Jim Eadie

James Eadie (born 4 February 1947) is a Scottish former professional footballer. During his career, he made over 200 appearances in the Football League in spells with Cardiff City, Chester and Bristol Rovers.

Jim Eadie
Personal information
Full name James Eadie[1]
Date of birth (1947-02-04) 4 February 1947
Place of birth Alexandria, Scotland
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1965–1967 Rangers 0 (0)
1967–1968 Dumbarton 5 (0)
1968–1969 Kirkintilloch Rob Roy ? (?)
1969–1973 Cardiff City 43 (0)
1972Chester (loan) 6 (0)
1973–1977 Bristol Rovers 183 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Eadie began his career at Rangers but never made a first team appearance for the club, moving to Dumbarton where he played a handful of matches before joining Kirkintilloch Rob Roy. It wasn't until he moved south to play in The Football League that he began to play regular football. He signed for Cardiff City in 1969, although he did not make his debut until the following year when he kept a clean sheet in a 2–0 win over Portsmouth in March 1970. The following season, he managed to oust Frank Parsons as the number one goalkeeper as Cardiff just missed out on promotion.[2]

However, during the next season Eadie himself was ousted as first choice goalkeeper by Bill Irwin. After remaining as back-up for a short time, he spent time on loan at Chester before joining Bristol Rovers.[2] He kept clean sheets in his first five matches at the club and was instrumental in the club winning promotion the following year. Eadie went on to appear over 200 times, earning the nickname "the flying pig" from the club's fans,[3] before moving into non-league football to finish his career.

Later life

After retiring from football, Eadie became a plumber before retiring to live in Bristol.[4]

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gollark: Its tokeniser does stemming a bit but that isn't true fuzzy searching.
gollark: Not fuzzy searching, no. It has all the bits you need but to use them you need either accursed hacks or use of irritating bits of the C API not exposed by wrappers.
gollark: Given that the merely semiworking search thing I have is ⅓ the size of the Minoteaur backend code it will likely continue to use the SQLite search forever.
gollark: Unfortunately SQLite's search capabilities are good but inflexible unless I manually deal with its C API.

References

  1. "Jim Eadie". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  2. Hayes, Dean (2006). The Who's Who of Cardiff City. Derby: Breedon Books. p. 53. ISBN 1-85983-462-0.
  3. "Where you there when the rams beat the gas?" BBC Sport Retrieved on 11 December 2008
  4. "Bristol Rovers 1973-74 Division Three runners up". The Football League Paper. 4 August 2013. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  • Jim Eadie at Post War English & Scottish Football League A–Z Player's Database
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