Sunday, 3 January 2021

George Hudson 14.3.1937 - 28.12.2020

 Sadly, on Monday last George Hudson, the legendary Coventry City centre-forward from the 1960s passed away at the age of 83. 'The Hud' as fans knew him, thrilled City fans between 1963-66 and in an era in which there were so many legends he shone like a star with his silky skills and his phenomenal scoring record.


Friend and fellow City historian David Brassington had no doubts about his legacy: '
One has to rely on our shaky, possibly unreliable memories but no one will ever convince me that 'The Hud' wasn’t the greatest City player I ever saw. What is indisputable, no one - not even Hutch, Cyrille or Dion was so worshipped by the Highfield Road terraces'.

George's arrival at Highfield Road in 1963 caused great controversy within the supporters – he was replacing leading scorer Terry Bly – and his departure, in 1966, similarly brought howls of anguish from his adoring fans; these moments were undoubtedly two of the defining moments of Jimmy Hill's reign at the club.

George was born in the Manchester suburb of Ancoats, one of seven boys. A prodigious schoolboy player, he was recommended for a trial with Blackburn Rovers and after doing his National Service he went to Ewood Park as an apprentice. After signing a full professional contract in 1958 he made his first team debut in the First Division home game with Manchester City in April 1959 playing alongside illustrious stars of the day Ronnie Clayton, Roy Vernon and Peter Dobing. Rovers won 2-1 and George retained his place for the final three games of the season, scoring his first senior goal in a 3-1 home win over Luton. The following season he was back in the reserves and with Derek Dougan scoring prolifically George was unable to get a first team start. Rovers had a good season – they were second at Christmas and although they fell away in the New Year they did reach the FA Cup final only to lose 3-0 to Wolves. In the summer of 1960 Rovers allowed George to move to nearby Accrington Stanley. Accrington were in dire financial straits and finished 18th in Division Four but George scored 35 goals in 44 games, a total only topped by the man he would succeed at Highfield Road, Peterborough’s Terry Bly. Early the following season Stanley's situation was even worse and they sold him to Peterborough for £5,000 just before the bailiffs arrived and a few months before they resigned from the league.

At Posh Hudson was playing one division higher but continued his goalscoring feats, and scored 25 goals in 1961-62, alongside Bly who netted 29. Jimmy Hill signed Bly for the Sky Blues and the tall, rangy forward proceeded to score 29 goals in 42 games as the Sky Blues reached the sixth round of the FA Cup and were well placed for promotion. At London Road Hudson had scored 25 goals but Hill believed that the Mancunian was the man City needed to get out of Division Three.

Four days after losing to Manchester United in the FA Cup, the transfer deadline approaching, and a better than good chance of promotion, Hill paid a club record £21,000 for Hudson making it clear that there was no place for the goal-machine Bly as Hudson would be his first choice centre-forward. Not since 1950 when the club had paid £20,000 for Tommy Briggs had City paid out such a large fee.

Posh were managed by former City manager Jack Fairbrother who said that Hudson had never been put up for sale but: ‘…a staggering fee is offered and we would have been silly not to have taken it.’

A week earlier Fairbrother had been quoted as saying: ‘I will not sell…within the next two seasons Hudson will get an international cap.’

Hill was known to be an admirer of Hudson but apparently had no hint that Posh would be prepared to sell until he read that Middlesbrough and Newcastle were bidding for him. There was a risk he would lose Hudson and he moved fast.

Former colleague Dietmar Bruck remembers Hudson’s arrival at Highfield Road: ‘He arrived in a smart grey suit with a velvet collar with his hair in an ‘Elvis-like’ quif - a real dandy. He had this Charlie-Chaplin-like walk and looked nothing like a footballer. Any doubts the other players had went after his first game – he was pure genius.’

The fans were mystified – why had Hill had rejected a centre-forward who had scored virtually a goal a game that season – but in time the fans realised that the manager had pulled off an inspired deal. Hudson scored a hat-trick in the first half of his debut, a 5-4 win over Halifax, to leapfrog Bly in the scoring charts but Hill faced a barrage of criticism from supporters for weeks afterwards before Bly joined Notts County where his career went downhill.

After the Cup run and the dire weather City’s fixture list was impossible. Despite the powers extending the season until the end of May the team played 16 league games in seven weeks after the Cup exit and missed out on promotion by five points. George netted six goals in 15 games which when added to his goals for Posh made him Division Three's leading scorer.

In the autumn of 1963 he was devastating, by the end of November he had netted 24 league and cup goals as City raced towards promotion, leading the division by eight points at New Year. He scored hat-tricks in three successive games for the club, against QPR in the league, German club Kaiserslautern in a friendly and Trowbridge in the FA Cup. His goals were put away with clinical disdain. He’d spit on the turf, turn and waddle back to the halfway line with that curious Charlie Chaplin walk. There was no fuss or kissing and cuddling and he never milked the crowd’s adulation.


In January he picked up a groin strain and needed an operation when he returned he looked out of touch and meanwhile City had failed to win in 11 games and the fans were biting their nails. Hill signed another centre-forward George Kirby and Hudson was dropped after just one goal in six games. Kirby's arrival steadied the ship and promotion was back on. On the final day in a game City needed to win to go up Hudson was recalled and playing alongside Kirby he netted the only goal, his 28th of the season, that defeated Colchester and confirmed City as champions.

                     The goal that clinched the Division Three title in 1964

Division Two held no fears for George and another 25 goals hit the net in 1964-65 including one in a 3-0 Christmas home win over Preston on a frozen, snow covered pitch, a game in which the Coventry Telegraph described his performance as ‘almost beyond belief’. The only blemish on another good season came at Huddersfield when he took offence at a bad challenge by John Coddington and got his marching orders for landing a punch on the centre-half.


George started the 1965-66 season in regal form. Four goals in a pre-season friendly victory over First Division Nottingham Forest was followed a week later by a brace in a victory over Wolves and he was averaging almost a goal a game by the end of October. In September in a 5-1 win over Southampton he scored arguably his most memorable Coventry goal when, with his back to goal he flicked the ball over Tony Knapp’s head, turned, then casually headed past a startled keeper. In his match report in the Coventry Telegraph Nemo wrote prophetically: 'It was the sort of goal that will live in the memory and even two of the Southampton players applauded it as the crowd exploded with excitement.'

                    George's 'wonder' goal v Southampton (September 1965)

The goals however dried up for George over the winter and he netted only twice in 15 games. Hill gave Bobby Gould a few games and then, desperate to win promotion, signed another striker, Ray Pointer, at Christmas. George netted twice in an FA Cup replay with Crewe but there were signs of frustration about his performance against Bristol City a few days later. In the second half Hill moved George to the right-wing, frustrated with the number 9’s first half input. ‘The Hud’ scored City’s second equaliser but on the Monday Hill named Hudson in the reserve team to play Southampton the following evening. With an FA Cup fifth round tie at Goodison Park looming speculation rose that George may be dropped for the game. Nemo explained that it was the first ‘official admission that Hudson’s form has been below par’ and he reminded supporters that their favourite had scored only five goals in his last 18 appearances. Reading between the lines it is difficult not to conclude that Hill had been concerned for some time but some were convinced that there had been a fall-out between the manager and the player that was never made public. For many fans however George could do no wrong and they chose to overlook the statistics because Hudson was their God.


Almost 8,000 fans plus hordes of club scouts watched City’s Reserves thump Southampton 7-1 and Hudson scored one goal but was overshadowed by 19-year-old Gould who scored two and ran the Saints’ defence ragged all night.


The next morning Hill took a phone call from Northampton boss Dave Bowen who offered Hill a large fee for Hudson. The Cobblers were having a hard time in their first ever season in the First Division and were trying to keep their head above water near the foot of the table. Bowen saw Hudson as the man who might just save them. With the transfer deadline less than two weeks away Hill knew this was the time when fees were inflated by desperate buyers.


Not for the first time Hill made an unpopular decision and faced the wrath of the supporters. He agreed a fee of £28,500 with Northampton – a profit of £7,500 - and then spent weeks trying to justify his decision to angry fans. He knew that time would be the judge of his actions – and he was probably proved right - but City’s stuttering form to the end of the season didn’t help his cause.


Several coach-loads of City fans travelled to Northampton to see Hudson’s debut against Leeds United rather than travel to Goodison Park to support City in the FA Cup and ITV television rubbed salt in the wounds by showing the highlights from Northampton with Hudson at his cultured best, bamboozling the England centre-half Jack Charlton and scoring a superb goal in the Cobblers’ 2-1 victory.

                          Coventry City 1964-65 with George next to JH

Hill justified the shock sale: ‘With every player, there is a time to sell and a time to buy. I give the fans this assurance – I would never do anything against the interests of Coventry City.’ Looked at in retrospect, Hudson, despite scoring a few goals, failed to keep the Cobblers in the top flight and was sold to Tranmere for £15,000 less than a year later. Apart from helping dump City out of the FA Cup in 1968 he never set the football world alight again and his recurring groin injuries forced him to retire the following year. His son Alan believes there were other factors in his decline: 'He was sad that he had left Coventry, where the fans adored him and he and the family were settled. He told me later that he fell out of love with the game after leaving Highfield Road'.


Some City fans believe 'The Hud' could have been thrived in the First Division for Coventry and still believe it was a mistake by Hill to sell him. Perhaps, some argue, it exposed a flaw in JH's management style, namely an apparent inability to handle the flamboyant star – he later had bigger problems with Ian Gibson. We'll never know the answer.


City, in the short-term, missed promotion that season but they got an inflated fee for George which went towards signing Gibson in the summer. In Bobby Gould Hill had a ready-made replacement centre-forward who, whilst not the exciting, charismatic player that Hudson was, would score the goals that got City promotion a year later.


In his book Miracle in Sky Blue, Marshall Stewart sums up Hudson: ‘He was a rare combination: a player without personal glamour who attracted the fans’ adulation by his disregard of the unnecessary and his ability to reap the maximum effect from the most discreet amount of effort. He had star quality without the spotlights…’


He scored 75 goals in 129 games for the Sky Blues and holds the unenviable record of being the only City player sent off in the five-year era under Jimmy Hill. His career league record was 298 appearances and 163 goals. He once told me that his toughest opponent was Everton's Brian Labone who he faced playing for Accrington in a League Cup tie however he never relished a training game with City's legendary captain, George Curtis.


After retiring from the game he had various jobs the longest which was at the Daily Mirror in his native Manchester where he worked in the machine room. Interviewed in 1987 he was modest about his feats at Highfield Road: ‘I never believed in taking any credit for the goals I scored. I were only one bloke. There were ten other blokes out there with me.’ He did acknowledge his goal against Southampton: ‘Yes that was the best I ever scored. I remember it as though it were last night.’


In retirement he never sought the spotlight and kept himself very much to himself with his wife Bernadette who sadly pre-deceased him, his four children Donna, Anthony, Alan and Colette, and numerous grandchildren and great grandchildren. He was persuaded to join the Former Players Association several years ago and attended several Legends Days, usually with a good number of family members and a good day out was enjoyed by all. There was genuine emotion as he was reunited with his 60s team-mates and the memories transported them back to City's golden era. Despite playing for the club almost fifty years earlier his appearances generated more interest from supporters than for any other former player and the great man was visibly overwhelmed by the reception he got from the Ricoh crowd. RIP George


Sunday, 20 December 2020

Jim's column 19.12.2020

 The 0-0 draw with Huddersfield on Wednesday night, acknowledged by Mark Robins as one of the best results of the season, extended the Sky Blues unbeaten run in the league to eight games. I had to go back a long way to find the last such run in the Championship and discovered it was Autumn 2003. In mid-October, under the stewardship of Gary McAllister, the team lost 3-1 at home to Cardiff before going on an eight-game run with one win and seven draws!

The only change that McAllister made after the Cardiff game was to drop goalkeeper Scott Shearer and give a debut to former Leicester and Liverpool custodian Pegguy Arphexad. Three days later City got a hard won 1-1 draw at Watford before winning 3-1 at Derby with Stephen Warnock and Patrick Suffo (2) on target. Then came five successive draws the final one being 1-1 at Crystal Palace when debutant loanee Johnny Jackson came off the bench to score a late equaliser. By this time Arphexad had been injured after just five games and Gavin Ward was between the posts. The run came to an end on a cold night at Rotherham when early goals from Darren Byfield and Shaun Barker gave the Millers the points. As a side note a certain Mark Robins came off the bench for Rotherham near the end. This turned out to be McAllister's penultimate game in charge – a week later he temporarily stood down to take care of his sick wife and Eric Black took the role. At the start of the run the Sky Blues were in 16th place, by the end of the run they were 15th. The eight game run was as follows:

October 21 Watford (a) 1-1 Staunton

October 25 Derby (a) 3-1 Warnock, Suffo 2

November 1 West Ham (h) 1-1 Barrett

November 5 Bradford C (h) 0-0 -

November 8 Sunderland (a) 0-0 -

November 22 Gillingham (h) 2-2 Joachim 2

November 25 Norwich (a) 1-1 McAllister (pen)

November 29 Crystal Palace (a) 1-1 Jackson

Over the last two weeks numerous people have asked me if Coventry City are close to setting a club record of penalties conceded in a season. At Wycombe last Saturday the Sky Blues conceded their seventh league penalty of the season and there have been two others in League Cup games at MK Dons and Gillingham.

The league penalties, which have all been converted, with the culprits, are:

QPR (h) Lyndon Dykes (foul by McFadzean)

Blackburn (h) Adam Armstrong (foul by Rose)

Nottm. Forest (a) Lyle Taylor (foul by McFadzean)

Watford (a) Ismaila Sarr (handball by O'Hare)

Norwich (a) Mario Vrancic (foul by Wilson)

Rotherham (h) Daniel Barlaser (foul by Wilson)

Wycombe (a) Joe Jacobsen (foul by Sheaf)

The penalty at MK Dons was saved by Marosi after Drysdale committed a foul whilst Jordan Graham scored from the spot for Gillingham after a foul by Rose.

The penalties had no effect on the final score in three of the league games but without them City would have picked up an extra point at both Forest and Watford and an extra two points at Norwich. It could be argued that at least five of the seven league penalties were soft and perhaps wouldn't have been given on another day.

The club record for league penalties conceded in a single season is 12, set in 2013-14 (the Northampton season). Goalkeeper Joe Murphy set a club record by saving five of them, so seven were scored.

The record for league penalties scored against City is 10, in 1979-80 season when no opposition penalties were missed/saved. That season some great players of the era netted from the penalty spot including Glen Hoddle (two in a 4-3 loss at Tottenham), John Robertson (scored home and away), Peter Barnes, Sammy McIlroy and John Wark.

In the last ten seasons the Sky Blues have conceded an average of seven league penalties a season whilst the average for the previous 64 seasons (i.e. since World War II) is 4.5 per season. This backs up the theory that there are more penalties given in the modern game. I haven't got the stats for penalties given in the domestic game this season but from watching Premier League games there seems to have been an increase, a number coming controversially as a result of VAR.

City have only been awarded one penalty this season (v Bournemouth) and their average for the last ten years in 3.9, just over half that conceded. Lets hope that the number of penalties conceded is one record that the Sky Blues can avoid this season and they can put an end to the current sequence.

This is my last column of 2020 so I will wish you and your families a Merry Christmas and a Happy 2021 when hopefully we will get back to watching the Sky Blues continue their phoenix-like rise up the leagues.


Sunday, 6 December 2020

Jim's column 5-12-2020

 Former Coventry City player Graham Walker asked me for help in tracking down his senior debut for the club. Graham, a centre-half, joined the club's groundstaff straight from school and progressed to the professional staff. He had been in the reserve team for some time before he got his chance in October 1958. In the early years of floodlit football English clubs weren't allowed to play competitive games under lights and whetted fans' appetites for the new innovation by arranging friendlies with higher status teams, foreign teams and Scottish clubs. Between 1953, when the first floodlights were installed, and 1959 City played 26 such friendlies. Almost 17,000 watched City play Queen of the South in the first floodlight game in October 1953 but the novelty slowly wore off and although a similar crowd watched the infamous game with Argentinian club San Lorenzo in 1956, crowds generally slipped under 10,000.


In October 1958 City invited Sunderland to Highfield Road for a floodlit friendly on a Monday evening. The Roker club, known as the Bank of England club just a few years previously because of the number of big money signings they had in their team, had lost their First Division status for the very first time the previous season. They had also been found guilty of illegal payments to players and suffered a heavy fine. In Division Two they were struggling having lost key players such as Don Revie and Billy Bingham and were bottom of the table with just three wins in 14 games. A 4-1 defeat at Bristol City on the previous Saturday had increased the gloom and their party had spent a miserable weekend at Leamington's Regent Hotel licking their wounds.



City, on the other hand were riding high in second place in Division Four after a 2-2 draw at Workington and looked a good bet for promotion from the division at the first attempt. Gates which had dropped to below 8,000 the previous campaign were above 20,000 with the team unbeaten in six games. They would be without their outstanding young centre-half George Curtis who had suffered concussion at Workington and had seen a specialist on the Monday morning. Graham tells the story: On the Monday morning I received a hand delivered postcard requesting me to report to Highfield Road for the evening game in which the “gaffer” Billy Frith was thinking of  playing me in the second half. We often received postcards either sent or hand delivered informing us when to report for certain games'.

                                          Graham Walker in his playing days

Frank Austin, normally a wing-half, deputised for Curtis but at half-time Graham was told to strip off and come on as substitute (in those days subs weren't permitted in competitive games). Austin moved to left half, replacing Mick Kearns and both he and Walker wore a number 5 shirt. It was 0-0 at half-time but Sunderland, even with several reserves, came to life after the break and England B international Stan Anderson put them ahead after 63 minutes. Nine minutes later Sunderland and former England winger Colin Grainger went down under a challenge from Walker and a penalty was awarded.


'It was never a penalty', says Walker, 'and after the final whistle Grainger winked at me and said “never mind kid. Win some lose some”.' Anderson scored from the penalty spot and Maltby added a third goal before Brian Hill headed a late consolation goal for City. Graham remembers the fog descending and that the the old fashioned floodlighting 'wasn't the best in those conditions'. The attendance of 4,979 convinced the club that the days of floodlight friendlies was over and it was the last one for over three years when Jimmy Hill reinstated them. I was able to send Graham a copy of the match report and after reading it he said that it wasn't a surprise that he had forgotten the game.


City's team that night was: Graham Spratt: Roy Kirk, Lol Harvey: Brian Nicholas, Frank Austin (sub Graham Walker), Mick Kearns (sub Frank Austin): Peter Hill, Ray Straw, Jimmy Rogers, Brian Hill, Ken Satchwell.

Sunday, 29 November 2020

Maurice Setters (16.12.1936- 22.11.2020)

 It is sad to report the death of former Coventry City player Maurice Setters at the age of 83. He passed away at Doncaster Royal Infirmary last Sunday after a short illness and a long battle against Alzheimer's Disease.

Maurice came to Coventry near the end of a long career and was an inspired signing for the club, inspiring the team to avoid relegation from the First Division in 1968 by the skin of their teeth after looking relegation certainties for most of the season. He is remembered fondly by older Sky Blues supporters and his former playing colleagues.

Born in Honiton, Devon, Maurice joined his local club Exeter City from school and after winning England Schoolboys and Youth honours he made his debut for the Grecians as a 17-year-old in 1954. Within twelve months, after just 10 games, he was transferred to West Brom, then a leading First Division club. Two goals on his home debut against Portsmouth endeared him to the fans and it wasn't long before he was a regular at wing-half for the Baggies. In his three full seasons at Hawthorns the club never finished below fifth in Division One and Maurice's form earned him 16 England Under 23 caps. Although he never won a full cap he was named in England's 22-man squad for the 1958 World Cup squad.

In those days Maurice had an American-style 'crew-cut' hairstyle which added to his image as a hard man and whilst he was a fine footballer he earned a reputation as one of the country's toughest players. In January 1960 Manchester United, rebuilding after the Munich air crash that had decimated their team, paid Albion £35,000 for Setters and he was a regular in United's half-back line for the next five years. He was the hard man that won the ball before feeding Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and latterly George Best to turn on the magic. Maurice captained the club and was best man to Bobby Charlton at his wedding in 1961. In 1962-63 he handed the captaincy to his future Coventry manager Noel Cantwell and the pair were in the team that lifted the FA Cup, beating Leicester City 3-1, after ending the Sky Blues' own great run that year.

In 1964-65 Maurice had a serious contender for his club place, Nobby Stiles. The two had many similarities and ultimately Matt Busby plumped for the tigerish Nobby and Maurice left to join another First Division side Stoke City. A few months later he returned to Old Trafford with Stoke and got a standing ovation from the crowd who recognised his role in the re-birth of United.

At the Victoria Ground Tony Waddington converted him to a centre-half where despite his short stature (he was only 5 foot 10 tall) he could compete with the best in air with his timing and strength. Setters played a big part in the Potters' revival alongside renaissance stars such as Peter Dobing and Roy Vernon. In autumn 1967 however he was sidelined with a cartilage injury and struggling to get back to fitness when the call came from Noel Cantwell.

City's first season in Division One could not have started more badly. Manager Jimmy Hill had resigned to go to a career in television, captain and centre-half George Curtis had suffered a broken leg in the second game, inspirational midfielder Ian Gibson was sidelined by injury and star goalscorer Bobby Gould was also out injured. A 0-3 home defeat to fellow strugglers Fulham had left City at the foot of the table with just two wins in 16 games, having conceded 39 goals. Hill's signing of Tony Knapp to replace Curtis had failed spectacularly and rookie manager Cantwell had failed to win any of his five games since arriving. The attack had been strengthened by the signing of Gerry Baker and Ernie Hannigan but the team needed a leader and an experienced defender to shore up the leaking defence. Maurice ticked both boxes.

Former club physiotherapist Norman Pilgrim takes up the story: 'Noel was desperate to get Maurice in but at his medical I told Noel that his knee was dreadful and he needed a couple of months of rehab before he would be ready to play. Noel said he couldn't wait and needed Maurice straight away'.

Maurice made his debut at Elland Road, Leeds where Don Revie's team had won 10 home games in a row. Norman remembers Cantwell introducing him to Revie in the tunnel before the kick-off and says that Revie was a worried man after hearing that City had signed Setters.

Ninety minutes later City had taken a point thanks to an Ernie Hannigan goal and almost grabbed a win. In his match report Derek Henderson prophetically concluded: 'Setters strode about City's penalty box like a Soccer Napoleon. The chunky, lion-hearted Devonian -though clearly a long way from being fully match fit – brought that air of authority and professional outlook that could in the next few weeks transform Cantwell's side.'

Pilgrim had to work like a demon: 'Maurice didn't train with the first team for two months, it was me and him in the gym every day. On a Friday he would do a lap round the pitch at Ryton and a couple of sprints and he was ready to play the following day'.

It would be another three games before City would record their next win but slowly and surely the team got stronger and results improved. Setters, who was appointed captain, missed just one game, ironically City's only away win, at his former club West Brom, and as the season came to a climax he was as fit as any player on the team.

Dietmar Bruck was a team-mate of Maurice and had nothing but praise for him: 'he added a spark to the club that had been missing that season. He was a strong character who spoke his mind and just what we needed after George broke his leg. He always led by example and never gave less than 100% even in training games.'

City's home form kept their head above water and at the end of March Manchester United came to Highfield Road looking for an easy scalp on their way to a second successive league title and European Cup glory. Maurice had other ideas and gave a commanding defensive performance before heading home a corner for the second goal in City's 2-0 victory. Chris Cattlin made his debut that day, marking the mercurial George Best and says: 'I was as nervous as hell before the game but Maurice settled my nerves and gave me some advice for dealing with Best. He talked me through the game and later helped me settle at the club'.

With three games remaining City looked almost safe but then threw away the points at home to Leicester leaving two nerve-jangling away games to save their place. The first, at West Ham's Upton Park, is recalled by Norman Pilgrim: 'West Ham had Moore, Hurst and Peters and always played attractive football. As the team left the dressing-room Maurice turned to the rest and said 'West Ham will be expecting us to kick them today, let's not disappoint them!'' City drew 0-0.

The final game at Southampton saw City repeat the scoreline and earn safety but not before a terrific rearguard action, marshalled as ever by Setters who was up against the 28-goal Ron Davies, the league's leading scorer and recognised as one of the top headers in the country. Rarely did Davies get a clean head on the ball so good was Maurice's aerial antics. I can clearly remember his blood-spattered shirt resulting from a cut requiring four stitches above an eye.

The following season things didn't improve much for the Sky Blues with another relegation battle that went down to the wire. Despite George Curtis being fit again, Maurice started the season in the number five shirt but Noel experimented with the pair as double centre-halves in a League Cup tie at West Ham and it worked a treat in a 0-0 draw. The experiment was tried again at West Brom but City got hammered 6-1 and after one more attempt resulted in a 3-0 League Cup defeat at Swindon the whole idea was shelved. George took over and Maurice spent several months in the reserves helping develop youngsters Jeff Blockley and Alan Dugdale. Unhappy at not being in the first team, he was in trouble with Cantwell in the February and placed on the transfer list for critical comments to the press but his performance levels never dropped. With four games remaining and City desperate for points he was recalled to play as an extra defender at Everton, City lost 3-0 but Maurice impressed enough to displace Curtis for the three vital remaining games. Three draws left City having to wait for Leicester to finish their programme but the true grit of Maurice was seen in the final momentous game against Liverpool at Highfield Road. City, with Maurice driving them on, gave everything in a thrilling game but with 30 minutes remaining he committed a late tackle on Alun Evans and after a flurry of fists the referee sent the pair off. City survived to draw 0-0, a point which ultimately kept them up at Leicester's expense.

Maurice spent that summer on the transfer list but despite lots of interest he was still at the club when the new season started. The team started well but injuries meant a recall for him in midfield in and the team were unbeaten in five, including the famous 3-1 win at Derby. The changing of the guard was coming however in the shape of another blood and thunder centre-half, Roy Barry. A 0-0 draw at Burnley saw Barry start for the first time with Maurice in midfield and George came off the bench for his final appearance for the club – the only time the awesome trio appeared together.

Roy remembers Maurice fondly: 'He made me very welcome when I came down from Scotland. I was living in a hotel and he took me home for a meal with Cath and his family. He knew his days were numbered with my arrival but he was so kind. During the next few months Maurice, Ernie Hunt and myself got on like a house on fire and were nicknamed the Three Amigos and we had so much fun.'

Maurice was never on the losing side in his nine league games that season and made his final bow for the club, alongside Roy, at Anfield in an FA Cup replay. It ended in a 3-0 defeat and after a handful more reserve games he was on his way to Charlton on a free transfer. He only played eight games for the Valiants but helped steer them away from relegation from Division Two before hanging his boots up at the end of the season.

Within a year he was appointed manager of Fourth Division Doncaster Rovers and spent three and half seasons at Belle Vue the highlight of which was a creditable draw at Anfield in the FA Cup. He became Jack Charlton's assistant at Sheffield Wednesday in 1977 and stayed at Hillsborough for six years before coaching at Rotherham and being chief scout at Newcastle. He later linked up with Jack again from 1986 to 1995 as assistant manager with the Republic of Ireland and as a honorary Irishman helped Jack take the team to the World Cup finals for the first time in 1994.

Maurice was a member of the Former Player's Association but illness prevented him for attending any Legends Days. The Association send their condolences to his family which includes his grandson the former City player Robert Betts.

My friend and fellow City historian David Brassington on hearing the news of Maurice's death summed up everyone's feelings: 'If one player did more than any other to keep us up in that first season in Division One it was Maurice Setters'. 


Sunday, 22 November 2020

Jim's column 21.11.2020

 

Kent-based City fan Colin Heys posed an interesting question recently – How many Coventry City players have topped the Football League divisional scoring lists?


The answer, Colin, is four. Clarrie Bourton, George Hudson, Bobby Gould and Dion Dublin. Bourton did it two years running – in 1931-32, his first season at Highfield Road after a move from Blackburn Rovers, Clarrie netted 49 league goals in Division Three South. He started slowly, netting just three goals in his first six games before hitting his stride with goals in eleven consecutive games including five in a 6-1 victory over Bournemouth. He missed two games through injury and therefore played 40 league games, and also managed another goal in the FA Cup. Bourton topped the whole Football League scorers, beating the legendary Dixie Dean's 44 goals for Everton.


The following season Clarrie played 39 league games, scoring 41 goals with a further three FA Cup goals. After another run of nine consecutive scoring games he looked set to break his own record but failed to net in the final three games. Once more he was the top scorer in the whole of the Football League.


It was another 30 years before a City player topped the lists with George Hudson netting 28 goals in Division Three in 1962-63. The problem was that 22 of them were scored for Peterborough United with only six for the Sky Blues. His arrival at Highfield Road from Posh was controversial as he was signed to replace Terry Bly who had netted 25 league goals for City by the end of March. Tottenham's Jimmy Greaves topped the league's list with 37 goals. 'The Hud' should have topped the Division Three list the following season as he had netted 20 goals by the end of November but an injury and loss of form caused the goals to dry up and he ended with 24 goals and beaten by Bristol Rovers' Alfie Biggs who scored 30.


Hudson's controversial departure from Coventry in March 1966 opened the door for Coventry kid Bobby Gould who just over a year later topped the Division Two scoring list with 24 goals in 39 appearances as the Sky Blues roared to promotion. Like the team Bob had a slow start to the season but came to life in December with six goals including a hat-trick against Ipswich. January wasn't a good month for him – he failed to score and was the victim of much abuse and even death threats – and he lost his place in the team. Recalled to the side he went on a scoring spree failing to score in only one of ten games before a broken thumb prematurely ended his season.


It was another thirty years before a City player topped the scoring lists again. In 1997-98 Dion Dublin shared the Premiership Golden Boot with Liverpool's Michael Owen and Blackburn's Chris Sutton all on 18 goals. Dion, who also scored four FA Cup goals, played 36 games that season and his achievement is all the greater for the fact that in at least eight of those games he played at centre-back. Unlike Hudson and Gould he was the regular penalty taker and five of his goals came from spot-kicks. He made a statement of intent with a hat-trick against Chelsea on the opening day but then had a six-game drought. He hit his best form from Christmas with goals in nine out of 12 consecutive games including scoring in six home games in a row. His performances that season earned him an England call-up and he was unlucky not to be in the 1998 World Cup squad.


Since then only three Sky Blues have reached 20 league goals in a season – Callum Wilson, Adam Armstrong and Marc McNulty – but none of them have topped the lists. McNulty went closest in 2017-18 with 23 goals but was pipped by Accrington's Billy Kee.


Back in the summer I wrote about City games that had been abandoned – mainly through weather of floodlight failures – but regular reader Ian Greaves reminded me about a non-competitive game that was ended prematurely.


Ian writes: 'It was the Bryan King testimonial at the Old Den, Millwall on 30th April 1976. I was there with Dave Freeman and Lionel Bird. It was held on a Friday night, the day before the FA Cup Final. This was my only ever visit to that ground and what an awful place it was. Even for a testimonial game it was the most intimidating ground I ever visited'.


                              Bryan King

'Bryan King's career at City had been plagued by injury, ironic as he rarely missed a game in his nine-year career at Millwall. He started the game but was substituted after a token 20 minutes or so. There was a decent sized crowd and we even sat in the stand (courtesy of Ron Wylie) but it was a scary atmosphere. When Millwall took the lead there was a pitch invasion which took time to clear. With about 15 minutes left Millwall scored again with the same result. The referee gave up, took the players off, and there was a tannoy announcement that he had ended the game. It was utter mayhem and we were glad to get out in one piece.'


'The postscript to the game is that we had been invited to the players' reception after the game at a pub in Bethnal Green. It went on into the early hours and some players of both teams were worse for wear. One of the revellers was Gordon Hill, who had left Millwall for Manchester United a year earlier and who was due to play at Wembley in the final against Southampton the following day. We were not surprised to see Hill turn in a lacklustre performance in the final, being substituted in the second half as United suffered a shock defeat to the Saints'.


A great story from Ian and coincidentally last week I received news that Bryan's biography cleverly titled 'The Lions' King' is published later this month.



Sunday, 15 November 2020

Jim's column 14.11.2020

 This week I received an email from Keith Reay, a City fan and programme collector from Alberta, Canada. He has a large collection of Coventry City programmes but wanted to know about the game at Ipswich in 1972 that was abandoned because of a floodlight failure.


The game was played on 25th November 1972 at Portman Road. City were unbeaten in seven since the arrival of Colin Stein and Tommy Hutchison and had lifted themselves from 21st in Division One to ninth. Stein had struck up an excellent partnership with Brian Alderson whilst Hutch had terrorised some top full-backs such as Paul Madeley, Pat Rice and West Ham's John McDowell, creating chances for his strikers and netting a memorable goal at Highbury.


Bobby Robson's Ipswich had had their best start to a campaign since winning promotion four years previously and were in fifth place. They boasted a number of players who would go on to be Ipswich legends including Mick Mills, Kevin Beattie, David Johnson and Trevor Whymark. City dominated the game and Stein netted with a diving header to give City a deserved twenty fourth minute lead. After a partial failure of the floodlights just before half-time the referee abandoned the game after all the lights went out and the electricians couldn't quickly repair things. Joe Mercer summed things up after the game: 'The way we were playing, it was only the floodlights that were going to beat us'. Many spectators believed the conspiracy theory – that Ipswich knew they were going to be beaten and sabotaged the electrics!


The game was replayed ten days later with the lights fixed but City lost Roy Barry with a hip injury after half an hour with the score at 0-0. City held out till just before half-time when David Johnson scored. Trevor Whymark scored a second after half-time and City's unbeaten run was ended. Ipswich went on to finish fourth in Division One but certainly got away with one that day. As for Hutch, Mick Mills was booked in both games for fouling him. A new updated programme was issued for the game.


It's sad to report the death of former City coach Tony Waiters, aged 83 this week. Tony had only a brief time at Highfield Road as Director of Coaching under Noel Cantwell in 1971-72 and left the club in March 1972 when Cantwell was sacked.


Waiters made his name as a goalkeeper at Blackpool in the 1960s, playing over 280 games for the Seasiders and winning five caps for England. The form of Gordon Banks probably robbed him of more caps. After retiring in 1967 he went into coaching and impressed as an FA regional coach and youth development coach at Liverpool. In 1970 he took over as first team coach at Burnley but injuries forced him out of retirement and back between the sticks. In December 1971 he joined City as Director of Coaching, replacing Bill Asprey, but his timing was wrong – within three months Cantwell was sacked and Tony resigned in protest.

  Waiters between CCFC chairman Derrick Robins & secretary Eddie Plumley

He went on to manage Plymouth Argyle for five years, winning promotion from Division Three with the help of three former City players, Ernie Machin, Billy Rafferty and Colin Randell. In 1977 he moved to Canada to coach Vancouver Whitecaps to the 1979 NASL Championship and later coached Canada to fourth place in the 1984 Olympic Games and to the 1986 World Cup finals where his team held France to a goal-less draw.


I also have to mention one of the players at the club during Waiters' brief spell, Chris Chilton. Signed from Hull City for £91,000 in September 1971 after scoring over 200 goals in 11 seasons for the Tigers, Chris had a torrid time at Highfield Road, managing just five goals in 33 appearances. One of those goals was a late headed winner at West Brom in the FA Cup – City's first away win at a First Division side for 60 years. Chris later revealed that for some time he had been carrying the back injury which ultimately forced him to retire at the end of that season.

           Chilton heading the winner at West Brom in the FA Cup in 1972

Chris was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease in 2012 and now, eight years later, he needs a level of care his family cannot afford. His former team-mate Ken Wagstaff has set up a GoFundMe page where people can make donations to help pay for a care-home. In seven days it has raised more than £34,000. You can read more about Chris's story here: www.theguardian.com/football/2020/nov/02/dementia-football-rife-game-not-doing-enough-to-help-chris-chilton-gary-chilton and where there are also links to the GoFundMe page.



Sunday, 8 November 2020

Jim's column 7.11.2020

 Stephen Coyne sent me an interesting piece of Coventry City memorabilia last week – a ticket for City's game at Queens Park Rangers in 1963. The game was played at the White City Stadium, originally built for the 1908 Olympic Games, which was QPR's home ground in the 1962-63 season. The club had had a two-year spell at the 90,000 capacity stadium in the 1930s but returned to Loftus Road until 1962. The second experiment was a disaster with lower crowds and poor results by the team and plans were already afoot for a move back to Loftus Road for the 1963-64 campaign when the Sky Blues played what would be the final domestic football game at the stadium on 22nd May 1963.




The football season had been seriously impacted by the 'Big Freeze' with little football played between Christmas and the beginning of March because of snow, ice and frozen pitches. Before the freeze started both City and QPR were handily placed for promotion from Division Three but the massive backlog of games and City's remarkable FA Cup run to the quarter final had seen the promotion hopes slip away for both teams. QPR had already lost seven home games and Jimmy Hill's team made it eight with a 3-1 victory on a pleasant May evening two days before the FA Cup final. A measly crowd of 3,261 (easily the lowest of the season) watched the game come to life in the final twenty minutes. Ronnie Rees netted after 71 minutes and John Sillett made it two with a rare goal three minutes later. QPR's John Collins pulled a goal back on 77 minutes but a Ken Hale penalty completed the scoring seven minutes from time. City's win was their first in seven games and ensured they finished fourth in the table with QPR in 13th place.


White City continued hosting greyhound racing, athletics and speedway until it was demolished in 1984 but only one further football match took place there. In 1966 Wembley Stadium, expected to be the venue for all of the group one games, refused to cancel a greyhound event and the White City stepped in to host the Uruguay v France game which attracted over 45,000 to the old stadium.

John Sillett has many claims to fame but he was the last man to score an outfield goal at White City in a domestic game.

From the same era, a question from Michael Todd this week. Michael wanted to know the details of City's League Cup game at Rotherham on 4th November 1963. This was the Sky Blues Third Division promotion season and they were setting a hot pace at the top of table in early November. Rotherham were a Second Division outfit with some outstanding youngsters who would go on to greater things including Barry Lyons (later of Nottingham Forest) and Albert Bennett (later of Newcastle).

The Coventry line-up was: Wesson: Sillett, Kletzenbauer: Bruck, Curtis, Farmer: Humphries, Hale, Hudson, Whitehouse, Rees.

It was Bennett who gave the Millers a 14th minute lead as the home side looked set to give City a hammering but Willie Humphries equalised direct from a corner (32 mins) and 20 seconds into the second half George Hudson put the Sky Blues ahead. Houghton equalised on 54 minutes and it was 2-2 until nine minutes from time. City, down to ten men with Frank Kletzenbauer having to limp off injured, finally capitulated and Houghton (81 mins) and Bennett (85 mins) gave Rotherham a flattering 4-2 victory and sent them through to the Fourth Round. The attendance was 7,826