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・ Jimmy Gitsham
・ Jimmy Giuffre
・ Jimmy Giuffre (album)
・ Jimmy Glass
・ Jimmy Glazzard
・ Jimmy Gleason
・ Jimmy Glenn
・ Jimmy Gnecco
・ Jimmy Gobble
・ Jimmy Godden
・ Jimmy Goins
・ Jimmy Gold
・ Jimmy Golder
・ Jimmy Gomez
・ Jimmy Gooch
Jimmy Goodfellow
・ Jimmy Goodrich
・ Jimmy Goonan
・ Jimmy Gopperth
・ Jimmy Gordon
・ Jimmy Gordon (Australian rules footballer)
・ Jimmy Gordon (footballer, born 1888)
・ Jimmy Gordon (footballer, born 1915)
・ Jimmy Gorman
・ Jimmy Gossman
・ Jimmy Gourlay
・ Jimmy Gourley
・ Jimmy Governor
・ Jimmy Gownley
・ Jimmy Grafton


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Jimmy Goodfellow : ウィキペディア英語版
Jimmy Goodfellow

James "Jimmy" Goodfellow (born 16 September 1943) is an English former professional footballer and manager. A midfielder, he scored 33 goals in 479 league goals in a 13-year career in the Football League.
He spent his youth with Newcastle United, but did not earn a professional contract. Instead he played amateur football with Consett, Crook Town, and Bishop Auckland; he won the FA Amateur Cup with Crook Town in 1962. He entered the Football League with Port Vale in 1966, before transferring to Workington in May 1969. He moved on to Rotherham United four years later, and helped the "Millers" to win promotion out of the Fourth Division in 1974–75. He ended his playing career after spending the 1978–79 season with Stockport County. He then took up coaching with Newport County, Cardiff City, Plymouth Argyle, and Sunderland. He served as Cardiff's manager for six months in 1984, and later spent ten years working behind the scenes at the club.
==Playing career==
Goodfellow signed for Newcastle United, despite being a Sunderland fan, but was released by the club at the age of 17 without making a first team appearance. He moved into non-league football, signing for Consett before moving to Northern League side Crook Town. In 1964, at the age of 20, he scored Crook Town's first goal at Wembley when he scored against Enfield in the Amateur Cup final victory. Goodfellow became unhappy with the way the team was selected at Crook Town, being chosen by a committee rather than the club's manager, and agreed to join Bishop Auckland when manager Lawrie McMenemy asked him to do so.
Goodfellow got the call to move into league football at the age of 23, when he was signed to Jackie Mudie's Port Vale. He scored his first goal in the Fourth Division on 1 October 1966, in a 2–2 draw with Barrow at Holker Street.〔 He went on to finish the 1966–67 campaign with seven goals in 28 appearances.〔 Stanley Matthews then took charge at Vale Park, with disastrous consequences; Goodfellow scored twice in 31 games in 1967–68, as the club slipped to 18th place.〔 New boss Gordon Lee then revitalised the club, though after two goals in 36 games in 1968–69, Goodfellow joined Workington on a free transfer in May 1969.〔
The "Reds" finished just one place and one point above the re-election zone in 1969–70, before rising up to tenth place in 1970–71. New boss George Aitken then led the club to sixth and 13th-place finishes in the 1971–72 and 1972–73 campaigns. Goodfellow scored 15 goals in 199 Fourth Division appearances in his time at Borough Park.
He signed for Rotherham United in 1973. A highly consistent player, his one weakness was his lack of goals. Jimmy McGuigan's "Millers" finished 15th in 1973–74, before winning promotion with a third-place finish in 1974–75. They adjusted well to the Third Division, posting a 16th-place finish in 1975–76, before missing out on promotion due to a slightly inferior goal difference to Crystal Palace in 1976–77. Rotherham then dropped to just one position and three points above the relegation zone in 1977–78. Goodfellow scored eight goals in 192 league games during his time at Millmoor.
He ended his playing career with Stockport County at the end of the 1978–79 season. He made just three Fourth Division appearances for Mike Summerbee's "Hatters", before departing Edgeley Park.

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