Showing posts with label Alan Morton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alan Morton. Show all posts

29.12.13

Soccer's Greatest Players

Sir Frederick Wall, writing in 1935, identified the following four players under the chapter heading Soccer's Greatest Players. The accolade is great indeed if you place it in the context of Sir Frederick's lifelong connection with football and the fact he would have seen most if not all of the FA Cup Finals and the majority of the England v Scotland internationals in his capacity as  Secretary of the Football Association from 1895 to 1934.

Alex James 

Sir Frederick was a director at Highbury , and he placed Alex James above all the other players he had seen during his long involvement with the association  game. James was a playmaker- a  withdrawn inside forward who orchestrated the play for Herbert Chapman's Arsenal. James gained a paltry 8 Scotland caps, due largely to Preston North End's reluctance to release him for international duty during the 4 rather fractious seasons he spent there.  



Alan Morton

A dazzling outside left, Morton's success was built on balance, the exploitation of limited space and mesmeric ball control. 
 For Rangers he played 495 games and scored 115 goals, winning 9 league championships and a Scottish cup. He made 31 international appearances for Scotland.  

Bobby Templeton

Something of a peripatetic career for the outside right who was capped 11 times by Scotland. He played top level football for 17 years and in that time represented 6 clubs in 7 spells (Aston VillaNewcastle UnitedWoolwich Arsenal,CelticKilmarnock (2 spells) and Fulham.).
Sir Fredrick Wall's prose was more modest than that of William Pickford, who wrote:
Templeton is afflicted with a large measure of the eccentricity of genius. He is a man of moods. When "the afflatus" is upon him he is a winged horse to whom a spur is useless, and whom a curb cannot hold. It is then that the watching multitude is aflame with mingled surprise and admiration - surprise at the wondrous versatility of the man, admiration at the grace and beauty of his movements.
 Association Football and the Men Who Made It (1905)


Billy Meredith

Sir Frederick was clearly an admirer of wing play. The Welsh Wizard (who once told journalist James Catton that he wished he'd been born English)  played over 300 games for each of the Manchester clubs, and also managed 48 appearances for Wales in a 25 year international career. He was a professional for 34 years.

6.10.12

Alan Morton


We will set it down in chapter and verse. His secrets, the foundation- stones of his twenty years of uninterrupted triumph in first class football at outside left were:
1. Confident use of both feet, notably of the right foot on the left wing.
2. Body -balances to give him his all important pivoting powers ans his weaving, dancing- master run. 
3. Ball control, and
4. Speed off the mark.

Ivan Sharpe  from 40 Years In Football (1933)

The diminutive Alan Morton, (at 1.62 m and 60kg) was, at the time, Scotland's most capped and most decorated player (nine League Championships and two Scottish Cups with Rangers). Morton was notoriously nimble, and could operate in the smallest of  spaces. He attributed the precision of his skills and control to the fact that as a boy he had played with a tennis ball, dribbling it and shooting it through a small hole in the coal shed door.
Glasgow Rangers- 495 appearances, 115 goals (1920-1933)
Scotland- 31 appearances, 5 goals (1920- 1932)