|
"Bravo!
These are the boys England need!"
Daily Herald |
Officials |
England |
FIFA ruling on substitutes |
Yugoslavia |
Referee
José Da Costa Vieira
47 (13 February 1908), Porto,
Portugal |
|
Linesmen |
R. Speake Manchester |
Kenneth C.
Hesketh Prestwich |
|
|
England
B Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; |
Colours |
the 1954 Umbro
home uniform -
White v-necked short-sleeved continental jerseys, blue shorts, black
socks with white tops. |
Captain |
Joe Kennedy |
Manager |
Walter Winterbottom, 42 (31 March 1913), appointed as FA national director of coaching/team manager on 8 July 1946; |
2nd
of 3, W
1 - D 0 - L 1 - F 6 - A 8. |
Trainer: Laurie Barnett (Manchester City) |
eleventh of fourteen B matches, W 7 - D 4 - L 0 - F 32 - A 6. |
Teams chosen by the Intermediate Selection Committee, headed by
Frank Adams, on Wednesday evening, 12
October, following the FA XI match with the RAF XI. |
England
B
Lineup |
|
seven changes
to the previous B match (Langley,
Wheeler, Atyeo & Haynes remain) |
league position
(12 October) |
|
12 |
|
Baynham, Ronald L. |
26 131 days |
10 June 1929 |
G |
Luton Town FC (FL 10th) |
1 |
1ᵍᵃ |
112 |
only B app
1955 |
113 |
2 |
McGhee, Thomas |
26 162 days |
10 May 1929 |
RB |
Portsmouth FC (FL
8th) |
1 |
0 |
only B app
1955 |
3 |
Langley, E. James |
26 254 days |
7 February 1929 |
LB |
Brighton & Hove Albion FC
(FL3S 5th) |
2 |
0 |
4 |
Wheeler, John E. |
27 85 days |
26 July 1928 |
RHB |
Bolton Wanderers FC (FL 6th) |
4 |
0 |
5 |
Kennedy, Joseph P. |
30 338 days |
15 November 1925 |
CHB |
West
Bromwich Albion FC (FL 2nd) |
2 |
0 |
114 |
6 |
Clayton, Ronald |
21 75 days |
5 August 1934 |
LHB |
Blackburn Rovers FC
(FL2 14th) |
1 |
0 |
115 |
7
|
Groves, Victor G. |
22 348 days |
5 November 1932 |
OR |
Leyton Orient FC
(FL3S 4th) |
1 |
0 |
only B app
1955 |
8
|
Atyeo, P. John W. |
23 254 days |
7 February 1932 |
IR |
Bristol City FC (FL2 4th) |
2 |
1 |
9
|
Jezzard, Bedford A.G. |
25 277 days |
15 January 1929 |
CF |
Fulham FC (FL2 TOP) |
3 |
6 |
mst B goals
1954-55 |
final B app
1954-55 |
10
|
Haynes, John N. |
21 2 days |
17 October 1934 |
IL |
Fulham FC (FL2 TOP) |
5 |
0 |
=mst B apps
1954-55 |
116 |
11
|
Perry, William |
25 39 days |
10 September 1930 in Johannesburg,
South Africa |
OL |
Blackpool FC (FL
TOP) |
1 |
2 |
|
|
unused substitutes: |
Reg Matthews (Coventry City FC (FL3S
10th)), Ken Barnes (Manchester City FC
(FL 13th)) and
Geoff Bradford (Bristol Rovers FC (FL2
5th)).
Ray King (Port Vale FC (FL2
3rd)) replaced
Matthews on Monday, 17th. |
team notes: |
The B team trained against and lost (1-4) the senior side under
floodlights on Monday, 17th, at the Cliff Ground, Broughton in
Manchester, in which Joe Kennedy twisted his ankle a few minutes in.
On Tuesday, they trained with the Manchester United FC side, the
practise match resulted in a 6-0 defeat. With some doubt over Joe
Kennedy's fitness,
Derek Ufton (Charlton Athletic FC (FL
5th)) was placed on standby |
|
2-3-5 |
Baynham - McGhee, Langley - Wheeler, Kennedy, Clayton -
Groves, Atyeo, Jezzard, Haynes, Perry. |
Averages: |
Age |
25 years 80 days |
Appearances/Goals |
2.0 |
0.3 |
|
|
Yugoslavia
B
Team |
|
Rank |
No official ranking system established; |
Colours |
Light blue jerseys, white shorts |
Captain |
|
Manager |
Dragomir Tošić, 45 (8 November 1909) |
Yugoslavia
Lineup |
|
Stojanović, Slavko |
25 140 days |
1 June 1930 |
G |
Fk Partizan |
2 |
Stipić, Mladen |
nk |
not known |
RB |
Fk Sarajevo |
3 |
Biogradlić, Ibrahim |
24 225 days |
8 March 1931 |
LB |
Fk Sarajevo |
4 |
Popović, Vladimir |
20 216 days |
17 March 1935 |
RHB |
Fk Crvena Zvezda |
5 |
Juričko, Zdravko |
26 204 days |
29 March 1929 |
CHB |
Fk BSK Borča |
6 |
Pajević, Božidar |
28 300 days |
23 December 1927 |
LHB |
Fk Partizan |
7 |
Antić, Sava |
25 232 days |
1 March 1930 |
OR |
OFk Beograd |
8 |
Čonč, Vladimir |
27 279 days |
13 January 1928 |
IR |
nk Dinamo Zagreb |
9 |
Lipošinović, Luka |
21 160 days |
12 May 1933 |
CF |
nk Dinamo Zagreb |
10
|
Prljincević, Zoran |
23 265 days |
27 January 1932 |
IL |
FK Radnički |
11 |
Tasić, Lazar |
24 197 days |
5 April 1931 |
OL |
Fk Crvena Zvezda |
unused substitutes: |
Srboljub Krivokuca (Fk Crvena zvezda) |
|
2-3-5 |
Stojanović - Stipić, Biogradlić - Popović,
Juričko, Pajević - Antić, Čonč,
Lipošinović, Prljincević, Tasić. |
Averages: |
Age |
24 years 332 days¹⁰ |
Appearances/Goals |
|
|
Match Report
by
Clifford Webb, Daily Herald,
Thursday, 20 October 1955 |
THE
"B" stands for the Boys England need. Theirs was a fine, heart-warming
performance at Maine-road, Manchester, last night, when they were really
hammered home their superiority over a tough, skilful, swift moving
Jugoslav team.
Remembering that their opponents'
reputation is second to none among the "B" teams of Europe, this win was
certainly something to get steamed up about. It emphasised once again the
superlative Soccer quality of Johnny Haynes, who was just as much the
guiding genius in attack as he had been against Denmark's under-23s. It
also put his Fulham team-mate, Bedford Jezzard, once again on the
international map; and marked down Bristol City's John Atyeo as the kind
of goal-getter who should find a place in England's senior side. Quite a
night, in fact, for the boys of the Second Division.
A
two goal lead at half-time was no more than we deserved, even if the icy
blasts did blow in England's favour. In fact, it was the kind of gusty
wind that what was of no permanent value. You just didn't know when it was
coming. We went in front after 29 minutes through John Atyeo, who
swivelled with amazing agility, for one so heftily built, to hook a volley
past the goalkeeper. The chance came from a Vic Groves corner-kick, and it
was Bill Perry who glanced the ball with his head in Atyeo's line of fire.
Twelve minutes later Jezzard smashed home a beauty from beyond the corner
of the penalty box, after Haynes had touched the ball on with perfect
precision. Between times we had seen much bright, speedy football from
both sides; and, believe me, England found their rivals no easy meat.
There was no lack of enthusiasm for the tackle about this
Continental side. They made our boys fight for every ball and brought the
best out of England's half-back line.
I thought Joe Kennedy
handled the mid-field raids of Amcic and Conc with magnificently cool
efficiency. On either side of him Johnny Wheeler and Ron Clayton worked
tirelessly; and all three made up adequately for some of the deficiencies
at full-back, where both Tommy McGhee and Jim Langley occasionally got
tied up against the speedy Jugoslav wingers.
But no doubt about it, the
boys who gave the top-notch outlook to the England attack were Haynes and
Atyeo. Their performances spelled high hopes for the future in that their
contrasting styles were blended to near perfection. Haynes roamed
ceaselessly to find the ball in the open space and set his line alight
with canny passes. Atyeo teamed up with Jezzard in a double spearhead, and
was in fact, because of the tremendous power and speed of his goalward
rushes, often more of a menace than the centre-forward. The Jugoslavs had
obviously heard all about the estimated monetary value of Vic Groves and
the danger thrusts of Bill Perry. Their backs close-marked both flank men
and cut down their usefulness of a result. But they paid for this
over-concentration with scanty midfield coverage.
Goalkeeper Baynham
came well out of some goal-front scrambles in the second half, and was
agile and sure in his handling of anything in the air. The Jugoslav
attack, fairly subdued before the interval, came much more into the swim
in the second half; but some of their better moves were ruined by sky-high
shooting. Outside-right Lipusinovic, who scored four goals against Germany
"B" recently, was always a potential source of danger, but Clayton
continued to back up Langley with fine appraisal of the more difficult
situations. I must say I took an extremely good view of
the Blackburn left-half last night.
Midway through the second
half came the electric burst from England that really settled the
Europeans. Two goals in less than half a minute. It was enough to rock any
visiting side. Johnny Haynes was right in it again. He weaved out to the
left before turning with agile skill to cross a ball that Jezzard headed
expertly just inside the post. Straight from the restart Groves inside to
flick a ball on to Perry, and Blackpool's South African cracked it smartly
home. Jugoslavia hit back with a picture goal from inside-left Prljicevic,
but before the finish Perry scored a fifth goal for England after Jezzard
had crossed the ball from near the right-corner flag.
|
Match Report
as appears in the F.A. Yearbook 1956-57 page 28 |
Yugoslavia's
'B' team came to play this match at Manchester (Maine Road) on October
19th with a big reputation, having previously beaten Germany 'B' by 8-0.
But England's young forwards gave a most encouraging display, and a 2-0
lead at half-time was thoroughly deserved. Wing-halves Clayton and Wheeler
helped England well on top in the second half, and it was clear from this
match that our full international team had plenty of good reserve material
available if and when it was required. The scorers were Atyeo, Jezzard
(2), and Perry (2).
|
Source Notes |
Official
matchday
programme
|
|
Rothman's Yearbooks
Original newspaper reports |
|
cg |