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JACKSON
McBRIDE was one
of ice hockey's finest British-developed players, skating for
various Scottish clubs during his 26-year career and appearing in
three World Championships for
Great Britain
.
Born
in
Paisley
,
Scotland
on
28
August 1946
,
Jackson
was brought up on the town’s
Seedhill
Road
and educated at the John Neilson Institute. On leaving school he
served an apprenticeship as a fitter with Thomas Lamont’s in
Paisley
.
He
learned to skate as an eight year-old at the old Paisley Ice Rink
and started his ice hockey career aged 16 with Paisley Vikings in
1962. Moving on to the Paisley Mohawks, where he benefited
enormously from experienced team-mates like Billy Brennan, Bill
Crawford, Dave Ferguson and Joe Brown, he developed into an
outstanding left winger on Paisley’s all-conquering squad of the
mid 1960s, earning an All-Star ‘B’ Team honour in 1968-69.
Jackson
’s
father was based in the fire service at
Ayr
,
and the family moved to the west coast town in 1968. The following
year
Jackson
,
just turned 23, was invited to take over as Player-Coach of Ayr
Bruins. A First team All-Star in each of the three seasons from
1969-72, he was the Northern League’s Player of the Year in
1974-75 (when playing for a struggling Ayr team, reformed after a
two-year hiatus following the closure of the Beresford Terrace
rink in 1972, who had to play all games away from home) and was
the driving force in Ayr’s British Championship win in 1976.
Jackson
was good enough to still play Heineken Premier Division hockey in
1987-88 for
Ayr
,
when aged 41, having been Coach of the Bruins at the start of that
season. He had been Player-Coach of Irvine Wings in the Scottish
League during 1984-85 and subsequently coached
Irvine
in their only season of British League hockey (1986-87). In
addition, he had spells as coach to Glasgow Saints in the British
League Division One, and the newly-formed
Kilmarnock
team in the Scottish League from 1989.
Jackson
was still player-coach of the recreational Ayr Jets team up to his
untimely death, aged 56, on
10
July 2003
.
(Jackson, a manager with British Aerospace in Ayrshire, had been
on a business trip to one of the company’s factories near
Blackburn
,
Lancashire
,
when he died suddenly in his Clayton-le-Moors hotel room.
Fittingly, he had taken part in a recreational hockey practice at
Blackburn Ice Arena on the evening of his tragic death.)
On
the international front, he
represented
Great
Britain
in three World Championships (1971, 1973 and 1976); he also played
for
Great
Britain
in
Denmark
’s
Pondus Cup tournament in 1975 and appeared for
Scotland
against
England
on a number of occasions.
As
well as coaching at senior level,
Jackson
had also coached various junior teams at
Ayr
over many years, and he was an inspirational figure to the many
junior players he helped develop.
Jackson’s
elevation to the Hall of Fame is fully endorsed by former
goaltender Tommy Newall, who played with him for Paisley Mohawks
and both the Ayr Bruins and Ayr Rangers: “It’s about time that
he was recognised because Jackson was a hell of a player and a
real good guy. He was one of the best stickhandlers I’d seen and
he could pick up bad passes behind him and make them look good.
His attitude was just right; he’d train every day if he had to.
“All
the old players had respect for him, even as a youngster – it
was obvious he was going to be a star.”
Canadian
goaltender Jim Graves, his former Bruins’ team-mate on the
Championship-winning squad of ‘76,
always maintained that Jackson was the one British player
most likely to have succeeded in North America, had such
opportunities been available for British players in the late
1960s. He was the prototype ‘power forward’ before such a
phrase had been coined, being a superbly fast skater, skilled
stickhandler, hard shooter…and someone who also relished the
physical aspect of the sport.
This
is a view also shared by Tommy Newall: “
Jackson
,
with his size, skating and stickhandling, could’ve made it in
North
America
.”
Jackson
is survived by his widow Ayleen, sons Ryan and Blair and daughter
Krista. (Both Ryan and Blair followed their father into the sport
through
Ayr
’s
junior development programme; latterly, Ryan played with Solway
Sharks while Blair assisted Paisley Pirates.)
Jackson
McBride's career stats in senior hockey are as follows:
Seasons
GP Goals Assists Points PIMS Teams
Played for
1962-1988* 294 260 303 563 464 Paisley Vikings;Paisley Mohawks;
Ayr Rangers; Ayr Bruins;
Glasgow Dynamos; Irvine Wings.
*Records
incomplete for seasons 1962-66; Did not play senior hockey
during 1979-83 and 1984-85.
GB
Stats
Year GP Goals Assists Points PIMS Venue Competition
1971 4 3 2 5 4 Holland World
Championships - Pool C
1973 7 1 1 2 2 Holland World
Championships - Pool C
1976 4
0 1 1
4 Poland World Championships - Pool C
1975/76 3
0
0
0 8
Denmark
Pondus Cup
Totals
18 4
4
8 20
Profile
by David Gordon, 2008, member of IHJUK |