/ Stars that died in 2023

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Per Oscarsson, Swedish actor, died from a fire he was , 83

 Per Oscar Heinrich Oscarsson [1] was a Swedish film actor died from a fire he was , 83.

(28 January 1927 – 30 December 2010)

Early life

Oscarsson was born, along with his twin brother, on 28 January 1927 on Kungsholmen in Stockholm. The twins had two elder siblings. Their mother, who was German, died in 1933.[2]

Career

Oscarsson was best known for his role as Pontus, a starving writer, in the social realism drama Hunger (Sult), based on the Knut Hamsun novel by the same name, a role for which he won both the 1966 Bodil and Cannes Film Festival best actor awards. His most recent movie role was as Holger Palmgren, the character Lisbeth Salander's publicly-appointed guardian, in the 2009 movies The Girl Who Played with Fire and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest, based on Stieg Larsson's famous novels.[3]

Death

On the evening of 30 December 2010, a fire started in the house of Oscarsson and his wife Kia Östling. On 31 December, a relative found the house burned to the ground with only the foundation and chimney remaining.[4] Oscarsson had not been heard from since the fire. A body was discovered in the ruins of the house on 2 January 2011, and was presumed by police to be either the body of Oscarsson or that of his wife.[5] A second body was discovered on 3 January, which increased the possibility that both Oscarsson and his wife perished in the fire.[6] On 5 January, the deaths of Oscarsson and his wife were confirmed through dental records by Swedish police.[7][8]

Filmography

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Tony Proudfoot, Canadian CFL football player, died from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis , he was 61.

John A. "Tony" Proudfoot was an All-Star defensive back in the Canadian Football League, teacher, coach, broadcaster and journalist died from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis , he was 61..[2][3][4] He was a Grey Cup champion twice as a player, and twice as special consultant to Montreal Alouettes Head Coach Marc Trestman in 2009 and 2010. In 2007 Proudfoot was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, a terminal illness. He wrote regular updates on his deterioration in the Montreal Gazette. He set up the "Tony Proudfoot Fund for ALS research" at the ALS Society of Quebec, which has raised $500,000 for research into the disease. The courage, grace and determination during his illness was widely admired. Proudfoot died in Montreal on December 30, 2010 at the age of 61.


(September 10, 1949 – December 30, 2010)

 Early life

Proudfoot was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba,[5] and later moved to Pointe-Claire, Quebec.[6] He attended John Rennie High School, graduating in 1966.[7] Proudfoot went on to study at the University of New Brunswick and played as a linebacker for the University's football team.[6] In 1970, he was nominated for the Hec Crighton Trophy, awarded annually to Canada's outstanding intercollegiate football player.[6] In 1971, Proudfoot graduated with a Bachelor's degree in Physical Education.[5]

CFL career

Proudfoot was a Montreal Alouettes draft pick in 1971,[8] and played for them for nine seasons (1971 to 1979, 107 games), including five Grey Cup championship games.[9] Proudfoot initially played as a linebacker, and was cut in that role. However, he was re-signed in 1973 and converted to a defensive back.[10] He played on the Alouette's 1974 Grey Cup winning team.[11] After missing much of the 1976 season because of injury, he moved to defensive half-back.[12] With time, Proudfoot and his fellow players became so experienced that they made the calls on the field; they signalled their plans to defensive coordinator Dick Roach in case he had show to show that they were following his plans.[8] He and the team partied extensively in the bars and restaurants of Crescent Street.[8] In July 1977, Al's coach Marv Levy described him as a "very smart football player" who "gets [the] very best out of himself" and who "isn't selfishly competing with his own teammates".[13] Proudfoot later reflected that his success in professional football was due to being able to work, learn, ask good questions and process information, as "I didn't have great ability".[14] During the "Ice Bowl" at Montreal's Olympic Stadium, the field was icy and very slippery. Before the game players from the Alouettes and their opponents, the Edmonton Eskimos tried various solutions to avoid falling, including broomball shoes, and various kinds of cleats, but none were very effective. In the stadium just prior to the pre-game warm-up, Proudfoot saw a Bell Canada electrician with a staple gun, and tried firing staples into the tip of the cleats on his shoes. Over the course of the game, more and more of the Alouettes players followed suit.[15][16] Proudfoot later recalled "With that little bit of a grip, it gave you extra confidence. We really knew we had something when Gerry Dattilio caught a short pass from Sonny Wade and ran right past Larry Highbaugh for a big gain. Gerry will tell you that he was not ... well, he was not very fast. And Highbaugh was known as one of the fastest guys in the league. That's when we knew we had something. It was a big factor in that 41-6 win.[15] Proudfoot was a CFL All-Star in 1977 and 1979.[11] He also played 3 seasons (1980 to 1982, 41 games) with the B.C. Lions.[17] He retired from the CFL at the end of the 1982 season.[18]

Teaching, coaching and broadcasting

During his playing career, Proudfoot began teaching Physical Education at Dawson College in Montreal in 1978, and continued to work for there for 30 years. In the years that followed, he also lectured in Exercise Science at Concordia University and Physical Education at McGill.[2][14][5] Following his playing career, he received some coaching offers in the CFL, but decided to combine his teaching career, which provided financial stability, with coaching in Montreal.[18] Proudfoot coached youth community teams and school teams in Pointe-Claire, Lower Canada College as well as the Junior Alouettes and the Junior Concordes.[5][18] For four years, he served as Assistant Coach for the Concordia Stingers, including 1998 when the Stingers reached the Vanier Cup.[5] Proudfoot also pursued further education, and received a master's degree in Sports Science at McGill University.[14][5]
When the Montreal Alouettes returned to the CFL in 1996, Proudfoot became the team's radio analyst on CJAD.[19] He served as assistant coach to Alouette head coach Rod Rust in 2001, but continued to work as a broadcast analyst, never betraying the confidences of the team and its players during his broadcasts.[8]
In 2002, Proudfoot began planning a book to examine about which traits and qualities result in greatness in a CFL player.[20] Following several years of interviews, research and writing Proudfoot's book entitled "First and Goal: The CFL and the Pursuit of Excellence" was published in 2006.[20] The book includes insights from 44 coaches and players, including Dave Dickenson, Wally Buono and Geroy Simon. Jack Todd described the book as a "compelling analysis of all the factors that make the game entertaining and complex."[14][21]
Proudfoot saw some of the injured from his office window during the 2006 Dawson College shooting, and descended with his first aid kit. While the shooting continued and until a stretcher arrived about 15 minutes later, he tended to a student who had been shot in the head. The young man survived.[22][21]

Illness and Death

Proudfoot first noticed that his speech was slurred while lecturing at Concordia University in February 2007. A diagnosis of bulbar onset Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), a motor neurone disorder was made in early May at the Montreal Neurological Institute.[2][23] The disease, also known as "Lou Gehrig's disease" affects the nerve cells of the central nervous system, leading to increasing paralysis of muscles that control voluntary movement and, eventually death. Listeners to his broadcasts as a football analyst on CJAD noticed his speech disorder, and some suggested that he was drunk.[17][24][23] As a result, in June 2007, Proudfoot publicly revealed that he had ALS. Proudfoot commented at the time "I'm a physical-education teacher. I've spent my whole life being active, so it's ironic to now get a muscle disease."[2][25] In addition, Proudfoot noted the irony of a radio broadcaster and teacher losing his ability to speak.[26][23]
Proudfoot was widely admired for the lack of self-pity, bravery and humour he showed in facing the disease, and for using it as an opportunity for education and to raise money for research.[27][28][29] He wrote that he had determined to "Suck it up and get on with life (remember, no whining allowed!) and enjoy every day."[30] Proudfoot retired from Dawson College and Concordia University, but initially continued to work as a football analyst on CJAD.[31][32] He served as a guest coach for the Alouettes during the team's 2008 training camp. He was invited back for 2009 despite no longer being able to communicate verbally, and instead used a small whiteboard on which he wrote notes or drew diagrams.[33] In 2008, Proudfoot was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame Football Reporters wing. To make his acceptance speech, he used a speech generating device, an electronic communication aid that speaks aloud what the user has typed.[34][35] In 2008, Proudfoot was awarded an honorary doctorate of science (kinesiology) degree from the University of New Brunswick.[1] In November 2010, he accepted the CFL's Hugh Campbell Award for Distinguished Leadership before the Grey Cup Eastern Conference final in Montreal from CFL Commissioner Mark Cohon.[11][36] He served as special consultant to the Al's Head Coach Marc Trestman during the 2009 and 2010 CFL season's both Grey Cup winning seasons for the team,[37] and was a Grey Cup ring in the spring of 2010.[29]
After his diagnosis, Proudfoot worked to raise public awareness of ALS. He was interviewed regularly by radio, TV and print media across Canada.[23] With the ALS Society of Quebec, he raised funds for ALS, including setting up the "Tony Proudfoot Fund for ALS research". The funds provide support to ALS patients and their families as well as, the Tony Proudfoot Post-Doctoral Fellowships in ALS Research at the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) at McGill University and the McGill University Health Centre. [38] Alouettes such as Anthony Calvillo, Ben Cahoon, Scott Flory and others participated in the fundraising events.[3] Davis Sanchez, a B.C. Lion cornerback and a former Alouette, donated a game cheque to the fund in honour of his former mentor in during his time with the Als.[39] By December 2010, the fund had raised $500,000.[40] Beginning in 2007, Proudfoot also wrote a series of articles about his triumphs and challenges with the disease in the Montreal Gazette.[11]
In December 2010, the newspaper published an emotional farewell address from Proudfoot, recapping previous articles he had written about his struggle with ALS and thanking supporters. In the article, he stated that it would be his last such piece before his death, which he felt was "imminent".[32] The same day, Dawson College announced that they would be naming their gyms the "Tony Proudfoot Gymnasium."[37] The College cited "his long service to Dawson College, his careers in professional football and education, his life-saving heroics during the Dawson shooting and his establishment of the fund for ALS research."[41] Proudfoot was married and had two daughters and a son.[2] Following his diagnosis, the two children who had moved away from Montreal, returned to the city.[26] Proudfoot moved to The West Island Palliative Care Residence[42] on December 28, 2010, and died two days later at the age of 61.[4] A final Montreal Gazette column written by Proudfoot and published after his death, expressed his gratitude for his life, family, friends and the care he had received, and his pride that he had fought the illness with determination.[42]

Published works

Proudfoot, Tony (2006). First and goal: the CFL and the pursuit of excellence. Bolton, Ontario: Fenn Pub. ISBN 978-1551683164.

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Tom Vandergriff, American politician, Mayor of Arlington, Texas (1951–1977) and U.S. Congressman from Texas (1983–1985). died he was , 84

Tommy Joe Vandergriff  was a politician from Texas  died he was , 84. He served as Mayor of Arlington from 1951 to 1977, as a U.S. Representative from Texas's 26th congressional district from 1983 to 1985, and as County Judge of Tarrant County from 1991 to 2007. For the greater part of his life, Vandergriff was a Democrat, but he became a Republican around 1990.[5]
As Mayor, he was instrumental in several projects, including a new General Motors assembly plant, moving a Major League Baseball franchise to Arlington, and the opening of Six Flags over Texas.


(January 29, 1926 – December 30, 2010)

 Political career

Mayor of Arlington, 1951–1977

During his 26 years as Mayor of Arlington, Tom Vandergriff brought a General Motors assembly plant into Arlington,[6] brought the Washington Senators to Arlington as the Texas Rangers,[7] saw Arlington State College elevated to University status and became the University of Texas at Arlington,[1] helped create the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport,[1] and saw Arlington grow from about 8,000 people to over 120,000.[1]
In January 1977, Vandergriff unexpectedly announced his resignation at a regularly scheduled city council meeting.[8] His resignation, which was effective immediately, surprised both city councillors and observers because virtually no one had been aware of Vandergriff's intention to resign.[8] Arlington's mayor pro tem, SJ Stovall, succeeded Vandergriff as mayor.[8]

House of Representatives

Tom Vandergriff was elected as a Democrat to the newly formed 26th congressional district of Texas and served one term from 1983 to 1985.[9] While in Congress he was considered a conservative Democrat.
Despite his popularity in the area, Vandergriff was swept out after only one term by Republican Dick Armey amid Ronald Reagan's massive landslide reelection bid that year.

County Judge

As a Republican, Tom Vandergriff served 16 years as County Judge before retiring from public service in 2007.[1][10]

Non-political career

Texas Rangers

For over ten years, Vandergriff worked to bring baseball to the metroplex. Judge Roy Hofheinz of the Houston Astros tried to block any attempt Vandergriff made in his efforts to bring a ball club to Arlington. In 1971, Washington Senators owner Bob Short was wanting to relocate his team, managed by baseball legend Ted Williams.
Many people in the D.C. area were highly opposed to the move. Vandergriff was thrown out of a cab because the driver learned who he was. Even the then-President of the United States, Richard Nixon, was against the move. While Vandergriff was visiting Bob Short in his D.C. area office, Nixon sent his son-in-law to deliver a message to Short, demanding he not relocate the team. Not wanting Nixon to know Vandergriff was there, Short shoved Vandergriff into a closet, where he stayed until it was "safe to come out." Ultimately, the Washington Senators relocated to Arlington's Turnpike Stadium. Vandergriff rebuffed a large community effort to rename the stadium in his honor; the team thus played for the next 22 seasons in an expanded and renamed Arlington Stadium.
The new team became known as the Texas Rangers. Because the city of Arlington owned the broadcasting rights, he served as a TV broadcaster for the team from 1975 to 1977, not earning pay.
In 1993, he spearheaded the efforts to build a new stadium. Mayor Richard Greene, then owner George W. Bush, President Tom Schieffer, and Vandergriff campaigned to get Arlington voters to approve the new stadium. The stadium was passed and opened in 1994 as the Ballpark in Arlington, after Vandergriff again rebuffed a campaign to name the new park Vandergriff Stadium.
In 2004, Vandergriff was inducted into the Texas Ranger Baseball Hall of Fame, along with Buddy Bell and Ferguson Jenkins.[citation needed] He is honored with a statue in center field, which bears the name "Vandergriff Plaza." Today he is considered the Father of the Texas Rangers.[citation needed]

Businesses

Tom Vandergriff worked in his family's businesses including a chain of car dealerships. His father. Hooker, owned Vandergriff Chevrolet and Vandergriff Buick, until he split the dealerships between Vandergriff and Vandergriff's sister, Ginger. The car dealerships later expanded and were controlled by his son Victor as well as then Arlington Mayor, Richard Greene. Today the dealerships are owned by V.T. Inc. and include Chevrolet, Toyota, Acura, Honda, and Hyundai. V.T. Inc. has become the largest privately owned car dealer company in the United States.[1]
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Jenny Wood-Allen Scottish athlete and politician, world record holder for the oldest female marathon finisher has died she was , 99,.

 Jenny Wood-Allen MBE  was a Scottish marathon runner and Guinness World Record holder, running in over 30 marathons since 1983 and earning more than £70,000 for charity has died she was , 99,..[2]


(20 November 1911 – 30 December 2010[1])

Career

Originally hailing from Dundee, Scotland, Wood-Allen initially took up sport in 1983 as a "one-off".[3] Wood-Allen made national headlines across the UK when she was 87 years old after completing the 1999 London Marathon. Her time of 7hours 14mins 46secs, earned her the current Guinness World Record for Oldest Female Marathon Finisher.
In 2001, Wood-Allen ran for the last time in the London Marathon before walking it once more in 2002 at the age of 90.
She received an MBE in the 2006 New Year Honours List, and took part in the 2006 Great Scottish Walk.
In December 2006, she made the headlines when £700 worth of jewellery was stolen from her home.[4]
From 2007, she was still very active in sport, running up to 50 miles a week,[5] and regularly appearing at meetings of the Dundee City Sports Council.[6]
Wood-Allen died on December 30, 2010 at the age of 99.

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Barry Zorthian, American press officer during Vietnam War died he was , 90

 Barry Zorthian  was an American diplomat, most notably press officer for 4 12 years during the Vietnam war, media executive and lobbyist died he was , 90.

(October 8, 1920 – December 30, 2010)

 Early life and education

Baryoor Zorthian was born on October 8, 1920, in Katahya[1] Turkey, the child of Armenian parents. "His father, a writer, was imprisoned in Turkey but escaped. His mother, refusing to divulge her husband’s whereabouts, was herself sent to jail, along with their son. [The family] eventually migrated to New Haven, Connecticut, the father working in a dry cleaners. Barry went to Yale, where he edited the student newspaper and joined the secretive Skull and Bones society."[2]

Career

Military service and early career

Zorthian "was a Marine in the Pacific during World War II. After working for a Vermont newspaper [the Caledonian Record[1]], he joined CBS Radio and then the Voice of America. He earned a law degree by attending New York University at night. After 13 years at the Voice of America, he became a diplomat in India."[3]

Service in Vietnam

He was best known for his four years as chief spokesperson for the U. S. government in Saigon, Vietnam 1964-1968. "His daily afternoon briefings for press correspondents ... were dubbed “Five O’Clock Follies” by reporters frustrated by the lack of complete transparency. ... New York Times Correspondent, Gloria Emerson, declared him 'a determined and brilliant liar' at a 1981 conference on the Vietnam War. Despite the criticism, many still trusted him as an honest public official. 'He had a conscience. He believed in informing the American public,' Neil Sheehan, a Pulitzer prize-winning author and a former New York Times reporter in Saigon, told the Washington Post. 'His problem was that he was trying to sell a bad war.'"[4] He was "Murrow’s last recommendation before retiring from USIA, [an appointment] so sensitive that it required President Lyndon Johnson and the secretaries of state and defence, Dean Rusk and Robert McNamara, to sign off on it."[2] He oversaw the 500-person Joint United States Public Affairs Office under Carl T. Rowan after Murrow retired.[3] Other journalists he faced were members "of a tough school in American journalism covering the war [including] Richard Pyle, ... Halberstam, Apple, Arnett, Kalb, Karnow – several of whom made their reputations in Vietnam."[2]
One obituary described his job in Saigon as trying to "defuse an increasingly acrimonious relationship between American officials and news correspondents covering the war[. He] used a mixture of charm, sly wit and uncommonly straight talk in trying to establish credibility for the U.S. effort.... [H]e refused to be intimidated by either officials or the news media. 'He talked back,' said George McArthur, who covered the Vietnam war for The Associated Press and the Los Angeles Times [and later was AP Cairo bureau chief[5]].... 'Barry's door was always open and although he never shared a classified thought, he left you feeling that he had,' said former New York Times and CBS reporter Bernard Kalb. 'Even when he told you nothing, he was always persuasive.' 'In postwar years, Barry Zorthian remained steadfast to his conviction about the significant role the media must play in a democratic society,' said Peter Arnett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning war reporter for the AP in Vietnam and later a CNN foreign correspondent. ... Arnett recalled that when he [Arnett] complained about an American military policeman threatening to shoot him during a 1965 Buddhist street demonstration in Saigon, `Zorthian shook his head in mock concern, and said `D--- it, Peter, you threatened him and he was just responding.' 'What?' I replied. 'Yes,' Barry said, `you were aiming your pencil at him and that's more dangerous around here than a .45.'"[6]
"Zorthian remained proud of his most controversial achievement ... [the] Follies.... [T]he briefings lasted a decade, the only regular forum in which U.S. and South Vietnamese officials spoke entirely on the record and were often challenged or contradicted by reporters, sometimes to their embarrassment."[6]

Career after Vietnam

"After leaving Saigon in 1968, Mr. Zorthian was an executive at Time Inc. and a lobbyist on communications issues."[3]
"After The New York Times and other newspapers in 1971 published a history of the Vietnam War that came to be known as the Pentagon Papers, Mr. Zorthian wrote an Op-Ed column in The Times asserting that the Vietnam war had been 'the most open war in history.'[7] He said that almost all the important disclosures in the documents had already been known to journalists. In a letter to the editor in response, Elliot Bernstein, the ABC News Saigon bureau chief in the mid-1960s, countered that the press had been kept in the dark about the extent of American bombing of Laos beginning in 1964, as well as the fact that bases in Thailand were being used to conduct air raids on North Vietnam ."

Personal

Zorthian was feted at a "90th birthday 'roast and toast' [which included] Richard Holbrooke, who was himself to die a few weeks later and who earned his diplomatic spurs in Vietnam."[2]
"Zorthian's wife of 62 years, Margaret Aylaian Zorthian, died in July. He is survived by two sons, Greg and Steve, a daughter-in-law and two grandchildren."[6]

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Steve Boros, American baseball player (Tigers) and manager (Athletics, Padres), died from complications from multiple myeloma he was , 74.

Stephen Boros Jr.  was an American infielder, coach, manager, advance scout, and farm system official in United States Major League Baseball died from complications from multiple myeloma he was , 74..

(September 3, 1936 – December 29, 2010)


A graduate of the University of Michigan,[1] where he received a bachelor of arts degree in literature,[2] Boros managed the Oakland Athletics (1983–84) and the San Diego Padres (1986).
A native of Flint, Michigan, Boros signed a bonus contract with the Detroit Tigers in 1957. He was named the most valuable player of the Class AAA American Association in 1960 after he tied for the lead in runs batted in with 119. In his first full major league season, 1961, Boros appeared in 116 games for the Tigers as a third baseman and hit .270 with 62 runs batted in. It was his finest season. In 1962, he slugged three home runs in one game on August 6. No other Tigers player accomplished the feat until Bill Freehan did it in 1971.
Boros was then shipped to the Chicago Cubs in an offseason trade. After one season in Chicago, he finished his major league playing career with the 1964-65 Cincinnati Reds. In all or parts of seven seasons, he batted .245 with 26 home runs. He batted and threw right-handed.
Boros continued to play at the AAA level through 1969. His managing career began in the Kansas City Royals farm system in 1970. He coached on the staff of Whitey Herzog in Kansas City (1975–79). He also served as a coach with the Montreal Expos (1981–82), before taking over the Athletics, replacing Billy Martin.[3] After his managerial career, Boros returned to the coaching ranks with the Royals (1993–94) and Baltimore Orioles (1995), and was a coordinator of instruction and farm director for several MLB teams, including the Tigers.
But it was his work as an advance scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1988 that really showed off his baseball smarts. Boros was part of a scout team that filled out reports that fall on the Athletics, the Dodgers' opponent in the 1988 World Series. Among the traits that Boros and his co-workers noticed, where that Oakland relief ace Dennis Eckersley tended to throw a backdoor slider on 3-2 counts to left-handed hitters. That was exactly the pitch that pinch-hitter Kirk Gibson launched off Eckersley for a memorable two-out, bottom-of-the-ninth homer to win Game One of the Series. The Dodgers went on to upset the mighty Athletics in five games.[4]
He retired from baseball in 2004 after serving as a special assistant to Tigers' general manager David Dombrowski.
Boros died in Deland, Florida, at the age of 74. He had been ill with multiple myeloma since 2007.[5]

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Avi Cohen, Israeli footballer, died from a motorcycle accident he was , 54

Avraham "Avi" Cohen  was an Israeli footballer who played as a defender. He was best known for his spell playing for Liverpool in England.[1] After retirement from active football and management, he was the chairman of the Israel Professional Footballers Association for over five years until he was killed in a motorcycle crash.[4][5]
(Hebrew: אבי כהן‎; 14 November 1956 – 29 December 2010[2])

  Career

Avi Cohen.jpgCohen began his playing career with Maccabi Tel Aviv, before joining Liverpool for a fee of £200,000 ($450,000) in July 1979, and became the first Israeli to play in England.[1][4] He struggled to establish himself as a regular at Anfield and was released in November 1981, rejoining Maccabi.[1] On 20 September 1980, Cohen stirred up controversy when he decided to play in Liverpool's away fixture versus Southampton, which fell on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur. Liverpool drew with Southampton 2–2 in front of 24,085 spectators and Cohen was lambasted by the Israeli media for playing.[6] He returned to the United Kingdom in 1987, when he had a brief spell under former Liverpool teammate Graeme Souness at Rangers,[1] before ending his career with Maccabi Netanya.
He also played for the Israeli national team, making his debut on 19 July 1976 during the 1976 Summer Olympics in a 0–0 draw against Guatemala.[7][8] On 9 October 1984, Cohen scored his first goal against Greece in a 2–2 friendly draw.[9] He was capped 51 times, scoring 3 goals.[3][10] His son, Tamir, is currently an international professional footballer who plays for Bolton Wanderers in the English Premier League and the Israeli national team.[11]

Personal life

Cohen was married to Dorit and the father of three, including the football player Tamir Cohen.[12] In addition, Cohen was the brother-in-law of former football player Vicky Peretz and the uncle of Peretz sons – Adi and Omer Peretz.[13]
In 2008, he participated in the Israeli reality version of Dancing with the Stars and was the fifth to be eliminated.

Death

On 20 December 2010, Cohen was seriously injured in a motorcycle crash. He was taken to Tel Aviv’s Ichilov Hospital, where he was immediately taken into surgery and was reported to be in a critical condition.[14] Johan Elmander paid tribute to Avi Cohen through a goal celebration on 26 December 2010 when he scored against West Bromwich Albion. Elmander held up a Bolton Wanderers shirt that read on the back – Get Well Soon Avi Cohen. This was due to Cohen's son Tamir currently playing for Bolton.[15]
On 28 December 2010, Ichilov Hospital declared that Cohen was brain dead.[16] His brain death was confirmed by his son Tamir later the same day.[5] Paying tribute to Cohen, Kenny Dalglish said "Avi was a lovely man who will be remembered fondly by everyone at Liverpool who knew him. He quickly integrated himself into the football club when he joined us and spent a lot of time learning English which really made him popular. He was well liked by all the lads and although he didn't spend a long time at the club, he certainly left his mark and no-one will forget how he helped us win the league against Aston Villa. My thoughts and those of everyone connected to the club are with Avi's family." Ally McCoist said "we knew his situation was bad but never for a second did we think it would come to this" before going on to say it was "so sad to hear that he has passed away."[17]
On 29 December 2010, eight hours after the confirmation of suffering brain death, Cohen's heart stopped and he was declared legally dead at 06:00 am IST.[18][2]
Liverpool marked the death of Cohen with a period of applause before their Premier League match against Wolverhampton Wanderers on 29 December 2010.[19]

Honours

Club

Maccabi Tel Aviv
Liverpool
Rangers

Individual


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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...