Bill Morris

Association football player
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAssociation football player
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasAthlete Football player Association football player
Work fieldSports
Gender
Male
Birth26 March 1913, Handsworth, United Kingdom
Death1995Dudley, United Kingdom (aged 81 years)
Star signAries
Sports Teams
West Bromwich Albion F.C.
Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C.
Dudley Town F.C.
Halesowen Town F.C.
England national football team
The details

Biography

William Walter Morris (26 March 1913 – 1995) was an English footballer who spent the majority of his playing career at Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Morris began his senior career in the colts side of West Bromwich Albion, before moving to Halesowen Town. He was signed by Wolverhampton Wanderers in May 1933 for £100, and made his debut for the club against former team West Bromwich Albion on 17 February 1934, playing as an emergency centre-forward.

He remained a back-up player until the 1935–36 season when he became a first choice centre-half for the Midlanders. A disappointing start to the next campaign saw him switched to right-back, which would remain his position for the rest of his Molineux career.

He played in the 1939 FA Cup Final, where Wolves were surprisingly beaten by Portsmouth, and won three England caps. His international debut came on 16 November 1939 in a 7–0 victory over Northern Ireland at Old Trafford.

The outbreak of World War II meant the suspension of league football, but Morris turned out 67 times for Wolves in regional games, and also guested for Wrexham. At the resumption of league action in 1946, Morris soon found himself out of the team, and at the end of the 1946–47 season he left Wolves.

He joined nearby Dudley Town, where he played two further seasons as a centre-forward before retiring in May 1949.

He died in 1995, aged 82.

Honours

Wolverhampton Wanderers
  • FA Cup finalist: 1939
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 16 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.