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Bobby Thomson (footballer, born 1943)
England international footballer

Bobby Thomson (footballer, born 1943)

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
England international footballer
A.K.A.
Robert Anthony Thomson
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Smethwick
Place of death
Russells Hall Hospital
Age
65 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Robert Anthony "Bobby" Thomson (5 December 1943 – 19 August 2009) was an English professional footballer. He made 478 appearances in the Football League and won eight caps for England.
Something of a legend at his first club – Wolverhampton Wanderers, he is considered to be one of the finest full-backs ever to have played for the team. Departing Wolves in 1969, he then moved on to Birmingham City and then Luton Town. He was promoted out of the Second Division with all three clubs. His later career involved moving between numerous clubs, both at home and abroad. He spent time as player-coach at Connecticut Bicentennials and player-manager of Stafford Rangers.

Playing style

Thomson was an exceptionally fast full-back and was also extremely adept at back-pedalling.

Club career

Thomson was born in Smethwick, which was then in Staffordshire. He joined local side Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1959 upon leaving Lyndon High School in Solihull. He signed professional forms in July 1961, before making his senior debut on 27 January 1962 in an FA Cup tie against Black Country rivals West Bromwich Albion. Between his debut in 1962 to 1967 he missed just 11 first team games.

Unfortunately for Thomson, he was too late for the glory years, and instead came through under the tail-end of manager Stan Cullis' sixteen-year reign. Their best finish during Thomson's time was fifth in the First Division in 1962–63. The club fell to the Second Division in 1964–65. They won promotion at the second time of asking – in 1966–67, as runners-up. In Summer 1967 he was part of the Wolves side that played in the United States, guesting as the Los Angeles Wolves, under which guise they won the United Soccer Association league championship.

In March 1969, Thomson moved on to Birmingham City for £40,000, teaming up with his former boss Stan Cullis, though Cullis retired early the next year. He played 44 games of the 1969–70 campaign, in a settled back four made up of Thomson, Dave Robinson, Garry Pendrey, and Ray Martin. However he fell out of favour under new boss Freddie Goodwin, and featured just 15 times in 1970–71. In 1971–72, Birmingham gained promotion to the top tier, as runners-up behind Norwich City. He did not play any first team games however, and instead spent part of 1971 on loan at nearby Third Division club Walsall.

In 1972, he moved on to Luton Town, another Second Division side with ambitions of top-flight football. Thomson's teams had a knack of finishing second in the second tier, as the "Hatters" achieved this in 1973–74, as they watched Middlesbrough sprint away with the title. Luton were unfortunate to go back down in 1974–75, finishing a mere point from the safety of Tottenham Hotspur in 19th.

In 1976, his career drawing to a close and his best days behind him, Thomson went back to the States, spending a short period with Hartford Bicentennials. He returned to the Football League, and the West Midlands, with Third Division Port Vale in October 1976. He made an 'impressive' debut in a 3–2 defeat to Wrexham at Vale Park on 16 October 1976 and earned himself both a regular first team spot and the captaincy. He played 24 games for Roy Sproson's team in 1976–77, before he returned to the re-branded Connecticut Bicentennials as player-coach in March 1977.

He stayed with the Connecticut Bicentennials for two years, before returning to England with non-league Worcester City. He later became player-manager of Stafford Rangers. Another spell in the USA with Memphis Rogues in the NASL followed, before he joined Brewood, Solihull Borough and then Tipton Town.

International career

Thomson won eight full caps with the senior team between 1963 and 1964. He was selected by Alf Ramsey and made his full international debut on 20 November 1963 in an 8–3 Home International victory over Northern Ireland. His final international appearance came in December 1964.

He also played fifteen games for the England under-23 team, which was a record.

Later life

He was married to Jan and had three children. After retiring from playing, he ran a sports shop in Sedgley in the West Midlands. He was known to take part in Wolves All Stars charity games from his retirement up until his last years, as well as help coach youngsters in Oldbury.

He died of prostate cancer at Russells Hall Hospital in Dudley at the age of 65. He had apparently recovered from a first occurrence of the illness, only to succumb after suffering a relapse.

Statistics

Club statistics

  • Sourced from Bobby Thomson profile at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Los Angeles Wolves (guest)1967USA123123
Wolverhampton Wanderers1961–62First Division1401000150
1962–63First Division4201000430
1963–64First Division4201000430
1964–65First Division4008000480
1965–66Second Division4103000440
1966–67Second Division3914120452
1967–68First Division3610000361
1968–69First Division2402000260
Total2782201203003
Birmingham City1968–69Second Division1000000100
1969–70Second Division4201010440
1970–71Second Division1100040150
Total6301050690
Walsall (loan)1971–72Third Division91000091
Luton Town1972–73Second Division4204071531
1973–74Second Division4214060521
1974–75First Division1700040210
1975–76Second Division90000090
Total1101801711352
Hartford Bicentennials1976NASL240240
Port Vale1976–77Third Division1806000240
Connecticut Bicentennials1977NASL250250
Memphis Rogues1978NASL220220
1979NASL291291
1979–80NASL Indoor110110
1980NASL270270
Total8910000891

International statistics

England national team
YearAppsGoals
196310
196470
Total80

Honours

with Wolverhampton Wanderers
  • Football League Second Division runners-up: 1966–67
with Luton Town
  • Football League Second Division runners-up: 1973–74

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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