Sunday, 18 April 2021

Jim's column 17.4.2021

I am in regular contact with Marshall Stewart, author of Sky Blue Miracle, the first and one of the best books on the history of the football club, and he recently suggested that I write about Erle Shanks, an influential and sometimes controversial director of the club before and after World War Two. Born in 1901 he was the son of Ernest O Shanks, the owner of a Coventry-based timber company, and his wife Florinda.




                                                 W Erle Shanks

He first came to prominence at Highfield Road in May 1936 just weeks after City had clinched promotion to the old Second Division. A new stand was planned for Highfield Road, replacing the old John Bull Stand which had been in situ since the ground first opened in 1899. The old stand, on the south side of the ground (at the top of King Richard Street) only held a few hundred patrons and was in a poor state of repair.

The new stand was originally called the 'Promotion Stand' later became known as the Main Stand and was severely damaged by fire in 1968. The club did not have the money to both finance team strengthening for the higher division and carry out all the ground improvements and the Midland Daily Telegraph reported that 'an appeal fund to raise the £5,000 was to be supervised by William Erle Shanks, the owner of a timber merchant and joinery firm based in Foleshill'.

Shanks, a public spirited supporter who no doubt saw an opportunity of some substantial work for his company, would administer the ‘Stand Fund’ and organise a system of “district collecting agents”. A donation of 500 guineas by the football club inaugurated the appeal fund and Shanks’ open letter in the MDT urged all local businesses and individual supporters to make generous donations. In the same edition of the newspaper manager Harry Storer confirmed the club’s financial donation and revealed that Shanks had recently turned down an offer to join the board as the appeal would take up too much of his time. By August 1936 he had changed his mind and became a key member of the board, heading the Ground sub-committee and becoming involved with the negotiations over the Highfield Road ground lease.

The appeal failed to raise the full £5,000 required and Shanks was scathing of local businesses for not supporting the club. The new stand was completed for the new season however and Shanks persuaded Sir John Siddeley to lend the club the money to buy the freehold of Highfield Road from the Mercer's Company, a deal which strengthened the club's position as they entered Division Two.

By 1939 Shanks had emerged as the most dynamic of City's directors and soon after war was declared in September of that year he presented a plan for how the club could survive the hostilities which included the retention of manager Harry Storer (on a reduced salary) and the groundsman to ensure that the club was ready for resumption of activities as soon as possible.

After the war Shanks stood down from the board and was appointed vice-president of the club before becoming president in 1950 following the death of Alderman Fred Lee. In 1953. with City back in Division Three, however he resigned from that position in protest at the sacking of manager Harry Storer and led a shareholder's revolt that saw the majority of the board resign in April 1954 with Erle stepping in to be chairman. One of his first tasks was to bring onto the board businessman, Derrick Robins with whom he had close business ties. For the first time since the war the club had dynamic men who would make things happen but success was not quite around the corner.

           1954: Derrick Robins, Erle Shanks, new signings Colin Collindridge and Tommy Capel, manager Jack Fairbrother.

Storer's replacement Jack Fairbrother resigned in the autumn of 1954 allegedly over the sale of Eddie Brown to Birmingham and director's interference in the dressing room. Erle had ambitious plans however and in January 1955 announced a major coup by persuading top coach Jesse Carver to give up a job with AS Roma to become City's manager on a large salary the following season. For half a season Carver put City back on the football map with lots of continental ideas and some attractive football but by the start of 1956 he was on his way back to Italy. Shanks recruited Harry Warren to replace Carver but it was a poor decision and within 15 months Warren was sacked and Billy Frith came back for a second spell as manager.

In April 1958 Shanks resigned as chairman after a lot of pressure from shareholders and the club heading into the new Fourth Division. According to the Coventry Telegraph the resignation came after an incident following a home defeat to Swindon. Shanks had stormed into the home dressing room and in front of the manager and several other directors severely criticised the players’ performance. The late Lol Harvey, who played that night remembered it well: ‘Erle was known to have a short fuse but all the players liked him because he cared so much about the club. That night we had been dreadful but were shocked when he came into the dressing room – he never came in there – and started ripping into the players in general. He didn’t criticise me though, I remember he turned to me and said, ‘well played Lol’’.

Shanks resigned that night and a club statement said that the lack of success on the playing field had caused Mr Shanks ‘bitter disappointment and has been poor reward for his ceaseless and untiring efforts. Like directors before and after him Shanks’ hard work and financial backing was taken for granted by many fans. They didn’t appreciate what Shanks had done, especially in 1936 when his involvement in the ground improvements and their funding was crucial in the club’s development. His Herculean efforts to bring success to the club, displayed by his coup in bringing Carver to Coventry and his invaluable committee work, were matched by his impatience for success.

I had the pleasure of meeting Erle Shanks in the early 1990s by which time he was living in a Coventry residential home and he was a feisty character with strong views on football, lots of memories and still an avid City fan. He died in 1999, aged 98.

If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday, 11 April 2021

Jim's Column 10.4.21

Peter Carroll posed an interesting question recently. He asked how many players have pulled on a Coventry City jersey but have never kicked a ball in Coventry.

It's probably easier to list those that have played for the club at the Ricoh, before the move to St Andrews in 2019. There are eleven in total.

Dom Hyam

Max Biamou

Jordan Thompson

Jordan Shipley

Amadou Bakayoko

Liam Kelly

Jodi Jones

Morgan Williams

Jack Burroughs

Sam McCallum

Brandon Mason

Out of 31 players who have appeared for the club this season and are still at the club or out on loan, 23 have never played for the club at the Ricoh. There may be several of the 23 who will never play at the Ricoh including current loanees Leo Ostigard, Matty James, Ben Sheaf and Viktor Gyokeres.

Several of the current squad have played at the Ricoh, against City. Marko Marosi appeared for Doncaster, Kyle McFadzean has played there for Crawley, MK Dons and Burton. Matty Godden appeared for Stevenage and Peterborough. Jamie Allen played for Rochdale and Burton (scoring for the latter) and Ben Wilson appeared for Bradford City. Interestingly all five played at the Ricoh in 2018-19.

Peter seems to remember Nahki Wells, Bristol City's scorer in City's Bank holiday victory , scoring against us previously. He did, for Bradford City in 2013-14 when he scored a hat trick in a 3-3 draw at Valley Parade. He left Bradford for Huddersfield a few weeks later for a sizeable fee and has subsequently played for Burnley, QPR & Bristol City. I understand he is one of the highest paid players in the Championship currently. That game in 2013 incidentally, was his only other appearance against the Sky Blues so his record against us is played two and four goals.

Mark Browne is a City fan with also strong allegiances to Millwall. He collects City programmes and wanted to know about a pre-season friendly game at Highfield Road in August 1990. The game was against non-league Halesowen Town and I believe it was part of the deal that took Halesowen's Andy Pearce to Highfield Road earlier that summer. Normally these types of game would take place at the non-league club's home ground to generate some extra revenue for the selling club. City were well into their pre-season campaign and four days earlier had defeated Czech side Banik Ostrava 3-2 at Highfield Road. John Sillett put out a strong team but the non-leaguers pulled off a surprise 1-0 win with a 73rd minute goal from Lee Johnson in front of a miniscule gate of 735. Also in the Halesowen team were Sean Flynn and Tim Clarke who both later signed for City.



Mark also reminded me that in a pre-season friendly game in Germany in 2003 the Sky Blues fielded two Scottish international trialists – Simon Donnelly and Phil O'Donnell. Donnelly, a midfielder, played over 150 games for Celtic and won 10 Scottish caps (when he would have been a teammate of Gary McAllister) before moving to Sheffield Wednesday in 1999. After his trial at Coventry he moved back to Scotland to St Johnstone and later played for Dunfermline and Partick Thistle.

O'Donnell, another midfielder, played for Motherwell and Celtic and won one Scottish cap in 1993 and joined Wednesday at the same time as Donnelly. He came from Bellshill in Lanarkshire where McAllister grew up so that was probably the connection with City. After his trial at Coventry he rejoined Motherwell and played for them until tragically suffering a fatal heart attack in a game in 2007.

The friendly, against German fifth division side Suhler SV, was won 2-0 with goals from Donnelly and Craig Pead.

If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton

Sunday, 4 April 2021

Jim's column 3.4.2021

 In their last game, at home to Wycombe, the Sky Blues drew 0-0 again making it seven goal-less draws in a season, six of them at home. The record for the most in a season is eight, set in 1970-71 under Noel Cantwell when the side were ultra cautious and scored only 37 goals and conceded 38 (the latter a club record low) in finishing 10th in the old First Division.

This seasons seven equals the number in the post-Wembley season of 1987-88 when John Sillett's team recorded six 0-0's at home and one away but still managed an impressive 10th place finish thanks to more away wins than at home.

The current situation with Rotherham and their backlog of games due to Covid-19 issues reminds me a little of the 1968-69 season when the Sky Blues were locked in a relegation dog-fight with neighbours Leicester City. I'm sure many younger City fans won't be aware of the circumstances of that season and I thought I would remind readers about City's great escape. In February Noel Cantwell's Sky Blues, who had survived on the final day in the previous campaign, looked doomed, at the foot of the table and five points behind 20th placed Leicester. A combination of a bad winter and Leicester's FA Cup run, which took them to the final, meant however that when Coventry finished their season Leicester still had five games to play.

After City played their final game, a thrilling, gutsy 0-0 draw against Liverpool at Highfield Road they had to sit and wait for 25 days while Leicester played their final five games and hope and pray that they wouldn't overtake City's final total of 31 points. The Foxes needed seven points out of 10 (only two points for a win in those days) to send City down.

At Wembley in the FA Cup Final, Leicester lost 1-0 to Manchester City and on the following Tuesday night played their first of the five league games, beating Tottenham 1-0 with an Allan Clarke goal. The following Saturday they lost 2-1 at Ipswich with a very late goal by Mick Lambert leaving them needing five points from three games. A 2-1 home win over Sunderland on the following Monday piled the pressure on the nail-biting Coventry fans and a nine day wait before the next game didn't help.

Their penultimate game was at home to Everton and the Foxes struggled for the first hour. Alan Ball gave the Toffees a 10th minute lead and the Merseysiders should have wrapped up the points before Graham Cross equalised with a controversial goal. The draw meant Leicester had to win their final game – away to Manchester United to stay up and send the Sky Blues down.

The big question was: how would United approach the game? In City's favour it would be Matt Busby's last game in charge and surely they would want him to go out on a high. In addition Noel Cantwell was a United old boy and had many friends at Old Trafford.

City fans were glued to the radio (no internet or iFollow in those days) and were stunned when David Nish put Leicester ahead in 35 seconds. Two minutes later George Best levelled the scores with a brilliant goal and a minute later Cross put through his own goal to give United the lead. Best continued to dazzle and United should have been further ahead by half-time. Two minutes after the break Peter Shilton just managed to beat away a Bobby Charlton special but the ball went to Denis Law who coolly volleyed home. Leicester fought hard, hit the post twice and Rodney Fern made it 3-2 in the 72nd minute but United saw out the game to end Busby's 24-year managerial reign with a victory and send Leicester down. Coventry City were safe!

The two sides had met at Highfield Road in early April and in front of over 41,000 City had won with a late Neil Martin goal just seconds after Leicester were denied a strong penalty claim at the other end. Those two points ultimately kept City in Division 1.

                 Neil Martin's winning goal against Leicester 1969

If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton