George Smith (footballer, born 1915)
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | George Caspar Smith | ||
Date of birth | 23 April 1915 | ||
Place of birth | Bromley-by-Bow, England | ||
Date of death | 31 October 1983 | (aged 68)||
Place of death | Bodmin, England | ||
Position(s) |
Centre half | ||
Youth career | |||
1937–1938 | Bexleyheath & Welling | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1938–1945 | Charlton Athletic | 1 | (0) |
1945–1947 | Brentford | 41 | (1) |
1947–1949 | Queens Park Rangers | 75 | (1) |
1949–1950 | Ipswich Town | 8 | (0) |
1950–1951 | Chelmsford City | ||
International career | |||
1945 | England (Wartime) | 1 | (0) |
Managerial career | |||
1950–1951 | Chelmsford City | ||
1951–1952 | Redhill | ||
1952–1955 |
Eastbourne United | ||
1956–1958 | Sutton United | ||
1958–1960 | Crystal Palace | ||
1961–1970 | Portsmouth | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
George Caspar Smith (23 April 1915 – 31 October 1983) was an English footballer, coach, and manager.
He appeared in one wartime international for England (against Wales in May 1945) for which caps were not awarded although the England teams then were probably stronger than some pre-war sides. He also played in armed services representative sides which were Great Britain elevens in all but name. According to George Allison, Arsenal's manager, wartime football was 'better in quality than pre-war League football'.
After retiring from playing, Smith had a successful career as both an F.A. coach and manager. His league win ratios at
Early playing career
Smith's career began at Hackney Schools in east London where he had grown up. He joined the army as a young man and was stationed in Syria and Palestine in the mid-nineteen thirties. On returning to England, he was bought out of the army by Jimmy Seed and, in 1936–37, began to feature for Bexleyheath & Welling in the Kent League.[1] After promotion with Charlton from the third to the second division in 1935, Seed had arranged that Bexleyheath & Welling would become the nursery club of Charlton Athletic and the amateur team was also referred to as 'Charlton A'.
Charlton Athletic
Under Seed's management, Charlton surprised the football world prior to
War years
George Smith enlisted in the
On 15 April 1944, he played in Charlton's
He was discharged from Victoria Barracks, Windsor, at the rank of sergeant major, with exemplary military conduct on 8 December 1945. His discharge papers read 'an excellent physical training instructor and an international footballer: an honest, sober and trustworthy man with a most cheerful disposition'.
Army & FA representative XIs
During the last years of the war he also played in several strong Army and FA representative sides alongside players such as Frank Swift and Matt Busby, both of whom were friends from their days at Aldershot Army camp. Although these matches were not recorded as official internationals, the players wore England shirts and received notification of their selection on English Football Association headed paper.
'In March 1945, an FA XI played two games in Belgium, against the national side and against the Diables Rouge, the Belgian parachute brigade. The full party was:
Wartime International
George Smith made his one wartime international appearance against Wales at Ninian Park, Cardiff on 5 May 1945. England won 3–2 with a hat-trick by Raich Carter. He had also been reserve for England against Scotland at Hampden on 14 April after returning from the FA XI trip to Belgium.
Later playing career
Brentford F.C.
After the war, in November 1945, he was placed on the Charlton transfer list, at his own request, and on 19th of that month, moved to Brentford for a £3,000 transfer fee. The reason was given as 'domestic' in some newspapers and as 'a disagreement on certain issues' by Jimmy Seed.
He made 41 league appearances for
Queens Park Rangers
Brentford transferred Smith to QPR for a fee reputed to be a record for a third division club which according to press reports of the time 'the Rangers do not regret spending one penny of'. Smith described it as a 'good change for me. Brentford was not a happy club'. He captained
In August 1949, prior to Smith's departure from Loftus Road, the QPR boss, David Mangnall, wrote to Smith, 'you deserve most of the credit for our promotion, also for pulling us through last season, we noticed that you kept cool and calm about it all, and as a result our worry never entered the dressing room'.
End of playing career & early coaching
On 26 September 1949, he joined
F.A. Youth coach
During this period he became the first paid F.A. Youth Squad manager of the England national team attending and participating in coaching sessions at Lilleshall.
From September 1955 until February 1956 he was coach at Sheffield United.
Management
Sutton United
In 1956,
Although committed to a 4-year contract, success brought an offer of professional management from Crystal Palace and Sutton agreed to let Smith go, eventually replacing him with Malcolm Allison. Andrew Letts wrote of George Smith in the Sutton United Football Club 1898–1973 – 75th Anniversary Souvenir Book:
'We had two very happy years, under inspired leadership, and had been left with a great example. I understand how the players felt for he lifted me, just as he lifted the game and them, to a different level, and I, like them shall always be grateful to him.'
Crystal Palace
In July 1958, he took over as manager of Crystal Palace in the newly formed fourth division. When he took the Crystal Palace job he said he would resign if he did not achieve promotion within two years. He did not and subsequently kept his word; resigning in April 1960. However, he left a team good enough to win promotion for his successor.
George Smith returned to Sheffield United as coach from April 1960 until April 1961.
Portsmouth FC
He then began his decade as
'I congratulate you very much on getting Portsmouth out of the Third Division – which was completely a wrong place for a famous team. While the players all did their stuff, the major credit goes to you.'
Throughout the sixties, on a limited budget, he kept Portsmouth on a sound financial footing in the second division. In 1970, he became Portsmouth FC general manager until his retirement from football in 1973.
Retirement
He moved to Bodmin in Cornwall for the last years of his life and died in 1983.
Bibliography
- Rippon, A (2005) Gas Masks for Goal Posts: Football in Britain During the Second World War ISBN 0-7509-4030-1
- Rollin, J (1985) Soccer At War 1939–45 ISBN 0-00-218023-5Willow Books, Collins
- Sutton United Football Club 1898–1973 – 75th Anniversary Souvenir Book
- Charles Buchan's Football Monthly, February 1961 edition
- Seed, J (1958) The Jimmy Seed Story The Sportsman's Book Club, London
References
- ^ "Smith George Image 1 Brentford 1946". Vintage Footballers. Retrieved 24 December 2018.
- ^ "Queen's Park Rangers 1 Derby County 1".
- ^ EASTBOURNE UNITED at the Football Club History Database