Showing posts with label Ted Hufton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ted Hufton. Show all posts

10.11.16

Wembley 1923




Bolton Wanderers

West Ham United
Dick Pym
GK
Ted Hufton
Bob Haworth
FB
Billy Henderson
Alex Finney
FB
Jack Young
Harry Nuttall
HB
Syd Bishop
Jimmy Seddon
HB
George Kay (c)
Billy Jennings
HB
Jack Tresadern
Billy Butler
F
Dick Richards
David Jack
F
Billy Brown
Jack Smith
F
Vic Watson
Joe Smith (c)
F
Billy Moore
Ted Vizard
F
Jimmy Ruffell
Charles Foweraker
M
Syd King

This was one of those iconic events that has had so much written about it that there's not much to add.
It was a game that shouldn't have been played and a result that shouldn't have been allowed to stand. But there was a game of football, of sorts, played at Wembley Stadium on April 28th 1923.
The crowd, it goes without saying, frequently interfered with the play. Bolton's first goal, scored by David Jack, came when a West Ham defender was trying to extricate himself from the crowd. Jack Smith's second half strike was even more controversial. The ball was played to Vizard by a spectator. Vizard centred and Smith shot. The ball cannoned back into the field of play and the referee awarded a goal, despite the protests of the West Ham players that the shot had hit the post.



28.4.13

The Scout- Football Tips...


Lord Baden-Powell , the founder of the Boy Scouts, was a footballer in his youth. He was in the Charterhouse School football XI in 1876, a good goal-keeper, always keeping very cool according to The Carthusian of April of that year. He would have been 19 years old at the time. It is likely that he would have played with some of the Old Carthusians team that won the FA Cup in 1881.
In later life Lord Baden-Powell advocated the positive aspects of playing football whilst also emphasizing his opinion that, as a spectator sport, it was both morally and physically corrupting:
Football is a grand game for developing a lad physically and also morally, for he learns to play with good temper and unselfishness, to play in his place, and to play the game, and these are the best of training for any game of life.but it is a vicious game when it draws crowds of lads away from playing the game themselves to be merely onlookers at a few paid players.
He also wrote of the unwholesome and hysterical natures of football crowds, painting a most unflattering picture of  young British working class males.

By the 1920's, however, the Scout magazine, which carried Baden- Powell's endorsement on the cover, was offering its young readers football tips from some of the professional stars of the day.
The players mentioned on the cover of the issue shown above are:

Ted Hufton- goalkeeper for West Ham United.

Charlie Buchan- the legendary Sunderland and Arsenal inside forward.


Sam  Chedgzoy- Everton winger.

Jackie CarrMiddlesbrough centre half.

All four men were capped by England during the 1920s.