Football Oddities - Tony Matthews - E-Book

Football Oddities E-Book

Tony Matthews

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Beschreibung

The entire Ecuador team - all eleven players - were sent off in an international match in 1978! Because of a colour clash, Blackburn Rovers' players wore white evening dress shirts for their 1890 FA Cup final encounter with The Wednesday! In May 1950 Blackpool signed Billy Wright from a local junior club for a set of tangerine jerseys! These are just a few of the many hundreds of startling, unusual and improbable stories thrown up by the beautiful game over the years. In one of the most individual and irreverent collections of footballing facts ever produced, Tony Matthews has unearthed tales of the unexpected that will delight footy fans everywhere. Did you hear the one about the Argentine full-back who scored a hat-trick of own goals in less than an hour? Remember the England goalkeeper who was sent off after just twenty-seven seconds of a Premiership game in 1995? Read about them - and many, many others - here.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2005

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First published in 2005 by Tempus Publishing

Reprinted in 2009 by

The History Press

The Mill, Brimscombe Port,

Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2QG

www.thehistorypress.co.uk

Reprinted 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017

© Tony Matthews, 2005

The right of Tony Matthews to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All illustrations are by cartoonist Warren Gwynne © ‘WAYNE’, 2005.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without the permission in writing from the Publishers.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 978 0 7524 9376 3

Typesetting and origination by

Tempus Publishing Limited

Printed in Malta by Melita Press.

eBook converted by Geethik Technologies

Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Abandoned & Postponed Matches

Age

Appearances

Attendances

Benefits & Testimonials

Captains

Championships

Cricketer-Footballers

Debuts

Defeats

Discipline

Doubling Up

Draws (Football League)

European Football

FA Cup

Family Connection

Football Firsts

Football League

Foreign Affairs

Goalkeepers

Goals & Goalscorers

Grounds

Half-time Scores

Hat-tricks

Injuries

International Football

Journeys

League Cup

Longest Match Result

Managers

Matches

Medal Winners

Name Game

Nicknames

Non-League

Own Goals

Penalties

Players

Premiership

Promotion & Relegation

Referees

Results

Scottish Facts

Service

Substitutes

Trainers

Transfers

Trophies

Wartime Football

Weight

World Cup

Other Soccer Oddities

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Warren Gwynne (‘Wayne’) from Rowley Regis near Dudley in the West Midlands for his drawings and caricatures featured in this book.

Also I say thank you to everyone at Tempus Publishing, especially to Holly Bennion, Rob Sharman, Anthony Lovell and Katie Beard; to David Prole and Jack Rollin who have both compiled football oddity books in the past; and to my wife Margaret who has once again put up without me for hours on end as I’ve tiptapped away at the computer keyboard and fingered through page after page of soccer books, magazines and programmes searching for these odd curios, facts and interesting snippets of the great game.

This book is dedicated to all those right-minded people who enjoy their football.

Introduction

A collection of oddities, coincidences, unusual occurrences, stranger-than-fiction stories and facts and figures …all relating to the great game of Association Football.

The odd things that happen in football make the game a never-ending source of fascination. Novel twists affecting play and players continue to arise and each and every season literally hundreds of curios, odd facts, outrageous statistics and snippets of amazing, unbelievable and sometimes mind-boggling information crop up somewhere along the line.

Over the years a handful of books, brochures, magazines and supplements have been produced listing hundreds of so-called soccer odd-balls, numerous facts and figures, anecdotes and soccer curios. I have now placed many of them into one very interesting publication that will certainly get you talking…

Abandoned & Postponed Matches

The third round FA Cup tie between Newcastle United and Swansea Town at St James’ Park in January 1953 was abandoned after just eight minutes through fog. A crowd of 63,499 had assembled to see the contest.

The Sheffield United v. West Bromwich Albion League game at Bramall Lane in March 2002 was abandoned after eighty-two minutes because the home side had been reduced to just six players (three had been sent off and two taken off injured). Albion were 3-0 ahead at the time and the result was allowed to stand.

The (Sheffield) Wednesday v. Aston Villa League First Division game on 26 November 1898 was abandoned with a little over ten minutes left with the home side 3-1 ahead. The authorities asked both clubs to play out the remaining time on 13 March 1899 when Wednesday added another goal to run out 4-1 winners.

A similar thing happened in Spain’s La Liga in December 2004 when the Real Madrid v. Real Sociedad game was abandoned after eighty-three minutes with the scores level at 1-1. The remaining seven minutes were played later.

The Middlesbrough v. Oldham Athletic League game of 3 April 1915 was abandoned after fifty-five minutes when full-back Billy Cook of Oldham refused to leave the field after being sent off. The result was allowed to stand as Boro were leading 4-1 at the time. Cook was suspended for twelve months.

The 1979 Scottish Cup tie between Inverness Thistle and Falkirk was postponed no fewer than twenty-nine times before it was eventually played.

The third round of the FA Cup in 1963, scheduled for 5 January, was so severely hit by the atrocious weather conditions (snow, ice, frost) that the thirty-second and last tie was not completed until 11 March. The ties covered twenty-two dates, there were 261 postponements and one of them (Birmingham City v. Bury) was put off no fewer than fourteen times – when it was finally staged the game was abandoned and eventually went to a replay.

The League game between Darwen and Leicester Fosse in January 1895 was abandoned after just two minutes when a gale blew down the goalposts. The rearranged fixture resulted in an 8-2 win for Darwen.

Halifax Town did not play a single home League game between 14 December 1962 and 2 March 1963 – all were postponed due to frost, ice and/or snow.

After the arctic winter of the previous season, only six Football League matches were postponed during the 1947/48 campaign – a record!

Due to atrocious weather, the Scottish Cup tie between Inverness Thistle and Partick Thistle was postponed twenty-eight times during the 1978/79 season.

Age

International Level

In April 1879, James Prinsep, aged seventeen years 252 days, made his international debut for England. He remained England’s youngest player at that level until Wayne Rooney, aged seventeen years 111 days, played his first game as a substitute against Australia in February 2003. Seven months later Rooney became England’s youngest-ever goalscorer when he netted against Macedonia in September 2003, and at one stage (in June 2004) he held the record for being the youngest goalscorer in the European Championship finals, at eighteen years 236 days.

Stanley Matthews was forty-two years 103 days old when he played his last game for England against Denmark in May 1957. His international career spanned twenty-two years 228 days, from 29 September 1934 to 15 May 1957.

Billy Meredith played in his first international match for Wales on 16 March 1895 and his last on 15 March 1920 – a span of twenty-five years.

Samuel Johnston was only fifteen years 154 days old when he played for Ireland in their first international match v. England in 1882. The following week he scored his first international goal (v. Wales).

Premiership

Matthew Briggs became the youngest player to appear in the Premiership when he made his debut as a substitute for Fulham against Middlesbrough on 13 May 2007 at the age of 16 years, 65 days.

At the age of sixteen years 271 days James Vaughan of Everton became the Premiership’s youngest-ever goalscorer when he found the net in the home game against Crystal Palace on 10 April 2005.

Goalkeeper John Burridge is the oldest player ever to appear in a Premiership game. He was forty-three years, four months and twenty-six days old when he lined up for Manchester City against Newcastle United in April 1995.

The youngest goalkeeper to appear in a Premiership match has been Neil Finn for West Ham United against Manchester City in January 1996. He was just seventeen years, three days old.

Football League

Ken Owen Roberts was fifteen years 157 days old when he made his League debut for Wrexham against Bradford Park Avenue in September 1951.

Albert Geldard had been a day older when he started his first match for Bradford against Millwall in September 1929.

Glyn Pardoe was fifteen years ten months old when he made his First Division bow for Manchester City at centre forward against Birmingham City in 1962.

Lee Holmes was fifteen years 268 days old when he made his League debut for Derby County on Boxing Day 2002. He thus became the club’s youngest-ever debutant, beating Steve Powell who was introduced against Arsenal in October 1971 at the age of sixteen years, thirty-three days. Prior to that Steve’s father, Tommy Powell, had made his debut for Derby as a sixteen-year-old on Christmas Day 1941.

David Byng was sixteen years twenty-one days old when he made his senior debut for Torquay United against Walsall in August 1993. He celebrated the occasion by scoring both goals in a 2-1 win.

Jason Dozzell (aged sixteen years, fifty-seven days) became the youngest First Division goalscorer when he found the net against Coventry City in 1984.

Gifton Noel-Williams – the first Watford player with a double-barrelled name – made his League debut for the Hornets on 28 September 1996 v. Shrewsbury Town at the age of sixteen years, 250 days. He then became the Hornets’ youngest-ever goalscorer, aged sixteen years, 314 days, when he netted against Blackpool on 30 November that same year.

Ronnie Dix was only fifteen years, 180 days old when he scored for Bristol Rovers against Norwich City in a Third Division (South) game in March 1928.

Derek Forster became the Football League’s youngest-ever goalkeeper when he made his First Division debut for Sunderland against Leicester City in August 1964 at the age of fifteen years, 185 days.

Neil McBain was fifty-one years, four months old when he played in goal for New Brighton against Hartlepool United in a Third Division (North) match in 1947 – a Football League record.

Stanley Matthews’ professional playing career covered thirty-two years and ten months. He officially retired after playing in his last League game for Stoke City against Fulham a few days after his fiftieth birthday in February 1965. He had made his debut for Stoke against Bury on 19 March 1932.

Dixie Dean and Jimmy Greaves were both the same age – twenty-three years, 290 days – when each player scored his 200th League goal.

Joe Cockcroft was thirty-eight years of age when he made his First Division debut for Sheffield United in 1948.

Bob McGrory, left-back of Stoke City, appeared in all his side’s forty-two League games in 1934/35 at the age of forty.

FA Cup

Defender Andy Awford, aged fifteen years, eighty-eight days, played for Worcester City against Boreham Wood in the qualifying round of the FA Cup in October 1987 – the youngest player ever to appear in the competition.

On 10 November 2007, Luke Freeman became the youngest player to appear in the FA Cup proper when he came on as a substitute for Gillingham against Barnet at the age of 15 years and 233 days.

Alick Jeffrey lined up against Aston Villa on his sixteenth birthday in January 1955.

In 1949 Stan Cullis became the youngest man to manage an FA Cup-winning team, leading Wolves to victory over Leicester City at the age of thirty-three years, 187 days.

Billy Hampson (born in August 1882), right-back for Newcastle United v. Aston Villa in 1924, and John Oakes (born in September 1905), centre half for Charlton Athletic v. Derby County in 1946, are, at forty, the oldest players ever to appear in an FA Cup final.

In 1969, at the age of nineteen, Peter Shilton, then of Leicester City, became the youngest goalkeeper to play in an FA Cup final (against Manchester City).

League Cup

Chris Woods became the youngest goalkeeper at eighteen years 125 days to play in a major Wembley cup final when he lined up for Nottingham Forest against Liverpool in the 1978 League Cup final.

On 1 October 2002, in a League Cup tie at Wrexham, Wayne Rooney, aged sixteen years 342 days, became the youngest goalscorer in Everton’s history, beating Tommy Lawton’s record of scoring on his debut at the age of seventeen years 130 days on 13 March 1937.

Foreign Bodies

The Santos duo of George Dorval and Pelé both made their international debuts for Brazil against Argentina in July 1957 at the ages of fifteen years, one month and sixteen years nine months respectively. Both players had already played at League level prior to that, Dorval perhaps starting as a fourteen-year-old and Pelé as a fifteen-year-old.

Age Gap

Trevor Francis scored four goals for Birmingham City against Bolton Wanderers as a sixteen-year-old in a Second Division match in February 1971.

Eamonn Collins of Blackpool was only fourteen years 323 days old when he made his debut for the Seasiders as a substitute against Kilmarnock in the Anglo-Italian Cup in September 1980.

Goalkeeper John Burridge holds the record for being both Darlington’s and Scarborough’s oldest League player. He played his last competitive game for Scarborough in the Autoglass Trophy v. Hull City in December 1996, aged forty-five.

In 1928/29, Halifax Town’s regular goalkeepers were Bob Suter (aged forty-nine) and Howard Matthews (forty-five).

When Newcastle United signed Andy Cunningham from Rangers in January 1929 he was thirty-nine years of age. He later became the first player-manager of a First Division club.

Stoke have signed two players over forty – Tom Brittleton (forty-one) was recruited from Sheffield Wednesday in May 1920 and Stanley Matthews (forty-six) returned home from Blackpool in October 1961.

Michael Gilsken holds three off-the-field football records: in August 1957, at the age of eighteen, he became the youngest-ever director of a League club (Charlton Athletic); he became the London club’s youngest chairman in May 1962, aged twenty-three; and two years later he became the youngest-ever member of the Football League Management Committee.

Coventry City had three thirty-seven-year-old players appear in their League side during the 2002/03 season – Vicente Engonga, Gary McAllister and Steve Walsh.

Asby FC (Sweden) fielded sixty-seven-year-old right-winger Karl Sjoeberg in an intermediate League game against Krona in 1966. Asby lost 19-0.

The two regular full-backs of First Division Birmingham City in 1937 – Cyril Trigg and Billy Hughes – were both seventeen-year-olds.

Several footballers aged forty and over have regularly appeared in League games. Among them: defender Billy Hampson (Newcastle United, 1920s); wingers Billy Meredith (Manchester City and United, up to the First World War), Stanley Matthews (Blackpool and Stoke City, 1950s), John Page (Merthyr Town, 1920s) and David Eyres (Oldham Athletic, 2004); goalkeepers Peter Shilton (Derby County, 1990s), Kevin Poole (Bolton Wanderers, 2004) and Eric Nixon (Sheffield Wednesday, retired in 2004).

Ghanaian striker Nil Odartey Lamptey, later to play for Aston Villa and Coventry City, scored on his League debut for Anderlecht at the age of sixteen in December 1990. He then netted in each of his next three games and in March 1991 became the youngest-ever scorer in a major European game.

Terry Neill captained Bangor at the age of seventeen and both Arsenal and Northern Ireland at twenty-one. He was chairman of the PFA at twenty-four, became player-manager of Hull City at twenty-eight, managed Spurs at thirty-three and Arsenal at thirty-six and quit the game at forty-one.

Harry Kinghorn (trainer) was forty-eight years of age when he was forced into action by Bournemouth against Brentford in March 1929.

The former Port Vale, West Bromwich Albion, Crystal Palace and England international centre forward Ronnie Allen played in a friendly for WBA against Cheltenham Town in May 1995 at the age of sixty-six years, 115 days.

In August 1961, Sylvester Bicketon of Padiham near Burnley had a trial for Accrington Stanley – he was seventy-one.

In 2002, former Labour MP Michael Foot was given a squad number by Plymouth Argyle – at the age of ninety.

Appearances

Internationals

Goalkeeper Peter Shilton played in a record 125 full international matches for England over a twenty-year period from 1970.

Pat Jennings won 119 caps for Northern Ireland (1964-1986), Kenny Dalglish 102 for Scotland (1971-1986), Neville Southall 92 for Wales (1982-1997) and Steve Staunton 102 for the Republic of Ireland (1988-2002).

Other leading international cap winners include Mohamed Al-Deayea (Saudi Arabia) with a record 181 (at 2008), Claudio Suarez (Mexico) 177, Hossam Hassan (Egypt) 169, Martim Reim (Estonia) 156 and Lothar Matthius (Germany) 150.

Premiership

Wayne Bridge set a new record in January 2003 by appearing in 112 consecutive Premiership matches for Southampton without being substituted.

Frank Lampard made his 150th consecutive appearance for Chelsea in September 2005.

Welsh international midfielder Gary Speed holds the record for most appearances in the Premiership – amassing 535 between 1992 and 2008. David James has made over 530 and Ryan Giggs almost 520.

Football League

Peter Shilton made a record 1,005 League appearances while serving with ten different clubs between 1966 and 1996. He made over 100 for five of them: Leicester City (286), Stoke City (110), Nottingham Forest (202), Southampton (188) and Derby County (175). All told, he played in 1,390 first-class matches.

Harold Bell holds the record for most consecutive League appearances. Between 1946 and 1955 he lined up in 401 Third Division (North) games for Tranmere Rovers. He appeared in 574 of that club’s first 582 post-Second World War League matches in thirteen seasons.

Over a period of eight seasons – 1952/53 to 1959/60 inclusive – centre forward Ray Straw appeared in all six divisions of the Football League. He played, in turn, for Derby County in the First, Second and Third (North) Divisions and for Coventry City in the Third (South), the newly formed Fourth Division and then the Third Division.

In 1961 goalkeeper Chic Brodie made consecutive appearances in the Fourth, First and Third Divisions for Aldershot, Wolves and Northampton Town respectively.

Jim Robertson played in the First, Second and Third Division (South) in that order in season 1937/38 when representing Huddersfield Town, Newcastle United and Millwall.

Midfielder Tony Gough played in his first League game in April 1959 for Bristol Rovers. His second came eleven years and 121 days later for Swindon Town in August 1970.

The versatile Jack Taylor is the only Everton player to have made 100 consecutive appearances from his debut. From 5 September 1896 to 24 March 1899 he completed a total of 122.

Full-back Stan Lynn was the only player to appear in twenty consecutive Football League seasons immediately following the Second World War (1946/47 to 1965/66 inclusive), doing so for Accrington Stanley, Aston Villa and Birmingham City.

Portsmouth in 1926/27, Huddersfield Town in 1952/53 and Aston Villa (Champions) in 1980/81, had seven ever-presents in their League sides during the seasons stated. Liverpool had five in 1965/66 when they also won the championship.

Ronnie Allen (with Port Vale, West Bromwich Albion and Crystal Palace) played – and scored – in nineteen consecutive post-Second World War campaigns (1946/47 to 1964/65). He also appeared and scored for Port Vale from April 1945 and in season 1945/46, thus making it twenty-one seasons in all.

Stanley Matthews’ League career spanned twenty-seven seasons: from 1931/32 to 1938/39 and 1946/47 to 1964/65.

Neil McBain played his first League game in 1914 for Ayr United and his last thirty-three years later with New Brighton in 1947. He lost four seasons due to the First World War and did not play at all from 1939 until being called out in an emergency by the Rakers in 1947 at the age of fifty-one.

Billy Meredith played his first League game in 1894 and his last in 1924. He lost four of those thirty years due to the First World War.

Left-back George Mulholland made a record 231 consecutive League appearances for Bradford City between August 1953 and September 1958. With FA Cup games added, his overall tally was 246.

John Ruggiero played in all four divisions of the Football League in the space of seventeen games in the 1970s, serving with Workington (Fourth Division), Stoke City (Second Division), Brighton & Hove Albion (Second Division) and Portsmouth (Third Division). He later played for Chester (Third Division).

Only Ernie Butler appeared in all eighty-four League games for Portsmouth during their successive championship-winning seasons of 1948/49 and 1949/50.

Centre forward Harry Stapley is the only amateur to have played in every League match for a club in one complete season, doing so for Glossop in their Second Division campaign of 1910/11 (38 appearances).

England World Cup winner Alan Ball made over 100 League appearances for four different clubs: Blackpool, Everton, Arsenal and Southampton.

Goalkeeper John Wheeler, full-backs Ron Staniforth and Laurie Kelly and half-backs Bill McGarry, Don McEvoy and Len Quested played together in all of Huddersfield Town’s forty-two Second Division matches in 1952/53. Including two FA Cup ties and two First Division fixtures at the start of the 1953/54 campaign, the same defensive formation lined up in a total of forty-eight competitive matches, a record.

FA Cup

Raich Carter was the only player to appear in an FA Cup-winning team either side of the Second World War – for Sunderland in 1937 and Derby County in 1946. Willie Fagan played for Preston in the 1937 final and for Liverpool in the 1950 final and was a loser both times.

Dave Mackay appeared in 36 FA Cup matches for Tottenham Hotspur and was on the losing side only three times. He gained three winners’ medals, in 1961, 1962 and 1967.

Blackpool goalkeeper George Farm did not miss an FA Cup game between 1949 and 1961, making 47 appearances in total and playing in three finals, winning in 1953.

Luton Town and Nottingham Forest, FA Cup finalists in 1959, retained unchanged teams throughout the competition.

Roy Bentley appeared in seven FA Cup semi-finals with three different clubs and was never on the winning side. He was a loser with Newcastle United (v. Charlton Athletic) in 1947, with Chelsea (v. Arsenal) in replays in both 1950 and 1952 and with Fulham (v. Manchester United), also in a replay, in 1958.

European

Defender Bill Foulkes appeared in all of Manchester United’s first forty-five European matches from 1955 to 1968, eventually playing in 52 out of a possible 58 while with United.