Lenny Rider
Well-known member
- Sep 15, 2010
- 5,982
We interviewed him in the early days of Gulls Eye, and he was definitely Elvis back thenWe referred to him as Elvis. Suppose it was for his quiffed and dark hair style
We interviewed him in the early days of Gulls Eye, and he was definitely Elvis back thenWe referred to him as Elvis. Suppose it was for his quiffed and dark hair style
Lovely bloke ,took me and a few others into one of the worse pubs i;ve ever been in ,in Pokesdown .Is the ādocā still about he was a legend
Buddy Holly more like, anyways I last saw him in The Albert about two years ago and said hello.We referred to him as Elvis. Suppose it was for his quiffed and dark hair style
He loved a terrible boozerLovely bloke ,took me and a few others into one of the worse pubs i;ve ever been in ,in Pokesdown .
This one was awful ,plus it was a pre season friendly . Don't ever remember why i went ,i rarely do friendlies .He loved a terrible boozer
Buddy Holly more like, anyways I last saw him in The Albert about two years ago and said hello.
remember him from the northern away games at places like York (had a good session in a pub chatting to him) Carlisle, nice bloke, loved a plastic bag as others have said. This was around the same time the guy who used to start the singing especially āgive us a Beeeeeā etc as he would sing heād stick his finger in his ear, most odd, I used to think it was one and the same guy, but Iām pro wrong on that.
Doc stuck up for me once at York away in 93 we lost as usual, I was still living up north, travelling to most away games and the odd home game, always on my own and would cling to anything from Sussex, and wore a Sussex Cricket top, and some Brighton fans in the pub were taking the piss out of me, one or two were going a bit OTT and Doc pipped in and told them to leave me alone, that meant a lot to be honest at the time. I used to constantly get the pissed ripped out of me for supporting the Albion in Wigan and then later in Manchester, and for our own fans to start on me that day, I was a bit pissed off.Krispies and Doc are definitely not the same guy! They are both lovely people, but 500% different!
My other half knows Krispies more than I do, probably as much from a prolonged spell as a patient in the RSCH in the 90s as from the Goldstone & away games, although they already knew each other through that too.
I know him in passing, from leading the singing behind me in Withdean J block, the odd pub encounter, the other half, and a few away games. I know he hasn't been coming as much since he became a terminal dad. And not seen him for a while but I hear he's still around.
Also he's seriously not at all old, even now! Maybe he just looked it with glasses and being skinny, and without @Stat Brother hair but he's probably younger than I am!
Doc on the other hand is a long-term close friend both of mine personally and of us as a couple - someone I've known for decades from both football and elsewhere, and will hopefully be a friend for many years to come.
He was definitely not a song starter on the terraces! But he would 100% start a one-man riot against a random nearby pub serving real ale in plastic cups. And I'd join in.
He could be ***ing vicious when he chose to!
Shit, I've known him pick fights over absolute bollocks nothing, just because he's pissed & hasn't had enough to eat. But he's literally the only person I'd still pile in for
Wasn't going to mention it, yes he had some health issues last winter, but he is doing much better this year touch wood. It won't stop him doing what he does.A lot of what's on here about 'Doc' is correct. Moved on from ground hopping to 'collecting' 'Spoons boozers and is now on cinemas.
One of my best mates from the old Goldstone days still goes in the North now and we have a pint in the Swan quite often. He still sees Doc regularly. Unfortunately, Doc's had spells of bad health and has been in hospital a few times but is currently out and enjoying the pubs of Brighton. I last saw him at The Albert in December. My brother's band were playing upstairs and he was shuffling about downstairs with an overfilled WH Smith bag and a pint. Looked better than the time I saw him before that, which was at the Komedia promotion party, when he couldn't hold his head straight.
Despite health that's worried a few of us he just seems to crack on with it.
The thing about doc I will never forget and the prove what sort of bloke he is he never met my old man but still came to his funeral to be there for me top blokeWasn't going to mention it, yes he had some health issues last winter, but he is doing much better this year touch wood. It won't stop him doing what he does.
He has people looking out for him but remains fiercely independent!
Love to hear that, and yes the sort of man he is.The thing about doc I will never forget and the prove what sort of bloke he is he never met my old man but still came to his funeral to be there for me top bloke
When I was going away the most between 1987 and 1996 most people who went by train knew him and everyone called him 'Doc', though I do remember the GE where you called him Elvis because we were all laughing at it.We interviewed him in the early days of Gulls Eye, and he was definitely Elvis back then
Always got on at East Worthing .....used to call them Bill and Ben , permanently pissed..they used to live in one of the houses near ham bridge and frequented the dolphin but when the northern basted had it he banned them.Do you mean Pat and Michael from Worthing ?
john or armsSaw him in the Selden a few weeks backā¦..
Armsjohn or arms
They were hystericalā¦. Iām remember drinking beer through a straw because apparently it got you more pissedAlways got on at East Worthing .....used to call them Bill and Ben , permanently pissed..they used to live in one of the houses near ham bridge and frequented the dolphin but when the northern basted had it he banned them.
Doc Talbot worked with my dad at the Tax Office on Preston Road 70s, early 80s. They would chat all things Albion to relieve the tedium of the job. I know Doc always had a week off for the BFI festival on the South Bank.When I was going away the most between 1987 and 1996 most people who went by train knew him and everyone called him 'Doc', though I do remember the GE where you called him Elvis because we were all laughing at it.
I believe, though this is second hand from some of the other characters in those days, that the name comes from a battered, hand carried 'Doctor Doolittle' box suitcase that he took on one of our pre-season tours.
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Some of our own fans can be real tossers. Millwall away in the cup I was at the kiosk and some pratt decided he didnāt need to wait in line and barged in front of me, almost came to blows.Doc stuck up for me once at York away in 93 we lost as usual, I was still living up north, travelling to most away games and the odd home game, always on my own and would cling to anything from Sussex, and wore a Sussex Cricket top, and some Brighton fans in the pub were taking the piss out of me, one or two were going a bit OTT and Doc pipped in and told them to leave me alone, that meant a lot to be honest at the time. I used to constantly get the pissed ripped out of me for supporting the Albion in Wigan and then later in Manchester, and for our own fans to start on me that day, I was a bit pissed off.
I did thank him years later in a pub when I recognised him, but he had long forgotten.
The offending top View attachment 175773
don't forget the paracetamol as well.They were hystericalā¦. Iām remember drinking beer through a straw because apparently it got you more pissed