very best players he made it all look so effortless.
The quintessential Firmani game was the winner-take-all final day decider in May 67 against Northampton - marvellous skill and sheer brutality in equal measure.
A unique player and a great guy. A legend that legends would look up to ....
His managerial career in the US was notable as well, he managed the New York Cosmos when they had the likes of Pele and Beckenbauer in their team!
I think he played at least once for Italy although born in South Africa, I belive he qualified because his grandfather was Italian.
I have a program (somewhere in my loft) with an artical in the Football Leauge review which formed part of the matchday program about Eddie our newly appointed manager sitting at the feet of another young and upcomong manager called Brian Clough. Apparently Eddie wanted to learn how Clough managed his team.
Apart from the football, wasn't he used as a human shield in the first gulf war?
As for the goals, the only one I recall of the 3-0 was an unsurpassable goal from Alan Campbell who slalomed through some potentially homicidal tackles to score. Firmani provided a masterclass as only a true maestro could - for presence on the ball maybe only PdC could equal him. The physical stuff was awesome too (that's English awesome, not American) but it was only evident when provoked - he was no thug. And that side of him shouldn't disguise the fact that he was such an elegant player.
Today a Firmani would be absolutely priceless.
By the way, the article will appear in the next edition of Backpass (www.backpass.co.uk) - completely coincidentally the latest edition has a pic of Eddie on the back with Bobby Moore and another Charlton player, Graham Moore, who was with Chelsea at the time.
The thing about Eddie was the way he held his elbows in the air when moving, absolutely graceful as his skipped through defences.
"Sha la la la Firmani"
Didn't he sack Ray Crawford for missing the coach, even though Ray's wife had been rushed to hospital? Sold him to Colchester and he scored two in the 3-2 cup defeat of the reverred Leeds side