Football greats have gathered for the funeral of Manchester City and England striker Francis Lee, who died aged 79 after a long battle with lung cancer.
Lee, who was affectionately known as ‘Franny’, passed away earlier this month.
Legends of the game have been pictured ahead of the funeral service for the former Manchester City chairman, who was also a highly-successful businessman and racehorse trainer.
Newcastle legend Graeme Souness, former Manchester City players Micah Richards and Mike Summerbee, and former captain of the club Keith Book have all been seen attending Manchester Cathedral today where the funeral is being held.
Lee scored 148 goals in 330 appearances for Man City before spending four troubled years as chairman of the club in 1994, replacing Peter Swales.
Lee became a multi-millionaire in his retirement thanks to the success of his toilet paper company which allowed him to take over as the majority shareholder at Man City in 1994.
It would be football that first brought Lee into the limelight – including his unforgettable sending off after getting into a vicious brawl with Leeds United hardman Norman Hunter.
Described as one of City’s all-time greats, Lee won the First Division, FA Cup, League Cup and a European Cup Winners’ Cup during eight years with the club.
Lee began his career at Bolton Wanderers before signing for City for a then record fee of of £60,000 in 1967. He was the club’s top goalscorer for five consecutive seasons from 1969/70 to 1973/74, helping City to a number of trophies.
After leaving City he won another league title with Derby in 1975 in a spell otherwise recalled for an on-pitch fight with Leeds’ Norman Hunter. Lee suffered a cut lip that needed four stitches, and on the way to the dressing room he attacked the Leeds man again, resulting in a four week suspension.
‘It’s a good job I didn’t get in the dressing room afterwards,’ he said later. ‘I might have just been coming out on parole now.’
After scoring 30 goals in two seasons for Derby, he retired in 1976 to focus on his business commitments.
Lee went on to become a businessman once he retired in 1976 and was also involved in training horses. He later became chairman of City from 1994 to 1998 before being succeeded by David Bernstein.
Lee’s entrepreneurial spirit first manifested itself as a teenager when he used an old brewery lorry to collect waste paper.
It was this market he exploited, ploughing his football earnings into setting up FH Lee Ltd, a company which specialised in waste paper recycling and haulage before expanding into toilet roll, kitchen roll, foil and cling film.
He eventually sold the company for £8.35million in 1984, making £6m.
He later bought stables and had some success training racehorses before buying City from the unpopular Peter Swales in 1994.
He was hailed as a returning hero by City fans, but his early ambitious promises proved way off the mark.
‘If cups were awarded for cock-ups, you would not be able to move in City’s boardroom,’ Lee later admitted after a series of poor managerial appointments – Alan Ball, Steve Coppell, Frank Clark – set the club on a downward spiral.
City were relegated to the second tier and were on their way down to the third when Lee resigned in 1998.
Despite his departure, he retained shares until selling to Thaksin Shinawatra in 2007 and continued to attend City games regularly. He was made CBE for services to sport and charity in 2016.
Football greats gather for funeral of Manchester City and England striker Francis Lee
Football greats have gathered for the funeral of Manchester City and England striker Francis Lee, who died aged 79 after a long battle with lung cancer.
Legends of the game attend funeral of former Manchester City chairman Francis Lee
Legends of the game have been pictured ahead of the funeral service for the former Manchester City chairman, who was also a highly-successful businessman and racehorse trainer.
Francis Lee, Manchester City and England striker, dies aged 79
Lee, who was affectionately known as ‘Franny’, passed away earlier this month.
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