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"ENGLAND CAN THANK THEIR LUCKY
STARS"
Sunday Mirror |
Officials |
England |
UK ruling on substitutes |
Scotland |
Referee
Charles
Adolphe Delasalle
49 (8 December 1897), France. |
|
Goal Attempts |
|
|
Attempts on Target |
|
Linesmen |
32 |
Throw-ins |
18 |
M.
Andrew Watt
Edinburgh |
George Henry Hann
50 (1 January 1897), Yeovil, Somerset |
4 |
Corner Kicks Won |
5 |
15 |
Bye-kicks |
14 |
Teams presented to the Prime Minister, The Right
Honourable Clement Richard Attlee PM, and A.Brook-Hirst, FA Chairman. Attlee also presented George Hardwick
with the Jubilee Trophy following the match. |
25 |
Free-kicks |
12 |
|
Possession |
from Sunday Post |
|
|
England
Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; ELO rating 4th |
Colours |
The 1946 home
uniform -
White collared jerseys, blue shorts, red socks.
|
P 5th of eighteen, W 4 - D 1 - L 0 - F 20 - A 5. |
Captain |
George Hardwick |
Manager |
Walter Winterbottom, 34 (31 March 1913), appointed as FA national director of coaching/team manager on 8 July 1946; |
5th of 13, W 4 - D 1 - L 0 - F 20 - A 5. |
P 5th of 139, W 4 - D 1 - L 0 - F 20 - A 5. |
|
Team chosen by Selection Committee headed by Arthur Drewry, on
Friday, 28 March, in Harrogate. |
England
Lineup |
|
two changes to the previous match
(Matthews & Mullen>Finney & Langton) |
league position (28 March) |
|
|
Swift, Frank V. |
33 107 days |
26 December 1913 |
G |
Manchester City FC (FL2 TOP) |
5 |
5ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Scott,
Lawrence |
29 354 days |
23 April 1917 |
RB |
Arsenal
FC (FL 17th) |
5 |
0 |
3 |
Hardwick,
George F.M. |
27 69 days |
2 February 1920 |
LB |
Middlesbrough FC (FL 5th) |
5 |
0 |
4 |
Wright, William A. |
23 65 days |
6 February 1924 |
RHB |
Wolverhampton
Wanderers FC (FL TOP) |
5 |
0 |
5 |
Franklin,
Cornelius |
25
78 days |
24 January 1922 |
CHB |
Stoke
City FC (FL 7th) |
5 |
0 |
6 |
Johnston, Harry |
27 198 days |
26 September 1919 |
LHB |
Blackpool FC
(FL 2nd) |
2 |
0 |
7 |
Matthews, Stanley |
32 70 days |
1 February 1915 |
OR |
Stoke
City FC (FL 7th) |
18 |
8 |
7 years
329 days after his last appearance |
8
|
Carter,
Horatio S. |
33 112 days |
21 December 1913 |
IR |
Derby County FC
(FL 11th) |
11 |
6 |
9 |
Lawton, Thomas |
27 188 days |
6 October 1919 |
CF |
Chelsea FC (FL 10th) |
13 |
12 |
10
|
Mannion,
Wilfred J. |
28 331 days |
16 May 1918 |
IL |
Middlesbrough
FC (FL 5th) |
5 |
6 |
665 |
11 |
Mullen, James |
24 96 days |
6 January 1923 |
OL |
Wolverhampton Wanderers FC
(FL TOP) |
1 |
0 |
the 19th
Wanderer to represent England |
reserves: |
originally
Phil Taylor (Liverpool FC (FL 3rd)) and
Stan Mortensen (Blackpool FC (FL 2nd)). Taylor was replaced by
Eddie Lowe (Aston Villa FC) on 9 April. |
Prior to this match, the England side were
set-up in Brighton, using Brighton & Hove Albion's ground to train on.
This is the most experienced and oldest post-war side so far. |
|
2-3-5 |
Swift -
Scott, Hardwick -
Wright, Franklin, Johnston -
Matthews,
Carter, Lawton, Mannion, Mullen. |
Averages: |
Age |
28
years 154
days |
Appearances/Goals |
6.8 |
2.8 |
oldest post-war team so far |
most experienced post-war team so far |
England teams
v. Scotland
(the previous year's game was a Victory International) |
1946: |
Swift |
Scott |
Hardwick |
Wright |
Franklin |
Mercer |
Elliot |
Shackleton |
Lawton |
Hagan |
Compton |
1947: |
Johnston |
Matthews |
Carter |
Mannion |
Mullen |
|
|
Scotland
Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; ELO rating 6th |
Colours |
Dark blue jerseys
with white collars, white shorts, blue socks with red tops. |
Captain |
Jock Shaw |
Selection |
Scottish Football Association
Selection Committee on Wednesday, 2 April 1947 |
Trainer: Hugh Shaw (Hibernian FC) |
Scotland
Lineup |
|
Miller, William |
22 143 days |
20 November 1924 |
G |
The Celtic FC |
2 |
4ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Young, George L. |
24 167 days |
27 October 1922 |
RB |
Rangers FC |
2 |
0 |
3 |
Shaw, John |
34 134 days |
29 November 1912 |
LB |
Rangers FC |
1 |
0 |
634 |
4 |
Macaulay, Archibald R. |
31 256 days |
30 July 1915 |
RHB |
Brentford FC, England |
1 |
0 |
635 |
5 |
Woodburn, William A. |
27 247 days |
8 August 1919 |
CHB |
Rangers FC |
1 |
0 |
636 |
6 |
Forbes, Alexander R. |
22 81 days |
21 January 1925 |
LHB |
Sheffield United FC, England |
1 |
0 |
7 |
Smith, Gordon |
22 322 days |
25 May 1924 |
OR |
Hibernian FC |
2 |
0 |
637 |
8
|
McLaren, Andrew |
25 78 days |
24 January 1922 |
IR |
Preston North End FC, England |
1 |
1 |
9
|
Delaney, James |
32 221 days |
3 September 1914 |
CF |
Manchester United FC, England |
10 |
3 |
638 |
10 |
Steel, William |
23 346 days |
1 May 1923 |
IL |
Greenock Morton FC |
1 |
0 |
639 |
11 |
Pearson, Thomas U. |
34 27 days |
16 March 1913 |
OL |
Newcastle United FC, England |
1 |
0 |
travelling
reserves: |
John Husband (Partick Thistle FC) and William Thornton
(Rangers FC). |
reserves: |
George Brown (Rangers FC); David Shaw
(Hibernian FC); Hugh Brown (Partick Thistle FC), John Aird (Hibernian FC), and
Husband; Jimmy Delaney (Manchester United FC) and Neil Dougall (Birmingham City
FC); Willie McIntosh (Preston North End FC); Thornton and Willie McCall (Aberdeen
FC); |
team notes: |
Tom Pearson played for England against Scotland in the December 1939
war-time international. Andy McClaren's debut goal is the first
such goal since Jimmy Dougall did so for Scotland in April 1939. He
becomes the third Preston North End player to score on his Scotland
debut against England in the last ten years, and the first to do so at
the Empire Stadium. |
"The Scottish team left for Sonning, near Reading (Berks), where
they will stay until the match." |
|
2-3-5 |
Miller - Young, Shaw - Macauley, Woodburn, Forbes -
Smith, McLaren, Delaney, Steel, Pearson. |
Averages: |
Age |
27
years 153 days |
Appearances/Goals |
2.1 |
0.2 |
youngest post-war opposition so far |
|
|
Match Report
by Mike Payne |
THE
Home International Championship went to England after their draw
in this final match of the season against Scotland. It was not a
very good display and it was the Scots who gained most of the
credit.
Over
98,000 spectators packed into Wembley on a glorious sunny day. The pitch
looked superb and it was a very colourful scene especially when
decorated by the pipes and drums of the Scots Guards. The teams
were presented to the Prime Minister, Clement Atlee, before the
kick-off.
The first-half belonged to Scotland. Driven on by
marvellous displays from Macauley and Forbes in the midfield, they
tore England apart. The rhythm that had been seen in England's
previous games was completely upset and the usual inspirational
pair, Raich Carter and Wilf Mannion, just could not get going
against their Scottish counterparts.
After 15 minutes
Scotland took the lead their play deserved. The move typified
their native quality. Shaw found Pearson with a good pass. The
winger dribbled down the left before laying on a perfect pass for
McLaren, bursting through the middle, to shoot home a fine goal
past the helpless Frank Swift.
England went from bad to
worse. Pearson saw a shot blocked. Swift twice dropped the ball
under pressure and there was a vociferous appeal for handball
against Laurie Scott. Somehow though, England held on until
half-time although at this stage they should have been out of the
game completely.
To their eternal credit the half-time
break was used to good effect by England and they restarted with a
much more determined look about them. Within minutes a sparkling
move involving Tommy Lawton, Jimmy Mullen and Cater ended with a
shot into the side netting.
Two other similar moves
lingered in the memory, on 56 minutes, England equalised. A superb
quick passing movement between Lawton, Mannion and Carter ended
with the latter shooting an excellent goal. At last England were
something like their old selves again. They forced three corners
in as many minutes as they searched for a winner but the Scots
were not going to let that happen and they gave as good as they
got, rising above themselves in a thriller.
There had been
some interesting individual battles on the day with Scott doing
well against Pearson, Smith worrying George Hardwick and Delaney
having Neil Franklin in two minds for much of the game. Mullen,
meanwhile, had a quiet but promising debut. In the end, though,
the two sides shared the points and, reluctantly, settled for the
draw.
|
Match Report
by Norman Giller |
A crowd of
98,250 gathered for this first
post-war international at Wembley. victory or a draw would give England the
Home Championship. Scotland were the superior side in the first half and
deserved their 1-0 half-time lead from a goal by Preston inside-right Andy
McLaren. England equalised in the 56th minute when Raich Carter finished off a
sweeping movement involving Tommy Lawton and Wilf Mannion. With the score
deadlocked at 1-1, Carter was racing unchallenged towards the Scottish goal in
the dying moments when he heard a whistle and pulled up. The whistle had come
from the crowd. Jimmy Mullen made his debut on the left wing, and Stanley
Matthews was preferred to Tom Finney on the right wing. It was Stanley's
18th peacetime international appearance and his first since before the war.
Wright and Franklin were developing into the Britton and Cullis of peacetime
football. There could be no higher praise. This match saw the start of the
Matthews-or-Finney controversy that lasted throughout their careers. The
selectors never seemed quite sure which to pick. They were both exceptionally
gifted players, but it was considered it would be too much of a luxury to play
them both. It started long arguments between fans, whipped up by newspapers,
as to which of them should wear the number seven shirt.
|
Match Report
by Glen Isherwood |
England had beaten both Ireland and Wales
and needed only a point to secure the first post-war British
Championship. Scotland had lost 3-1 to Wales at the Racecourse
Ground and could finish joint runners-up at best. They had lost
four out of five wartime internationals at Wembley since winning
in 1938.
Scotland dominated the
first half and took the lead when a pass from Pearson found Andy
McLaren who shot past Swift. England's equaliser came from a very
quick and incisive move which split the Scottish defence and
Mannion provided the in-rushing Raich Carter with the final pass
from which he drove the ball past Miller. England were to
retain the British Championship the following year, their fourth
successive peacetime title, while Scotland finished bottom without
a point. They returned to Wembley in 1949, however, with a
much-improved side. The 1951 Footballer of the Year, Harry
Johnston, made his first Wembley appearance.
|
Match Report
by John
Batson, The Weekly Dispatch |
MYSTERY WHISTLE COST ENGLAND A VICTORY It is doubtful if
there exists an Englishman so shameless as to moan about that
extraordinary Wembley incident yesterday, which resulted in
England being deprived of what seemed an odds-on and winning goal
against Scotland. Grey-haired Horatio Carter, the man who
saved England from complete disgrace by scoring the equaliser
earlier in the second half, was concerned in the incident.
As the Derby County inside right
galloped through on his own, the crowd's roar seemed to die
momentarily for some reason, and a whistle sounded. Carter braked
and half fell, looking back in astonishment towards the referee,
who waved that he was not at fault. Recovering his feet, Carter shot hard—and Miller saved. Without
that pause, I am sure that a second goal would have been scored
for England—and rank injustice done to the Scots, who were moral
victors, anyway, whatever the score."
"Nevertheless, but
for that misguided ass in the crowd blowing a whistle, England
would have won, for to this day, I still believe Raich Carter
would have scored." - Billy Wright
|
In
Other News....
It was on 11
April 1947 that the Soviet Foreign Minister, Vyacheslav
Molotov, refused to agree to the Saar Protectorate
becoming part of France, at a meeting in Moscow. It would
be another ten years before the disputed territory became
a state in West Germany. |
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Source Notes |
TheFA.com
Original newspaper reports LondonHearts.com Glen
Isherwood's Wembley: The Complete Record |
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Rothman's Yearbooks Mike Payne's England: The Complete Post-War Record
Norman Giller, Football Author
British Pathé |
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