Former Burnley captain and manager Jimmy Adamson has died at the age of 82.
Adamson made 486 appearances for the Clarets in a playing career spanning 17 years, placing him sixth on the club's all-time list.
He will be best remembered as the ever-present captain in Burnley's 1960 League Championship-winning team.
'Burnley Football Club is sad to confirm the passing of a true club legend in Jimmy Adamson,' read a statement on the Clarets' website.
'Adamson, a former manager and captain of the club at the peak of its powers, has died at the age of 82.
'Ashington-born Adamson gave three decades of magnificent service to the Clarets.'
Recruited from youth football in Northumberland, Adamson joined Burnley's groundstaff before signing a first professional contract in 1947, aged 17. However, he did not make his senior debut until 1951.
Big day: Adamson with Spurs captain Danny Blanchflower at the 1962 FA Cup final
Despite finishing on the losing side in the 1962 FA Cup final, Adamson was named Footballer of the Year and, at the age of 33, included in England's World Cup squad for the tournament in Chile that summer.
Although he never won a senior international cap, Adamson acted as Walter Winterbottom's assistant during the competition and was offered the role of England manager, only to turn it down because he felt he lacked experience, leaving Alf Ramsey to take the reigns of the national team.
Following his retirement in 1964, Adamson managed Burnley to promotion from the Second Division in 1973 and Leeds to a place in the UEFA Cup in 1979/80, while he also enjoyed a spell in charge of Sunderland.
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Source: Daily Mail
Source: Daily Mail