Knowledge R.I.P.

As we're unlikely to see terraces again at football, this is the virtual equivalent where you can chat to your hearts content about all football matters and, obviously, Arsenal in particular. This forum encourages all Gooners to visit and contribute so please keep it respectful, clean and topical.
BournemouthRED
Posts: 4107
Joined: Thu Jul 03, 2008 9:43 pm
Location: SE19

Post by BournemouthRED »

:cry:

never heard of this guy before, but after seeing his pic i now realise i had the pleasure of sitting behind him in rome this year! he had a little notebook pad which he was scribbling every detail on to. very quirky character but a true gooner.

RIP the knowledge!

User avatar
olgitgooner
Posts: 7431
Joined: Fri Nov 16, 2007 12:39 am
Location: Brexitland

Post by olgitgooner »

I never heard of the man until now.

He was obviously Arsenal obsessed. And somebody described him as "quirky".

It's great to have characters like this around.

I'm sorry that he has gone. He will be remembered by many. Which is a good tribute to a man's life.

User avatar
Rob
Posts: 2535
Joined: Sun Feb 17, 2008 12:03 pm
Location: Cambridge England

Post by Rob »

matthewadam123 wrote:Used to see Knowledge at every home game and had many chats as I am in the FE with my son and he also used to collect teamsheets and hang around near the press. At the Rushden friendly last year, Knowledge was in the glass fronted press box on his own and was very pleased with himself !

Spot on description in post above -

"He was often scurrying around looking very hot and bothered trying to get programmes, team sheets or press passes so he could sit in the press area.

Every time I met him he would always be laden down with carrier bags and a big heavy electronic typewriter."

A picture of Knowledge from the Barnet game in 2008.



Image

RIP - and yes a character gone, shame.

Cheers for that Photo' Matt.

He is clearly a man who goes back a long way. I used to attend a lot of the away games in to '70s and '80s - very infrequently now - but his pic' kinda rings a bell.

It's great that our Club - and frankly others too - but especially ours attracts people like that.

Individuals who seek nothing for themselves but come rain or shine, come hell or high water, they are always there. It's their life and they give nothing less than everything they have and all they can, to it.

The sad thing is that they are often not seen until they are gone. If you follow me. But as others say above - all part of our great Club's noble tradition. And all the greater for enduring, through the seasons, out of the lime light.


Let's hope we can do him proud by putting ourselves back at the top, where we belong, come next May.


:barscarf:

User avatar
Dicko
Posts: 1843
Joined: Sun May 28, 2006 5:12 pm
Location: Block 2

Post by Dicko »

I've known of Mr Knowledge's presence in the Arsenal family for almost as long as I've been going to football. I saw him at all the away matches as I started to attend them and hang. I don't really remember talking to him much and if I did it was in those early nineties years. I remember seeing him at an Oxford Utd evening reserve match in headington when I was studing at Oxford. I don't know where he lived but imagine it was not the short distance I travelled that night.

It will be a wierd season without him.

RIP

User avatar
Rob
Posts: 2535
Joined: Sun Feb 17, 2008 12:03 pm
Location: Cambridge England

Post by Rob »

Good to see the Club reverted to type and showed proper class by giving Knowledge a nice Obituary in the programme under the 'Voice of Arsenal' column.

Well done to them for that :barscarf:

But what shocked me was that they said he was 45. They presumably got that from his sister so that must be right. :(

In which case he's at least 10 years younger than I had him marked down in my mind as :( :(

In fact that makes him younger than me :(

Sounds a selfish thing to say but things like that pull you up short :cry: :cry: :cry:

User avatar
littlefire
Posts: 1224
Joined: Sun May 31, 2009 12:48 am
Location: Another Grove

Post by littlefire »

Rob wrote: He is clearly a man who goes back a long way. I used to attend a lot of the away games in to '70s and '80s - very infrequently now - but his pic' kinda rings a bell.

It's great that our Club - and frankly others too - but especially ours attracts people like that.

Individuals who seek nothing for themselves but come rain or shine, come hell or high water, they are always there. It's their life and they give nothing less than everything they have and all they can, to it.

The sad thing is that they are often not seen until they are gone. If you follow me. But as others say above - all part of our great Club's noble tradition. And all the greater for enduring, through the seasons, out of the lime light.


Let's hope we can do him proud by putting ourselves back at the top, where we belong, come next May.


:barscarf:


What a classy eulogy. Thank you Rob and R.I.P. Knowledge.

Post Reply