Everyone at Coventry
City and the Former Players Association were saddened to hear of the
passing of John O'Rourke last week.
Noel Cantwell signed
John from Ipswich Town in November 1969 for £80,000, seeing him as
the ideal strike partner for his star centre-forward Neil Martin.
John had an excellent scoring record in the lower divisions before
arriving at Highfield Road and although his scoring record didn't
match the heights he had achieved at Luton and Middlesbrough he is
remembered for his efforts and goals in the 1969-70 season which saw
the Sky Blues qualify for European football for the first time.
At the start of that
momentous season the Sky Blues were the bookies' favourites for
relegation, having escaped by the skin of their teeth in the previous
two campaigns. Manager Cantwell however was to prove the experts
wrong. A five-game unbeaten start and away wins at Arsenal and Derby
in early October pushed the team amazingly into the top six but three
successive defeats and a dearth of goals in early November saw them
slip back to 12th place. Chairman Derrick Robins, afraid
that his dream of seeing his team in Europe was slipping away, urged
Cantwell to strengthen the team. In came centre-half Roy Barry,
destined to become a Sky Blue legend, to replace the long-serving
captain George Curtis, and two weeks later O'Rourke arrived from
Ipswich. John's debut, at home to Newcastle, saw him partnered with
emergency striker Maurice Setters as Martin was injured, and the
mini-slump was arrested by a late Ernie Hunt penalty. O'Rourke was
paired with Martin in the next game, a 3-2 home win over Tottenham,
and scored the second goal in a 3-2 victory which was more emphatic
than the score suggests.
Martin and O'Rourke hit
it off immediately and the team won eight out of nine league games
with John netting a brace, both headers, in a thumping 3-0 home win
over Manchester City as City's unlikely challenge for top six place
became a reality. Despite being under six foot tall he was superb in
the air & many of his goals came from headers. John scored 11
goals in 20 league games that memorable season as the Sky Blues
galloped towards a European place. As the season reached its climax
Cantwell knew that two wins from their final three games (all away)
would be enough to guarantee sixth place and European football. City
travelled to Nottingham Forest and O'Rourke grabbed a hat-trick in
the 4-1 victory. Three days later sixth place was confirmed with a
1-0 win at Molineux.
O'Rourke scores one of his three at Forest
The following season
another hat trick, at Trakia Plovdiv, launched the club’s European
Fairs Cup campaign with a 4-1 win and he scored the winning goal in
the home leg against the mighty Bayern Munich. John was a predatory
striker and many of his goals were from close range but in the League
Cup victory over West Ham he hit a screamer from 35 yards. However
goals in the league were harder to come by and he managed only five
in 28 games to add to the six in Cup-ties.
In March 1971 his
partner Neil Martin, who had also lost his goal touch, was sold to
Nottingham Forest and by the end of the season John had been
displaced by a strike force of Billy Rafferty and Ernie Hunt. At the
start of 1971-72 season John was briefly back in favour but Cantwell
had his eyes on Hull City's Chris Chilton. Although John scored in
his last league start in a City shirt, a classic 3-3 draw at Chelsea,
Chilton signed the following week and soon afterwards John was on his
way to Second Division QPR for £70,000. In total he made 66
appearances and scored 23 goals for Coventry.
John O’Rourke was
born in Northampton in 1945 after his family were evacuated out of
London during World War Two but they moved back to Dagenham after the
war. As a schoolboy at Campbell School and Bifrons Secondary School
in Barking, John was selected to play for Barking Schools and in 1960
was the star of the team that reached the quarter-finals of the
English Schools Trophy. In the fifth round they defeated Hackney
Schools who boasted future stars Rodney Marsh and Ron 'Chopper'
Harris and in round six John scored the only goal in the defeat of
Swindon before losing to Stockton. His schoolboy exploits earned him
an England trial game which resulted in him winning a schoolboy 'cap'
against Scotland at Aberdeen
In his teens he was on the books of both Arsenal and Chelsea and although he made one League Cup appearance for the Blues in September 1963 he was behind the likes of Peter Osgood, Barry Bridges and Bobby Tambling in the Chelsea pecking order and found it impossible to break into the league side.
In his teens he was on the books of both Arsenal and Chelsea and although he made one League Cup appearance for the Blues in September 1963 he was behind the likes of Peter Osgood, Barry Bridges and Bobby Tambling in the Chelsea pecking order and found it impossible to break into the league side.
In December 1963 he was
released by Chelsea joining Luton Town and he made an instant impact
at Kenilworth Road scoring 22 goals in 23 games including four in a
6-2 win at Brentford and both goals in Luton's victory over Watford
that ensured the Sky Blues won promotion that season. Sadly Luton
were a team on the decline and the following season were relegated to
Division Four with John, despite injuries, scoring 10 goals in 21
games. In 1965-66 he netted 32 goals and in the summer of 1966 a move
to a higher status was on the cards. Middlesbrough, newly relegated
to Division Three, signed John for £20,000 as a replacement for Ian
Gibson, recently sold to the Sky Blues. John flourished in a powerful
'Boro team and netted 30 goals including a hat-trick in the crucial
game with Oxford that clinched promotion. Former 'Boro skipper
remembers his influence: 'John was a great goalscorer. He wasn’t
the sort who would run around all over the place, but he was very
quick and had an eye for goal. In the box he was absolutely deadly,
forming a great partnership with John Hickton and Arthur Horsfield.'
In the summer of 1967
Alf Ramsey selected John for the England Under 23 tour and in his
only game he scored in a 3-0 victory over Turkey playing alongside
future stars such as Allan Clarke, Ralph Coates and Colin Harvey.
In Division Two the
following season he continued to score, averaging a goal every other
game, before another move, to Ipswich Town for £30,000, in early
1968. He had a dream start at Portman Road, scoring six goals in his
first four games and Bill McGarry's team remained unbeaten for 15
games to clinch the Second Division title. The Tractor Boys did well
in the First Division, finishing 12th and John netted 16
goals but after McGarry left to manage Wolves there were problems.
New manager Bobby Robson and John didn't see eye to eye and John was
transfer-listed and suspended by the club for allegedly refusing to
train. The resolution was a move and when Cantwell offered £80,000
for O'Rourke Robson saw an opportunity to fund a rebuilding job on
his squad.
After leaving City he
had an early rush of goals in a strong QPR side featuring Rodney
Marsh and a young Gerry Francis but lost his place to Stan Bowles and
in early 1974 he moved to Bournemouth. John struggled in a poor
Bournemouth side that included Harry Redknapp and was relegated to
Division Four. After 21 games in two seasons he was released and at
the age of 29 his league career was over. He played for Johannesburg
Rangers in South Africa briefly in 1975 before playing non-league
football with Poole Town and later Weymouth and Dorchester Town. He
settled on the South Coast and ran a newsagent's in Highcliffe,
Christchurch for several years before working at Bournemouth Airport.
John receives his CCFPA tie from the late Bob Bromage in 2011
In his twelve year
professional career he made 366 appearances and scored 178 goals –
an exceptional scoring record.
With thanks to Barking
& District Historical Society and the English National Football
Archive (www.enfa.co.uk)
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