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Remembering Robins' promotion 50 years on

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Fan writer David Pottier recalls Bristol City's promotion to the top flight 50 years ago on Monday.

[BBC] To any Bristol City fan aged 60+, 20 April 1976 is a date indelibly etched into their minds. On this day 50 years ago, a Clive Whitehead goal was enough to beat Portsmouth and secure a return to the top flight after an absence of 65 years. The world, never mind just football, was a lot different back then!

One thing that did not seem to exist was footballers' agents. Today it would seem such individuals appear all too keen to egg on a player when a move is in the offing with their own gain by way of a fee clearly being a motive. If you go back to the spring of 1976 with City riding high in Division 2 (now the Championship) and transfer windows not having been thought of, Arsenal came in with an offer of £250,000 for arguably two of City's best players, Tom Ritchie and Geoff Merrick.

Promotion was by no means in the bag, but then chairman and club benefactor Harry Dolman rebutted the offer, as both players had made it clear that if they were going to play at the highest level, it was going to be for Bristol City. "Loyalty" is a word that does not feature much in today's footballing dictionary. Merrick must have rued his wish to stay when, six years later, he was one of the Ashton Gate Eight who tore up their contracts during Roy Hodgson's first spell in charge to save the club going under as City tumbled down the leagues with three successive relegations.

Coming back to the present, there are few City fans who would disagree with my view that current owner and benefactor, Steve Lansdown, effectively wrote off this season when he sanctioned the sale of two of the best players that were part of the current squad in the January transfer window. Both Anis Mehmeti and Zak Vyner were out of contract this summer and therefore free agents. There is no doubting an underlying degree of loyalty in Vyner, who had been at the club since he was eight, although Mehmeti is perhaps more of a soldier of fortune.