Peter Storey
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Peter Edwin Storey | ||
Date of birth | 7 September 1945 | ||
Place of birth | Farnham, Surrey, England | ||
Position(s) | Full-back / defensive midfielder | ||
Youth career | |||
1961–1962 |
Arsenal | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1962–1977 | Arsenal | 391 | (9) |
1977 | Fulham | 17 | (0) |
Total | 408 | (9) | |
International career | |||
1961 | England Schoolboys | 2 | (0) |
1971–1973 | England | 19 | (0) |
1971–1975 | The Football League XI | 2 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Peter Edwin Storey (born 7 September 1945) is a former
He turned professional at his boyhood club Arsenal in 1962, and became a first team regular after making his debut in 1965. He spent 15 years at the club, winning the
After retiring from football he was convicted of various criminal offences; including keeping a brothel, and was jailed for three years for financing a plot to counterfeit gold coins. He has been married four times and has three sons and one daughter; he lives in southern France with his fourth wife.
Early life
Storey was born on 7 September 1945 in Farnham, Surrey, to Edwin, a carpenter and builder, and Nellie, a part-time shop assistant.[1] As a child he would occasionally accompany his father to matches at the Recreation Ground to see Aldershot play in the Fourth Division.[2] However, he began supporting Arsenal from an early age.[3] From the age of 11 he was coached by former Aldershot striker Charlie Mortimore for the Aldershot and Farnborough Schools Football Association.[4] He soon attracted the attention of Arsenal with his performances at schoolboy level, and impressed across the back four enough to represent England Schoolboys.[5]
Club career
Arsenal
Storey signed as an apprentice at
He made his senior debut on 30 October 1965, taking Billy McCullough's place at left-back in a 3–1 defeat to Leicester City at Filbert Street.[10] The Daily Telegraph reported that he had a "promising" game against a "clever" opponent in right-winger Jackie Sinclair.[11] He retained his first team place and went on to play all of the remaining 29 games, though the season would prove to be a poor one for the "Gunners" as manager Billy Wright was sacked after dropping top-scorer Joe Baker and disillusioning the dressing room.[12] Arsenal finished in 14th place in 1965–66, just four points above the relegation zone, and were knocked out of the FA Cup at the Third Round following a 3–0 defeat to Blackburn Rovers, who would end the season bottom of the First Division.
Storey quickly made a name for himself as a rough player early in the 1966–67 season as he injured Manchester City winger Mike Summerbee; the Daily Express reported that "Storey... is overdoing the tough guy act".[13] He was warned by new manager Bertie Mee not to get sent off after Storey got involved in a brawl during an FA Cup win over Gillingham.[14] The team improved under Mee's strict leadership, and finished the season in seventh place, cutting goals conceded to 47 from the previous season's tally of 75. Storey started 34 league games, missing eight matches due to injury and illness.[15] He scored his first professional goal on 22 April 1967, in a 1–1 draw with Nottingham Forest at Highbury.[15]
Arsenal reached fourth place in the
Their league position meant in 1968–69 that Arsenal qualified for the
They defended their European trophy up until the
"In time, I became immensely proud of what Arsenal achieved in 1970–71, constantly defying the odds and coming from behind. Only special teams do the Double. One word summed us up – remorseless. We never knew when we were beaten; our powers of recovery during 90 minutes, and sometimes beyond, were immense."
— Storey reflects on the double-winning season in his autobiography.[30]
He helped Arsenal to get off to a solid start in defence of their title in the
Storey failed to pick up a winners medal in the 1972–73 season as Arsenal finished second in the league – three points behind Liverpool – and lost 2–1 to Sunderland in the FA Cup semi-finals.[38] Arsenal had won at Anfield in February, but dropped points in the end of season run-in and ended the season with a 6–1 defeat to Leeds.[39]
Arsenal started the
Mee retired in the summer of 1976, and his successor was Terry Neill, who was the Arsenal captain when Storey made his debut.[46] He returned to the first team in spells, but the purchase of Alan Hudson in December 1976 spelt the end for Storey at Highbury.[47] Storey played his final game for Arsenal on 29 January 1977, replacing Malcolm Macdonald as a substitute in a 3–1 victory over Coventry City in the FA Cup.[48] He refused to train with the reserves and was again suspended by the club before accepting a free transfer to Fulham in March 1977.[48]
Fulham
When Storey arrived at
International career
Despite being named by Arsenal fanatic Nick Hornby as the club's example of the one player that "most First Division teams ..[had in the 1970s]..who simply wasn't very good at football at all", [51] Storey was the only player from Arsenal's Double-winning squad regularly to be capped by World Cup winning manager Alf Ramsey. His 19 caps stand in stark comparison to the paltry two won by John Radford, and four won by Bob McNab, all awarded by Ramsey. Charlie George's solitary cap and Ray Kennedy's 17 were all awarded by Ramsey's successors, and neither George Armstrong nor Peter Simpson ever won international honours. The other players in the Double winning squad were all from Scotland or Northern Ireland.
Storey made his England debut on 21 April 1971, in a 3–0 win over Greece at Wembley in a qualifying game for UEFA Euro 1972.[52] Despite at the time being used as a midfielder at club level he played at right-back as Ramsey wanted to assess his options at the full-back position; his rivals for the number 2 shirt were Keith Newton (Everton), Emlyn Hughes (Liverpool), Paul Reaney (Leeds United), Chris Lawler (Liverpool), and Paul Madeley (Leeds United).[53] He almost did not play the game as Arsenal manager Bertie Mee ordered both Storey and teammate Bob McNab to pull out of the fixture to play a league game against Burnley the day before, but was allowed to play for England after coach Don Howe persuaded Mee to reconsider his decision.[54] Storey picked up an assist in the match after providing the cross for Francis Lee's late header.[55] His second cap came in a 1–0 British Home Championship win over Northern Ireland at Windsor Park, in which he played in midfield and man-marked George Best.[56]
In 1972, Storey sat on the bench for the first leg of the Euro '72 qualifying quarter-finals match with West Germany, which ended in a 3–1 defeat.[57] He played in the return leg at the Olympiastadion, helping England to secure a 0–0 draw but not a place in the tournament.[57] Despite the respectable draw Ramsey was criticised for naming a negative line-up when England needed a win.[57] His performance in Berlin was the first of a run of 15 successive England appearances for Storey.[57] He played in 1972's three British Home Championship games, helping England to finish joint-first in the tournament after he and Norman Hunter out-battled Billy Bremner, Denis Law and Bobby Moncur at Hampden Park in a 1–0 victory.[58]
He made his final appearance for England in a 2–0 friendly defeat to Italy in Turin on 14 June 1973.[52] He was on the bench for the crucial final game of qualification for the 1974 FIFA World Cup, with Colin Bell favoured in midfield with Paul Madeley and Emlyn Hughes at full-back, as England drew 1–1 and failed to qualify for the tournament.[59] He did though feature in one game for The Football League XI in a 5–0 win over Scottish Football League XI at Maine Road on 20 March 1974, having already featured for The Football League XI in a 2–1 win over the League of Ireland XI in Dublin on 22 September 1971.[60]
Style of play
Storey began his career as a right-back, and soon picked up a reputation as a powerful tackler.[4] Later in his career he was deployed as a defensive midfielder so as to break up opposition play further up the pitch.[61] He gained a reputation as Arsenal's "hard man" in a violent era of British football where clubs would typically employ at least one tough player willing to use dirty play to hurt the opposition and to protect their own generally more skilled players.[62] He later said that he made premeditated tackles from behind early in matches to try and intimidate opponents at a time when referees were reluctant to punish fouls.[63] His rough play was frequently criticised by pundits, though during the 1970s the footballing authorities took little action to try and punish him or any other of football's "hard men".[64] Teammate Bob McNab, quoted in Seventy-One Guns wrote that "Peter was a nightmare for players when he marked them man for man".[65] He was also an efficient taker of penalty kicks, and the only penalties he missed had little bearing on the final result of the match.[66]
"Here are a few choice words which have been used to describe me: assassin, bastards' bastard (courtesy of 'Chopper' Harris), boot boy, bully, calculating, 'cold eyes', destructive, dirty, hatchet man, merciless, pernicious, rogue, ruthless, thug, vicious."
— Writing in 2010, Storey remembers some of the words he was called during his playing career.[67]
Personal life and criminal convictions
His marriage to first wife Susan broke down six months after their marriage in summer 1969.[68] She left him for good in February 1971 after tiring of his self-described "boozy, carefree ways".[69] He met his second wife, Cathy McDonald, at London's Playboy Club in May 1972.[70] The pair began living together before getting married in 1975.[71] The couple had a daughter, Natalie, in December 1976.[47] He married third wife Gill shortly before the arrival of his son, Peter, born in November 1981.[72] His second son, Anthony, was born in December 1982.[73] His third son, Jamie, was born in September 1987.[74] He later divorced Gill and married a Frenchwoman, Daniele Scorceletti.[75] He later split from Daniele and got back together with Gill,[76] before leaving Gill and his three sons to return to Daniele some years later.[77] By 2010 he was in regular contact with his three sons, but has not seen daughter Natalie in decades.[78]
His life began to fall apart in 1975 after he took a three-year tenancy agreement out on the Jolly Farmers pub on north London's Southgate Road.[79] At the time it was common for footballers to invest in pubs, as did other Arsenal teammates.[80] His marriage to Cathy fell apart as he spent more nights at his pub, with the attractions of drink and women, than at home with his wife.[44] He became more dependent on alcohol as his career at Arsenal came to an end.[81] He also invested in a minicab firm in Newington Green, that failed.[82]
"I was never a criminal mastermind, but rather a foolish former footballer with more money than sense... It sounds so big-time, so glamorous doesn't it? All I did was lend some money to blokes I thought were going to make a few quid by knocking out cheap imitation jewellery."
— Storey speaking on his downfall.[83]
He turned to crime when helping local gangsters, the Barry brothers, to counterfeit money by providing finance and storage of the cast die.[84] He was arrested, and whilst on bail set up a brothel called the Calypso Massage Parlour with three women to try and raise enough money to flee to Spain to avoid his trial for conspiracy to produce counterfeit money.[85] He was arrested and pleaded guilty to keeping a brothel on 22 December 1979, and was handed a £700 fine and a six-month suspended sentence.[86] He was also briefly jailed for contempt of court after failing appear at his bankruptcy hearings.[87]
In September 1980 the trial for conspiracy to produce counterfeit money came to a conclusion and Storey was sentenced to three years imprisonment.[88][89] He served his time at Wandsworth and Spring Hill.[72] He was handed a 12-month suspended sentence in April 1982 for stealing two cars he had on hire purchase whilst running his minicab firm.[90]
After a time on
In September 2010 he released a no-holds-barred autobiography, True Storey: My Life and Crimes as a Football Hatchet Man; a bio-film project fell through.[91]
Club statistics
Season | Club | Division | League | FA Cup | League Cup
|
Europe | Total | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Apps | Goals | Apps | Goals | Apps | Goals | Apps | Goals | Apps | Goals | |||
1965–66 | Arsenal | First Division | 28 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
1966–67 | 34 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 41 | 1 | ||
1967–68 | 39 | 0 | 5 | 0 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 51 | 0 | ||
1968–69 | 42 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 7 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 53 | 0 | ||
1969–70 | 39 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 0 | 11 | 0 | 56 | 1 | ||
1970–71 | 40 | 2 | 9 | 4 | 5 | 0 | 8 | 2 | 62 | 8 | ||
1971–72 | 29 | 1 | 7 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 41 | 1 | ||
1972–73 | 40 | 4 | 7 | 0 | 4 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 51 | 6 | ||
1973–74 | 41 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 45 | 0 | ||
1974–75 | 37 | 0 | 7 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 46 | 0 | ||
1975–76 | 11 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 0 | ||
1976–77 | 11 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 0 | ||
Total[95] | 391 | 9 | 51 | 4 | 37 | 2 | 22 | 2 | 501 | 17 | ||
1976–77 | Fulham | Second Division | 12 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 0 |
1977–78 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 0 | ||
Total | 17 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 19 | 0 | ||
Career total | 408 | 9 | 53 | 4 | 37 | 2 | 22 | 2 | 520 | 17 |
Honours
- with Arsenal
- 1969
- 1970
- Football League First Division champion: 1970–71
- Football League First Division runner-up: 1972–73
- 1971
- 1972
- with England
- British Home Championship winner: 1970–71, 1971–72 (shared) & 1972–73
References
Specific
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 13
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 16
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 19
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 17
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 24
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 26
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 32
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 34
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 35
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 40
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 41
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 53
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 59
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 60
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 63
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 69
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 68
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 75
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 76
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 77
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 81
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 83
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 97
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 94
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 103
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 106
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 99
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 102
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 109
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 110
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 137
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 138
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 140
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 141
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 142
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 145
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 146
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 147
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 152
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 154
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 155
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 158
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 162
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 163
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 171
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 174
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 179
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 180
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 181
- ^ a b c Storey & Price 2010, p. 185
- ^ {"Hornby, p112"}
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 111
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 112
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 113
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 114
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 115
- ^ a b c d Storey & Price 2010, p. 118
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 119
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 123
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 134
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 66
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 43
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 70
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 72
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 164
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 101
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 65
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 84
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 85
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 120
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 121
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 209
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 210
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 211
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 212
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 213
- ^ a b Storey & Price 2010, p. 217
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 224
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 159
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 160
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 172
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 176
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 202
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 188
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 192
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 193
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 197
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 200
- ^ "Soccer star in coins plot gaoled". The Guardian. 16 September 1980. p. 2.
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 208
- ^ a b Mackay, Duncan (3 February 2002). "Sportsmen who went to jail". The Observer. London. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 216
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 220
- ^ Storey & Price 2010, p. 221
- ^ "Line-ups". thearsenalhistory.com. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
General
- Harris, Jeff (1995). Hogg, Tony (ed.). Arsenal Who's Who. Independent UK Sports. ISBN 1-899429-03-4.
- Storey, Peter; Price, Will (2010), The Storey: My Life and Crimes as a Football Hatchet Man, ISBN 978-1-84596-584-6
- Hornby, Nick (1992). Fever Pitch. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-140-29344-2.