Jimmy
McFarlane
In August 1991 Jimmy McFarlane made
his debut for Purfleet, in October 2005 at the grand old age
of 40 he made his 600th appearance.
In these days of over inflated wages and ever shorter
contracts, there is still a place were people play because
they want to – non-league. Yes the players still get paid
but the vast majority barely cover their petrol expenses.
Long ago in August 1991 - before Sky discovered that people
would pay money to watch football in a nice comfy chair
cheering on ‘their’ team hundreds of miles away – Jimmy
McFarlane made his debut for Purfleet, in October 2005 he
made his 600th appearance.
The towering defender [with a presence to match] was 26
years old having already played for the likes of Fisher
Athletic and Clapton. He scored with what would become a
typical far post header in his first game and helped the
club win the Isthmian Division 2 and the Locite Trophy in
his first season.
Midway into the 1992-93 season Jim broke his leg and missed
most of the next two years of football, although still
watching and encouraging his team mates through his enforced
absence. He had played 68 times for Purfleet scoring just 3
times.
Jimmy made his comeback in October 1994 taking the captain
armband back where it belongs and once again asserting
himself back in the heart of the Purfleet defence. The
season culminating in Jimmy lifting the Essex Thames-side
Trophy.
After just 5 games of the 1996-97 season, then manager Gary
Calder deemed that Jimmy McFarlane was not up to the rigors
of Isthmian Premier Football and released him. Fate took
Jimmy to Concord Rangers of the Essex Senior League where
the old Purfleet captain, Colin McBride, was cutting his
managerial teeth and the played out the season.
Gary Calder left in the summer of 1997 and Colin McBride was
installed as the clubs sixth manger with his first signing -
Jimmy McFarlane - grasping the captains arm band that almost
belongs to him.
Jimmy led Purfleet to the Essex Senior Cup Final for the
first time and a respectable tenth place in the league. Over
the next 5 years Jimmy led us to 3 finals and helped cement
our place in the top half of the Ryman Premier league.
At the age of 38 Jimmy sustained a knee injury which
required exploratory surgery and missed the end of the
2003-04 season however Jimmy decided that it wasn’t worth
all the hassle of an operation and through a combination of
rest and hard work Jimmy made yet another come back at the
start of the next season. This time he led the newly renamed
club, Thurrock, to the first round of the FA Cup outplaying
Luton Town in front of the SKY TV camera’s in a one all draw
before losing in the replay and to two cup finals.
2004-05 once again saw Jimmy live on TV this time narrowly
losing 1-0 to Oldham in the first round of the FA Cup and
third place in the newly formed Nationwide Conference South.
During one game away at Weston-super-mare Jimmy Dislocated
his shoulder before playing on for 10 minutes. He also
played two days later at home to Bishops Stortford because
quote ‘We were a bit short on Centre Halves!’
He is now in his forty first year and still playing as well
as ever, a testament to his training regime. Six hundred
games and seventy three goals after his debut he still pulls
on the captain’s armband with pride. At least Jimmy proves
that there is more to football than money.