I am working with Dougie on his biography and we are about half way through. The amount of content on each team reflects the amount of time he spent with each of them - more written about Aberdeen, not so quite so much about Rangers, slightly less about Hibs and so on through around 10 other teams played for. He is a very fit 58 and still playing in Legends games for Aberdeen, Rangers and Hibs. I remember a few years ago that several posters on here commented on Dougie's time with us and I wondered if anybody had anything they would like to comment on. This is not a commercial venture and any proceeds from the sale will go to Cancer Relief. Any comment you make will probably be under a banner like What the Hibs Fans Said and I aim to get around a page or so of comments. He has some interesting things to say about his time with us. His wife Hazel told me that Easter Road was her favourite of all of the ground because of the civilised atmosphere in the stand. We might just have been sleepy with the tactics at the time.
The writing is well in hand and we are now thinking about a Publisher. A number of people are lining up to help us with this but if anybody knows a good one please let me know.
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Thread: Dougie Bell Biography
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14-07-2018 10:22 AM #1
Dougie Bell Biography
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14-07-2018 10:25 AM #2
Doug Doug Dougie Bell Doug Dougie Bell Doug Dougie Bell Doug Dougie Bell......we’re a bit more enterprising with our songs these days!
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14-07-2018 10:30 AM #3
I remember he linked well with Mickey Weir. They seemed to understand each others game. Remember them playing nice one twos to each other in one game. Good player. Good luck with the book mate.
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15-07-2018 02:14 PM #4
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15-07-2018 02:28 PM #5
I remember Dougie Bell as a talented player who came and did well as Miller set about rebuilding a side which had been run into the ground. He was offski quite soon and the talk at the time was a falling out with Alex Miller. That wasn’t an uncommon issue as the likes of Archibald, Mc Leod, Houchen and Stuart Beedie would testify.
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14-07-2018 10:34 AM #6
I remember him signing along with Tommy Mac and Graham Mitchell. I think it was a new year derby when we drew 2-2 I think not long after they had all signed and DB ran the show in the middle of the park that night. If it hadn’t been for Roughie getting chipped on his goal line twice by agent Colquhoun we’d have won the game comfortably. Added a bit of steel as well as true quality to our midfield at that time.
Edit - just did a search and found this;
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/thehi...uary-1987/amp/
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14-07-2018 11:40 AM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Also Sneddons 25 harder that Henry tipped over the bar
Sent from my SM-G950F using Tapatalk21.05.2016
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14-07-2018 11:52 AM #8
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A more skilful player that most would probably give him credit for and a very effective signing at a time when Hibs were in danger of going on a bit of a slide and needed some genuine pedigree in the side. A couple of others arrived along with him, McIntyre and possibly Mitchell. It's my recollection we dug out a really good win at Falkirk on his debut around Christmas time (might be wrong) and followed it up with a New Year derby draw where he helped to ensure we really stood up to Hearts.
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17-07-2018 01:42 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-07-2018 11:49 AM #10
My recollection is that the ne'er day game was cancelled and that Bell, Mitchell McIntyre played their first game v Falkirk at the old Brockville in front of a massive traveling Hibs support and we won 3-0. Bell was hugely impressive that day but Mitchell and McIntyre proved very good servants to us over the years. Memory may be playing tricks as back then I was much younger and often drunk!!
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14-07-2018 11:53 AM #11This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-07-2018 11:57 AM #12This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-07-2018 12:14 PM #13This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-07-2018 03:43 PM #14
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Used to love DB doing his keepy uppy warm up routine before a game. It consisted of hundreds without the ball hitting the deck once.
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14-07-2018 04:02 PM #15
Dougie Bett
Sometime in the 80s it is alleged Jim Bett took the field at Easter Road the home of Edinburgh team Hibernian. Bett in full Umbro Hibernian kit then went on to beat the world freestyle keepey up record. Despite a large crowd only one fan ever caught this great sporting moment and no cameras were present as the game was not televised. Bett allegedly did a number of tricks with a rolled up fifty stuck in his arse. Bett at the time had become addicted to a new craze of Cocainanus a highly addictive sport from Peru which the leader of the band the Charlatans Tim Burgess had introduced Bett to previously. The very dangerous technique of having coke blown up your arse by a close friend or lover enabled Bett to improve his keepey uppey skills no end. There were calls to ban Bett but Fifa ruled that while it had an effect on the mind physically it was harder to do keepey uppeys with the rolled up note. They however made it regulation that a fifty note off any currency must be used at all times. Craig Levein of lesser Edinburgh side Hearts was the first to receive a ten game ban for flaunting this rule and using a pound note. He challenged ban on grounds he was a tinflint jakey ****bo who had never seen a fifty never mind use one but Fifa upheld ban and increased to 20 games for Levein . Bett has never been seen at Easter Road in two decades but his legend grows each year. Many Hibernian fans in aftermath of historic cup win celebrated with a go at Cocainanus with close friends and loved ones. Many attempts were made at Betts keepey uppey record display but Jim Bett will always be the greatest. The fifty Bett used is framed and hangs in the main hall of the Hibernian supporters club. Fans hope to raise money to have a statue raised at the clubs ground in coming years.
Dougie Bell never got the credit He deserved and was always mistaken for Jim Bett in the eyes of 1
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14-07-2018 04:43 PM #16
Dougie Bell had great ball control but there was only so much he could do in a pretty mediocre Hibs team. As an aside he sat next to us and had a couple of pints at the Malletsheugh in Newton Mearns. It was toward the end of his time at Ibrox and he looked like he had the weight of the world on his shoulders so we left him in peace.
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14-07-2018 05:10 PM #17
Was there a large section about Shrewsbury Town? He was keen enough to go there. Decent enough player though. Good luck with the biography though, writing is hard work, and even harder to get published.
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14-07-2018 06:08 PM #18
Thanks for the above. Some of what you say connects directly to the book and I will comment on some of the points raised for your interest, in a few days time.
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14-07-2018 06:23 PM #19
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Dougie Bell was an outstanding player (at least as far as I am concerned)
However I remember that when travelling to the Isle of Man Tournament on the ferry with Hibs in 1986 he carried his gear in a Rangers sports bag!
Either my memory is screwed or Hibs are a damn sight more professional now👍
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14-07-2018 06:50 PM #20This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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14-07-2018 08:20 PM #21
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And Andy Goram signs as a result 😁
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15-07-2018 08:12 AM #22
An excellent cultured footballer just used to glide across the grass. I liked the way he used to take the ball,for a walk taking the pressure off our often beleaguered defence at that time. A very good underrated football player I was surprised that he only played 32 games and scoring 3 goals for our club.
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15-07-2018 01:32 PM #23This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I recall his debut I think, (the 2-2 rearranged New Year Derby ?) and he was very good. That would be January 87. I don't remember him contributing much thereafter and he struck me as being out of sorts most of the time......
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15-07-2018 01:48 PM #24This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I loved watching Bell play, the ba seemed tied to his foot at times but he came to us at the tail end of his career and think he might have had the old maverick streak in him which I can't imagine Lexo being too fond of (again, I might have just made that up).
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15-07-2018 02:11 PM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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15-07-2018 08:29 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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15-07-2018 10:09 AM #27
Imagine nowadays, a Scottish player in a team winning leagues and cups and getting to the business end in European Tournaments, but not getting a sniff for a place in the national team. The competition for that place in the team must have been impressive.
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17-07-2018 11:10 AM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Bryan Gunn
Stevie Nicol
Maurice Malpas
Roy Aitken
Richard Gough
Neale Cooper
Paul McStay
Neil Simpson
Brian McClair
Dougie Bell
Mo Johnston
A strong Aberdeen presence in this team. He also picked him again as one of his overage players when Dougie was 24.
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17-07-2018 11:26 AM #29
This extract from the Hibs section of the book struck a chord with me:
"Speaking to Hibs fans at various events at the time, their overall feeling was that Alec’s tactics were a bit too negative. The way I saw it is that he was only negative in the big games but not the ordinary league games. If we played Dunfermline for example and they were bottom half he wanted me to run at them and get the crowd excited. That is what I had been doing for years, and since I had been at the club, and I loved it. Against the bigger and better teams he was now was telling me that I had to sit in. That might have made good tactical sense but I really disliked having to do it.
In one game he asked me to man-mark a particular well-known Celtic player which I did. That player hardly touched the ball. The problem was that I only touched the ball myself around 10 times in the game and for an attacking midfielder who loves to get forward that was excruciating. The manager thought I had one of my best games for him and I couldn’t understand how."Last edited by Baker9; 17-07-2018 at 01:33 PM.
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17-07-2018 02:14 PM #30This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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