Showing posts with label Shelbourne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shelbourne. Show all posts

5 August 2007

Billy McCleery

Name: William McCleery
Born: 25 January 1902, Belfast

Died:
Height:

Weight:Position: Half-Back

Representative Honours: Ireland: 10 Full Caps (1922-1932), 1 Amateur Cap (1922); Irish League: 11 Caps (1929-1935); League of Ireland: 1 Cap (1927).
Club Honours: (with Queen’s Island) Irish League Champion 1923/24; Irish Cup Winner 1923/24; City Cup Winner; Co. Antrim Shield Winner 1923/24; (with Linfield) Irish League Champion 1929/30, 1931/32, 1933/34, 1934/35; Irish Cup Winner 1929/30, 1930/31, 1933/34, 1935/36, Runner-Up 1931/32; Gold Cup Winner; City Cup Winner; Charity Cup Winner; Co. Antrim Shield Winner 1928/29, 1929/30, 1931/32, 1932/33, 1933/34, 1934/35.

Club Career:

Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA Cup
Other
University
-
-
Amateur
(Belfast Minor League)
Cliftonville
-
-
Amateur
-
-
-
Queen's Island
22/23-24/25
-
-
-
-
-
Linfield
24/25
-
Guest
-
-
-
Blackburn Rovers
24/25-25/26
-
-
23/ 5
2/0
-
Shelbourne
27/28
-
-
/11
/2
-
Linfield
27/28-34/35
-
-
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-

Biography:
A multi-talented sportsman, Billy McCleery played both football and cricket for Ireland. On the cricket crease he was a classy all-rounder, playing in fourteen Irish Senior Cup Finals between 1929 and 1952, winning nine.

So too on the football field was McCleery as capable in defence as attack. In his early days with Cliftonville and Queen’s Island he was an accomplished inside-forward, earning a move to Blackburn Rovers on the strength of his performances in that role. Later in his career, with Linfield and Ireland, he was part of one of the Irish game's most renowned half-back lines, alongside Jack Jones and Tommy Sloan. His Irish League career yielded over twenty major trophies, many as captain.

Capped at Amateur level and in the inexperienced Full Irish side that played Norway in 1922 while with Cliftonville, McCleery had to wait seven years for further international caps. The second match of his international return saw him line-up in an all-Linfield half-back line (with Jones and Sloan), providing the bedrock for another Linfield player, Joe Bambrick, to score a double hattrick in a famous 7-0 win over Wales. He played eleven times for the Irish League; notable results being two wins over the Scottish League, a 2-2 draw with the Football League at Windsor and a 6-1 hammering of the League of Ireland at Dalymount Park. He also turned out once for the League of Ireland in a 5-1 defeat by the Welsh League.

Malcolm Brodie records McCleery’s career thusly in his book, Linfield – 100 Years (1985):
Billy McCleery, second youngest of a family of four boys and two girls, was born in Rutland Street on the Ormeau Road and it was in the “Holy Lands” and “The Plains” area of Belfast that he learned his football with 9th Boys’ Brigade (Fitzroy Avenue Presbyterian Church), a team called University, which competed in the Minor League; small in stature his inherent ability gradually developed at Cliftonville.

After playing for Ireland against Norway in
Bergen, a match watched by the King and Queen of Norway, McCleery came back to Belfast and signed for Queen’s Island at £2 per week plus the bonus of a job in Harland and Wolff. He flourished even more among the Island giants Tucker Croft, Joe Gowdy, Sammy McKeown and Charlie Cowan; he won an Irish Cup medal with them, the first of six, the others, of course, coming as a player with Linfield.

Towards the end of the season, Linfield asked permission to play the Queen’s Island left-wing of Morton and McCleery against Blackburn Rovers in a friendly at Windsor Park, a match which was to change his life. He was scintillating but McCleery drove a hard bargain and it took two meetings before he agreed to join Blackburn with £500 given to him in cash on the spot.

He enjoyed his football, played the game on his own terms and the tangle of new experiences, impressions and excitement in the big time did not affect him.

For three years the young Ulsterman maintained a first-team place but in a trial match damaged his knee in a tackle which everyone at Ewood Park thought heralded the end of his English career so he was placed on the transfer list at £500. Clubs steered clear of him .. they didn’t want a crock player, one “with a bad knee”. With no managers showing interest, McCleery, disappointed and dejected, returned to Ireland, joined Shelbourne and, within a season, all his artistry and skill had returned.

The denizens of Linfield had been watching his progress. They asked him to sign but he declined. Then Davy Emerson met him at Castle Junction one Saturday morning as McCleery, carrying his cricket bag, was en route to Woodvale
(his then cricket team). He invited him to play for the Blues in a Charity Cup Final against Celtic at Cliftonville. “If you play we’ll send a subscription to Woodvale”, promised Emerson. McCleery agreed, played a big part in the 4-0 triumph and so began a nine-year spell at Windsor park where he won all the honours and Ireland caps; on one occasion he took over in goals in an emergency!

He retired in 1936
[Linfield lost 3-1 to Blackburn in his benefit match on 6th May] and on April 1, 1939, became manager of Linfield but war work prevented him continuing for long and, after a dispute over sole control of team selection, he resigned to concentrate on cricket. His association with Linfield remained until his death; he acted in many capacities but perhaps his moment of great triumph was on April 25, 1956 when he managed the Irish League team which defeated the Football League 5-2 at Windsor Park.


Ireland Cap Details:

25-05-1922 Norway.. A L 1-2 FR
19-10-1929 England. A L 0-3 BC
01-02-1930 Wales... H W 7-0 BC
20-10-1930 England. A L 1-5 BC
21-02-1931 Scotland H D 0-0 BC
22-04-1931 Wales... A L 2-3 BC
19-09-1931 Scotland A L 1-3 BC
05-12-1931 Wales... H W 4-0 BC
17-10-1932 England. A L 0-1 BC
07-12-1932 Wales... A L 1-4 BC


Summary: 10/0. Won 2, Drew 1, Lost 7.

Ireland Amateur Cap Details:
14-11-1921 England. A L 1-4

Summary: 1/0. Won 0, Drew 0, Lost 1. 

29 August 2006

Harry Chatton

Name: James Harold A. Chatton
Born: 23 April 1899, Enniskillen
Height:
Weight:

Position: Right-Half / Centre-Half

Representative Honours: Ireland: 3 Full Caps (1924-1925). Irish Free State: 3 Full Caps (1931-1934).
Club Honours: (with NY Nationals) US National Cup Winner 1928; Lewis Cup Winner 1928/29; (with Shelbourne) League of Ireland Champion 1930/31; (with Cork) Irish Free State Cup Winner 1933/34.

Club Career:

Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA Cup
Other
Kirkintilloch Rob Roy
-
-
-
-
(Scottish Junior)
Dumbarton
20/21-22/23
-
-
*40/0
-
*23/5
Partick Thistle
23/24-25/26
-
-
86/2
-
-
Indiana Flooring
26/27
-
-
31/0
 (ASL)
3/0
Heart of Midlothian
26/27
-27
Free
0/0
-
-
New York Nationals
27/28-29/30
-
-
114/0
 (ASL)
13/2
Shelbourne
30/31-31/32
-
-
23/0
/0
-
Dumbarton
31/32-32/33
c/s-31
-
-
-
-
Cork
33/34
-
-
/0
/0
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-
*Scottish League Division One Appearances only (20/21-21/22), total games from 1922/23 possibly 23/5.

Biography:
Born in Enniskillen, Harry Chatton moved to Scotland with his family as a child. A commanding centre-half, he was playing in the Scottish League with Partick Thistle when the IFA selectors first called him up in October 1924 for a Home Nations game with England. He won two further caps for the IFA, against Scotland the following February, and again against England in October 1925.

In 1926 Chatton was one of many British players lured by the dollar of the American Soccer League. After a season with Indiana Flooring he sought to return home to sign for Hearts, but the move was blocked by FIFA after a protest from the USFA. Instead Chatton moved back across to the Atlantic, by which time Indiana had relocated to New York where they were to play as the Nationals. In three seasons with the Nationals, Chatton enjoyed successes in the the US National Cup (now the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup) and in the Lewis Cup (the ASL's league cup competition). In March 1929 he had been reported as suspended "forever" by the USFA owing to "activities in connection with the working of New York Nationals" but this appears to have been a short-lived ban.

After returning to play in Ireland with Shelbourne, Chatton was selected by the FAI for a game against Spain on 26th April 1931. That summer he returned to Scotland to play for Dumbarton and on 13th December he captained the FAI’s team in the return game against Spain. Chatton’s third and final FAI cap was won in 1934, whilst playing for Cork, in a 5-2 defeat by Holland. His first two caps had been as left-half, and the last at right-back.

Wikipedia

Ireland Cap Details:
22-10-1924 England. A L 1-3 BC
28-02-1925 Scotland H L 0-3 BC
24-10-1925 England. H D 0-0 BC

Summary: 3/0. Won 0, Drew 1, Lost 2.


Thanks to stuthejag and Roy Cathcart for the pictures.

4 August 2006

Jimmy Balfe

Name: James Balfe
Born: 9 September 1876, Dublin
Died:
Height:
Weight:
Position: Full-Back

Representative Honours: Ireland: 2 Full Caps (1909-1910), 2 Amateur Caps (1906-07); Irish League: 1 Cap (1908); Leinster Juniors: Inter-Provincial Caps.
Club Honours: (with Bohemians) Irish Cup Winner 1907/08; Leinster Senior Cup Winner 1906/07, 1910/11, 1911/12, 1914/15; (with Shelbourne) City Cup Winner 1908/09; Leinster Senior Cup Winner 1908/09.

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA.Cup
Other
Reginald
-
-
-
(Leinster Senior League)
Bohemians
06/07-07/08
Apr-1906
Amateur
-
-
-
Shelbourne
08/09-09/10
-
-
33/1
3/0
-
Bohemians
10/11-14/15
-
Amateur
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£0
-
-
-

Biography:
A sound reliable defender, Jimmy Balfe was playing with Leinster Senior League side Reginald when he won inter-provincial honours against Ulster in March 1905 and January 1906, the latter match as captain. In April 1906 he guested for Bohemians in an end-of-season friendly against English giants Aston Villa and remained at Dalymount Park for two seasons. While with the Bohs he played twice for Amateur Ireland, his first cap arriving in a 2-1 defeat by England at Dalyer on 15 December 1906. In 1908 he captained the Bohs to their only Irish Cup success, with a 3-1 replay win over Shelbourne. What was even more remarkable was that the Bohs had defeated Linfield and Belfast Celtic to reach the final.

For the 1908/09 campaign Balfe had moved to Shelbourne, and it was while a Shels player that he won his only Full Ireland recognition, stepping in for the unavailable Alex Craig of Rangers, against England in 1909. He was the only Dublin-based representative in this team. Later Sam Burnison, of Distillery and Bradford City, became Ireland's recognised right-back leaving Balfe to earn just one further cap. A badly broken leg sustained against Linfield in November 1910 was perhaps the final nail in his international ambitions. With the Shels he won a Leinster Cup winner's medal when Lancashire Fusiliers were defeated in the March 1909 final. He was also part of the team which won the City Cup for the only time in their history. In a career spanning 9 seasons he scored his only goal in Shelbourne’s 1-0 defeat of Derry Celtic in the Irish League on the 28th November 1908.


Balfe, who was born on the Shelbourne Road in the south side of Dublin but later moved with his family to the South Circular Road, was the younger brother of John Balfe who also played for Bohemians as a full-back. A brush maker by trade, Balfe's name was still mentioned in footballing circles decades after his retirement from the game

Ireland Cap Details:
13-02-1909 England. (a) L 0-4 BC
11-04-1910 Wales... (a) L 1-4 BC

Summary: 2/0. Won 0, Drew 0, Lost 2.


Additional details by George Glass and Gerard Farrell.

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