|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; |
Colours |
"the green-shirted Germans" |
Captain |
|
Manager |
Joséf Herberger, 56 (28 March 1897) appointed in 1950 |
West
Germany
Lineup |
|
Kwaitkowski, Heinrich |
25 251 days |
16 July 1926 |
G |
BvB 09 eV Dortmund |
2 |
Deinert, Rudolf |
25 295 days |
2 June 1928 |
RB |
TeBe Berlin |
3 |
Erhardt, Herbert |
24 261 days |
6 July 1930 |
LB |
SpVgg Fürth |
4 |
Lang, Walter |
28 296 days |
1 June 1925 |
RHB |
1. FC Schweinfurt 05 |
5 |
Schäfer, Hans |
26 156 days |
19 October 1927 |
CHB |
1. FC Koln |
6 |
Harpers, Gerhard |
26 12 days |
12 March 1928 |
LHB |
SV Sodingen |
7 |
Ernst, Otto |
nk |
not known |
OR |
not known |
8 |
Lettl, Heinz |
21 69 days |
14 January 1933 |
IR |
FC
Bayern München |
9 |
Kreß, Richard |
29 18 days |
6 March 1925 |
CF |
Frankfurter SG
Eintracht |
10 |
Laszig, Otto |
19
86 days |
28 December 1934 |
IL |
FC Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 04 eV |
11 |
Krämer, Hans |
25
298 days |
30 May 1928 |
OL |
FC Gelsenkirchen-Schalke 04 eV |
unused
substitutes: |
not known |
team notes: |
Most newspaper reports state that Ludwig Kwiatkowski was in goal,
Ludwig was a defender and played with SF Katernberg, and it was
actually Heinz who was also the Dortmund goalkeeper between 1952 and
1966. |
|
2-3-5 |
Kwaitkowski - Deinert, Erhard - Lang, Schaefer, Harpers
- Ernst, Lettle, Kress, Laszig, Kraemer |
Averages: |
Age |
25 years 139 days¹⁰ |
Appearances/Goals |
|
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; |
Colours |
The
1949 home uniform -
White collared jerseys with
blue shorts, socks not known. |
Captain |
Ken Armstrong |
Manager |
Walter Winterbottom, 40 (31 March 1913), appointed as FA national director of coaching/team manager on 8 July 1946; |
second, W 1 - D 1 - L 0 - F
5 - A 1.³ |
ninth
of fourteen B matches, W 6 - D 3 - L 0 - F 26 - A 4. |
|
Team chosen by the Intermediate Selection Committee, headed by Joe Richards, on Monday, 14
March. |
England
Lineup |
|
five
changes
to the previous
B match |
league position
(14 March) |
|
9 |
|
Burgin, Edward |
26
329 days |
29 April 1927 |
G |
Sheffield United FC
(FL 19th) |
1 |
0ᵍᵃ |
93 |
2 |
Staniforth, Ronald |
29 345 days |
13 April 1924 |
RB |
Huddersfield Town FC
(FL 3rd) |
3 |
0 |
final B app
1953-54 |
3 |
Byrne, Roger W. |
24
197 days |
8 September 1929 |
LB |
Manchester United FC
(FL 5th) |
3 |
0 |
final B app
1953-54 |
4 |
Armstrong, Kenneth |
29 294 days |
3 June 1924 |
RHB |
Chelsea FC
(FL 10th) |
2 |
0 |
94 |
5 |
Clarke, Henry A. |
31 29 days |
23 February 1923 |
CHB |
Tottenham Hotspur FC
(FL 13th) |
1 |
0 |
only B app
1953-54 |
95 |
6 |
Edwards, Duncan |
17 174 days |
1 October 1936 |
LHB |
Manchester United FC
(FL 5th) |
1 |
0 |
youngest B player |
7 |
Hooper, Harry |
20 283 days |
14 June 1933 |
OR |
West Ham United FC
(FL2 13th) |
2 |
1 |
8
|
Shannon, Leslie |
28 12 days |
12 March 1926 |
IR |
Burnley FC
(FL 4th) |
2 |
1 |
96 |
9
|
Jezzard, Bedford A.G. |
25
68 days |
15 January 1929 |
CF |
Fulham FC
(FL2 9th) |
1 |
|
3 |
|
=most B gls
1954 |
10
|
Haynes, John N. |
19 158 days |
17 October 1934 |
IL |
Fulham FC
(FL2 9th) |
2 |
0 |
97 |
11
|
Robb, George |
27 296 days |
1 June 1926 |
OL |
Tottenham Hotspur FC
(FL 13th) |
1 |
0 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
unused
substitutes: |
Des Thompson (Burnley FC
(FL 4th)), Jack Shaw (Sheffield United FC
(FL 19th)), Jimmy Glazzard (Huddersfield Town AFC
(FL 3rd)) |
team changes: |
The Selectors were farcically restricted. They could not consider
players who were appearing in the FA Cup semi-finals on 27th March, or
the Army and RAF teams, who are to play each other on the 25th.
Don Revie (Manchester City FC
(FL 18th)) was the original named inside right
until a groin injury ruled him out on 20th March. Les Shannon replaced
him on the 22nd. Billy Bly (Hull City AFC
(FL2 14th)) was the original named
reserve goalkeeper. |
|
2-3-5 |
Burgin - Staniforth, Byrne - Armstrong, Clarke, Edwards
- Hooper, Shannon, Jezzard, Haynes, Robb. |
Averages: |
Age |
25 years 200 days |
Appearances/Goals |
1.7 |
0.1 |
|
FIVE
thousand British troops, packed among the 40,000 Germans, tossed Union
Jacks high into the air here today as England's 'B' team punctuated the
second half with goals Nos, 2, 3 and 4.
Our selectors must have been
pleased with those last 45 minutes when our youngsters played with poise
and sometimes the brilliance of a great England team of the future.
Bedford Jezzard scored three of our goals. It was he who shot the heart right out
of a poor German side. Ludwig Kwaitkowski, 25-year-old Dortmund
goalkeeper, stood between Germany and Soccer disaster. He robbed Jezzard
of three further goals and his gathering of crosses from the touch-lines
was the finest I have ever seen—and the bravest as well. Major
England successes of the match, apart from Jezzard, were the Manchester
United pair, left-back Roger Byrne and 17-year-old left-half Duncan
Edwards. Edwards, from Dudley, is in the mold of Wilf Copping.
I hope our selectors name him next Monday to play against Scotland in
Glasgow on Saturday week. thousands of German eyes closed in
suspense when this young giant moved into a tackle. I did not envy the
five green-shirted German forwards. Harry Clarke also brimmed over with
firm, but fair determination. Ultimately all the home forwards, woefully
weak in the penalty area, had to listen to angry whistles from the
terraces. Byrne and Ken Armstrong, the Chelsea right-half, who did well
after a shaky start, should also be at Hampden Park. And Johnny Haynes,
Fulham's cheeky 19-year-old inside-left, did nothing to prejudice his
chances. To the team manager, Walter Winterbottom, goes a share of the
credit for this boost to our Soccer morale. After Jezzard had snatched
his first goal in 12 minutes, the white shirts of England retreated to
pack the penalty area. That policy brought us to the brink of defeat—and
silenced the khaki patches in the crowd. thousands of Germans, perched
high in the silver birches in the Stadium car parks, risked their necks as
they stretched to watch the green shirts storm round England's goal.
We had no forward, except Jezzard, sufficiently upfield to
challenge the German backs or even the half-backs.
Fortunately, England, too, had a fine goalkeeper in Ted Burgin, but two
good shots in the German attack might have won the game. Winterbottom's
words at half-time changed the policy of retreat. Kwaitkowski made
three magnificent saves in the first five minutes of the second half
before a fine pass by Haynes opened Germany's defence. Inside-right Les
Shannon, his first shot smothered, scored with the second. In 66 minutes
Byrne and George Robb paved the way for Jezzard's second goal, and his
third, in 89 minutes was laid on by Shannon. German football, I think,
has reached a standard far higher than this team would indicate. Of 17
post-war international matches they have won 11 and drawn three. But only
right-back Rudi Deinart, only Berliner in the line-up, and, of course,
Herr Goalkeeper, measured up to that form.
|