|
"SPANIARDS
MAUL ENGLAND—MARCIANO STYLE"
Clifford Webb, Daily Herald |
Officials
from
Italy |
Spain |
FIFA ruling on substitutes |
England
Party |
Referee
(black blazer)
Riccardo Cesare Pieri
34 (7 November 1920) |
|
Linesmen |
tbc |
tbc |
|
|
Spain
Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; ELO rating 12th |
Colours |
Red buttoned jerseys with wing collars, blue
shorts, black socks with red/yellow hooped tops. |
Captain |
Antonio Ramallets |
Manager |
Don Benito Díaz Iraola, 57 (17 April 1898). appointed
for the summer matches.
|
second and final match, W 0 - D 1 - L 1 - F 2 - A 3. |
Spain
Lineup |
|
Ramallets Simón, Antonio |
30 321 days |
1 July 1924 |
G |
FC Barcelona |
15 |
20ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Matito Domínguez, Román |
28 105 days |
2 February 1927 |
RB |
Real Valladolid CF |
1 |
0 |
only app
1955 |
3 |
Campanal |
23 94 days |
13 February 1932 |
LB |
Sevilla FC |
5 |
0 |
González
del Río,
Marcelino Vaquero |
4 |
Mauri |
21
22 days |
26 April 1934 |
RHB |
Athletic Club |
1 |
0 |
Lauzirika,
Mauricio Ugartemendia |
5 |
Garay Vecino, Jesús |
24 250 days |
10 September 1930 |
CHB |
Athletic Club |
3 |
0 |
6 |
Zárraga Martín, José María |
24 276 days |
15 August 1930 |
LHB |
Real Madrid CF |
1 |
0 |
7 |
Mañó Villagrasa, Daniel |
23 80 days |
27 February 1932 |
OR |
Valencia CF |
1 |
0 |
only app
1955 |
8 |
Pérez-Payá Soler, José Luis |
27 51 days |
28 March 1928 |
IR |
Real Madrid CF |
1 |
0 |
9 |
Kubala Stecz, László |
27 342 days |
10 June 1927
in Buda-pest, Hungary |
CF |
FC Barcelona |
5 |
1 |
10
|
Rial Laguía,
José Héctor |
26 216 days |
14 October 1928
in Pergamino, Argentina |
IL |
Real Madrid CF |
2 |
1 |
11 |
Gento López, Francisco |
21 209 days |
21 October 1933 |
OL |
Real Madrid CF |
1 |
0 |
unused
substitutes: |
Carmelo Cedrón Ochandategui, Canito, José María Maguregui Ibargutxi,
Miguel González Pérez, Ramón Alberto Villaverde Vázquez, Sócrates
Belenguer Pérez and Enrique Collar Monterrubio.... according to
BDfutbol |
team
notes: |
Journalist Bob Ferrier reported that Benito Diaz was the
'Spanish team manager who saw our failure against France.' -
Tuesday, 17 May 1955, Daily Mirror |
|
2-3-5 |
Ramallets - Matito, Garay - Campanal, Zárraga, Mauri -
Rial, Pérez-Payá, Mañó, Kubala, Gento |
Averages: |
Age |
25
years 146 days |
Appearances/Goals |
3.3 |
0.1 |
|
|
England
Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; ELO rating 5th |
Colours |
The 1954 Umbro
home uniform -
White v-necked short-sleeved continental jerseys, blue rayon shorts,
black socks with white tops.
|
p fourth of 43, W 2 - D 1 - L 1 - F 11 - A 6.⁴³ |
Captain |
Billy Wright
|
Manager |
Walter Winterbottom, 42 (31 March 1913), appointed as FA national director of coaching/team manager on 8 July 1946; |
record 52nd of 90, W 30 - D 10 - L 12 - F 129 - A 81. |
p seventieth of 139, W 43 - D 14 - L 13 - F 203 - A 102,
one abandoned.¹³⁹ |
|
³ |
Team chosen by Selection Committee, headed by
Harold Shentall, on Tuesday, 17 May. |
England
Lineup |
|
three
changes to the previous match (Dickinson,
Bentley & Quixall>Flowers, Revie & Wilshaw) |
FINAL league positions
(5 May) |
|
|
Williams, Bert F. |
35 107 days |
31 January 1920 |
G |
Wolverhampton Wanderers FC (FL RU) |
22 |
29ᵍᵃ |
2 |
Sillett, R. Peter T. |
22 106 days |
1 February 1933 |
RB |
Chelsea FC (FL CHAMPIONS) |
2 |
0 |
3 |
Byrne, Roger W. |
25 252 days |
8 September 1929 |
LB |
Manchester United FC
(FL 5th) |
12 |
0 |
4 |
Dickinson, James
W. |
30
24 days |
24 April 1925 |
RHB |
Portsmouth
FC (FL 3rd) |
39 |
0 |
5 |
Wright, William A. |
31 101 days |
6 February 1924 |
CHB |
Wolverhampton Wanderers FC (FL RU) |
67 |
3 |
most apps 1952-55 |
6
|
Edwards, Duncan |
18 229 days |
1 October 1936 |
LHB |
Manchester United FC (FL 5th) |
3 |
0 |
7 |
Matthews, Stanley |
40 107 days |
1 February 1915 |
OR |
Blackpool FC (FL 19th) |
44 |
9 |
oldest outfield player |
8
|
Bentley,
T.F. Roy |
31 1 day |
17 May 1924 |
IR |
Chelsea
FC (FL CHAMPIONS) |
11 |
8 |
9 |
Lofthouse, Nathaniel |
29 264 days |
27 August 1925 |
CF |
Bolton Wanderers FC (FL 18th) |
25 |
25 |
no number worn in the second half |
10 |
Quixall, Albert |
21 282 days |
9 August 1933 |
IL |
Sheffield Wednesday FC (FL 22nd rel.) |
4 |
0 |
11 |
Wilshaw, Dennis J. |
29 68 days |
11 March 1926 |
OL |
Wolverhampton Wanderers FC (FL
RU) |
6 |
7 |
unused
substitutes: |
not named, but certainly
Reg Matthews (Coventry City FC (FL3S
9th)). |
team notes: |
"In one blatant obstruction,
centre-forward Nat Lofthouse had his shirt almost torn from his back.
He played in the second half in a new un-numbered shirt". "The
one in which he had started the game had been clawed off his back by
Spanish centre-half Garay, who stopped Nat with a rugby tackle as he
was tearing on to a pass by Bentley" "There were so many personal
feuds going on after this that the game lost all of its rhythm, and
the referee had little or no control." |
|
2-3-5 |
Williams - Sillett, Byrne - Dickinson, Wright, Edwards -
Matthews, Bentley, Lofthouse, Quixall, Wilshaw. |
Averages: |
Age |
28 years 241
days |
Appearances/Goals |
21.4 |
4.6 |
|
|
Match Report by
Mike Payne |
This
game will be remembered for all the wrong reasons. On a beautiful sunny
day, in front of 125,000 people in a magnificent stadium, the scene was
set for a classic confrontation. Sadly, by the end, it had degenerated
into nothing short of a brawl.
Spain had looked
forward to this match and the air of expectancy was much in evidence
around this lovely city prior to the kick-off. England withstood a
passionate opening by the Spaniards. Kubala was instrumental in all the
good things his team produced and they forced England back on their heels
for long spells. Bert Williams was looking very safe in goal, though, and
Billy Wright marshalled his defenders superbly, drawing on all his vast
experience.
As the first half
progressed, the visitors began to come into things a little more and with
Stanley Matthews roaming inside to gain more of the possession some
chances were beginning to appear. After 25 minutes, Ramellets saved at
Albert Quixall's feet bravely after the Sheffield Wednesday player had
been put through by Roy Bentley. Then Nat Lofthouse had the goalkeeper
diving at full length to save a screamer before, amazingly, with six
minutes of the half remaining England took the lead.
A
good move between Dennis Wilshaw, Quixall and Lofthouse set up Bentley.
The number eight continued with his impressive goal tally by shooting home
a beauty from 20 yards out. Three minutes after the goal came the incident
that, more than any other, lowered the tone of the game.
In a
breakaway attack, Bentley hit a long pass forward. It dropped in front of
Lofthouse, who for once was clear of his marker, Garay. The big
centre-forward strode clear and seemed certain to score, but two yards
from the edge of the Spanish penalty area Garay dived forward, rugby
style, to grab Lofthouse and end the attack in the most callous way
possible. From that moment England's dander was up and the second half was
'fought' out in a most uncompromising manner.
The Italian referee
struggled to keep control and all the rhythm went from the play as his
whistle constantly interrupted the proceedings. For the most part of the
second half, England were under heavy pressure as Spain searched for an
opening. With 25 minutes left, the impressive debutant Ugartemendia
dribbled hard at the England defence. As the ball fell between Sillett and
Duncan Edwards, Rial nipped in smartly to finish off the attack to
equalise.
Neither side impressed during the remainder of the match
and some players seemed more intent on kicking each other rather than the
ball.
|
Match Report by
Norman Giller |
In a
bad-tempered match Nat Lofthouse had his shirt ripped off his back in the
first-half, and played throughout the second half with a numberless shirt.
Even Stanley Matthews was drawn into the roughhouse, and conceded a
free-kick with a tackle, the first time anybody could recall him
committing a foul. Roy Bentley scored from a Lofthouse pass in the
thirty-eighth minute and Spain equalised in the sixty-fifth minute
following a mistake by Duncan Edwards that was as rare as a foul by
Matthews. The trouble flared after Lofthouse had been rugby tackled to the
ground when on a run towards the penalty area. There were so many personal
feuds going on after this that the game lost all of its rhythm, and the
Italian referee had little or no control. England's players were furious
over the foul against Lofthouse, and they could not believe it when the
player who had rugby tackled him was allowed to stay on the pitch. Tempers
were on a short fuse, and when Stanley Matthews was moved to foul somebody
then something had to be seriously wrong. The referee completely lost it,
and the wonder is that there were no legs broken. It was one of the
roughest and most bad spirited games in which England had played overseas.
|
Match Report
as appears in the F.A. Yearbook 1955-56 pages 29-30 |
The second match of the tour was
played in Madrid, before a great crowd of 125,000 spectators who filled
the magnificent Chamartin Stadium in the hope of seeing a classic
exhibition of football.
England scored after 38 minutes, as the result
of a really grand goal. Wilshaw, a success in the new position of
outside-left, made ground and gave to Quixall; a clever pass to Lofthouse,
a flick to Bentley who sent a crashing drive from the edge of the
penalty-area which gave Ramallets no chance. Spain equalised half-way
through the second half when Rial rushed in to score after Edwards had
partially deflected a shot by Mauri which Wright had half stopped. After
that all the England side - and especially Williams and Wright - threw
themselves gallantly into the fray in a determined resistance to hold
Spain to a draw in a game which was marred by the large number of
infringements. Territorially Spain were superior in the second half, yet
England would have been more dangerous if more of their attacks had
reached the Spanish goalmouth.
|
In Other News.... |
It was on 17 May 1955 that heavy snowfalls were reported in
Lancashire and Yorkshire, the Midlands, south Wales and in the
south west, in Dorset and Wiltshire. Snow was eight inches
deep in the Peak District, and London experienced its last
significant snowfall in May to date. |
|
The touring Football Association squad beat Jamaica 7-0 in
Kingston. |
|
Source Notes |
TheFA.com
BDFutbol.com
The Complete Book of the British Charts |
|
Rothman's Yearbooks
Mike Payne's England: The Complete Post-War Record
Norman Giller, Football Author
British Pathé |
|
cg |