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・ Jimmy Green (golfer)
・ Jimmy Greenhalgh
・ Jimmy Greenhoff
・ Jimmy Greenock
・ Jimmy Greenspoon
・ Jimmy Gregg
・ Jimmy Gresham
・ Jimmy Grewer
・ Jimmy Griffin
・ Jimmy Gunn
・ Jimmy Gunn (golfer)
・ Jimmy Gunning
・ Jimmy Gurulé
・ Jimmy Guthrie (footballer)
・ Jimmy Haarhoff
Jimmy Hagan
・ Jimmy Haggerty
・ Jimmy Haig
・ Jimmy Hall
・ Jimmy Halliday
・ Jimmy Hallinan
・ Jimmy Hallybone
・ Jimmy Hamilton
・ Jimmy Hamilton (curler)
・ Jimmy Hamilton (footballer, born 1904)
・ Jimmy Hamme
・ Jimmy Hampson
・ Jimmy Hanley
・ Jimmy Hanlon
・ Jimmy Hannah


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Jimmy Hagan : ウィキペディア英語版
Jimmy Hagan

James Hagan (21 January 1918 – 26 February 1998), known as Jimmy Hagan, was an English football player and manager born in Washington, County Durham, England. He played between 1938 and 1958 for Sheffield United and once for England. As manager he had his greatest successes with S.L. Benfica in the early 1970s.
==Playing career==
Just one full England cap, 1948 versus Denmark in Copenhagen (0–0), does not do justice to one of the finest British footballers of his era. A two-footed inside forward with an astonishing repertoire of tricks, Jimmy was also a regular goalscorer. His career was interrupted by World War II, but he remains a legend amongst Sheffield United fans for his performances during nearly 20 years service at Bramall Lane.
Following in the footsteps of his father, Alf, a former Newcastle United, Cardiff City and Tranmere player, Hagan represented England at schoolboy level and after spells with Washington Colliery and Usworth Colliery; he joined the groundstaff of Liverpool before leaving for Derby County at fifteen years of age. He stayed at the Baseball Ground until the age of twenty when United's manager Teddy Davison met his Derby counterpart George Jobey and haggled over the £3,000 asking price, eventually agreeing to pay £2,925.
With a weekly wage of £7 per week plus a first-team appearance fee of £1, Hagan made his debut two days later on 5 November 1938 in a 2–1 victory against Swansea Town in the Second Division. His first goal came 21 days later at Bramall Lane in a 3-1 victory over West Ham United. His first hat-trick for the club came in the last game of the 1938–39 season, with United needing to win to gain promotion instead of local rivals Sheffield Wednesday who having played all their 42 games were one point ahead on 53 with a superior goal average. Promotion was secured with a 6–1 win, Hagan contributing a goal.
After the war, Hagan initially refused to re-sign for United, missing the first four games of the 1946–47 season. Having got a job as a trainee chartered surveyor he only rejoined the team on a part-time basis. He continued to play for United until 1958, as captain between 1946 and 1949, despite United accepting what would have been a British record transfer fee of £32,500 from Wednesday in February 1951. Hagan rejected the transfer and Wednesday were relegated to the Second Division.
He finally retired after playing against his former club, Derby County, on 14 September 1957, having scored 117 league goals in 361 league matches. His testimonial game was played on 10 March 1958 between a Sheffield XI and an International XI.
In May and June 1958, Hagan joined fifteen Blackpool players on a tour of Australia. He scored 21 goals in his fifteen appearances. He had previously toured Australia with an FA party seven years earlier.〔Wolstenholme, Gerry (2014). ''By Bus to Wollongong'', Panther Press, 2014〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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