Andy Graver

Andy Graver
Personal information
Full name Andrew Martin Graver
Date of birth (1927-09-12)12 September 1927
Place of birth Craghead, England
Date of death 18 January 2014(2014-01-18) (aged 86)
Place of death York, England
Playing position Centre forward
Youth career
Quaking House Juniors
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Willington
Annfield Plain
1949–1950 Newcastle United 1 (0)
1950–1954 Lincoln City 170 (106)
1954–1955 Leicester City 11 (3)
1955 Lincoln City 15 (4)
1955–1957 Stoke City 37 (12)
1957–1958 Boston United 46 (31)
1958–1961 Lincoln City 89 (33)
1961–1962 Skegness Town
1962–1964 Ilkeston Town
Total 369 (189)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Andrew Martin "Andy" Graver (12 September 1927 – 18 January 2014) was an English footballer who scored 158 goals from 323 games playing in the Football League for Newcastle United, Lincoln City, Leicester City and Stoke City.[1]

Graver is Lincoln City's all-time leading scorer,[2] and topped the poll as the club's supporters voted for their "100 League Legends".[3] He spent three separate spells with Lincoln, interspersed with big-money transfers to Leicester City and Stoke City and appearances for Boston United in the Midland League. He finished his career in non-League football with Skegness Town and Ilkeston Town.

Football career

Graver was born in Craghead, County Durham in 1927.[3][4] His father, Fred, played professional football in the 1920s.[5] He worked as a coal miner while playing for Willington and then for Annfield Plain. He signed for Newcastle United as a professional footballer before the 1947–48 season, and played regularly for the reserve team in the Central League, but his only game for Newcastle's first team came on 21 January 1950, standing in for the injured Jackie Milburn in a First Division match at home to Manchester City which finished 1–1.[4][6] In September 1950, Lincoln City manager Bill Anderson persuaded the player to sign for the Third Division club for a fee of £5,000.[3]

In his first season at Lincoln Graver scored 20 goals in League and FA Cup, losing out as leading scorer by one goal to Johnny Garvie.[7] The following year, Garvie again scored 21 goals, but Graver's 39 (36 in the League from only 35 games) not only made him the club's top scorer but made a major contribution to Lincoln winning the Third Division North title and promotion to the Second Division.[4] Graver scored 36 goals from only 35 games in 1951–52, including a double hat-trick (six goals) – two scored with his right foot, two with his left, and two headers – as Lincoln beat Crewe Alexandra 11–1.[3] He injured a cartilage later that season so was unable to accept an invitation to appear for the England B team.[3] Graver was Lincoln's top scorer for the next two seasons, with 18 and 25 goals respectively.[4]

Described in his club profile as "fast, direct, and above all a fine opportunist in front of goal", Graver soon attracted attention from other clubs. Early on in his Lincoln career the club rejected an offer of £12,500 from Norwich City for his services.[3] Nottingham Forest made several bids for the player.[8] In December 1954, he signed for First Division strugglers Leicester City for a fee of £27,500 plus the player Eric Littler, valued at £600,[3] a Leicester City club record,[9] and little below the £30,000 paid by Tottenham Hotspur for Northern Ireland international and Aston Villa captain Danny Blanchflower not long before. Graver, described as "reluctantly" leaving Lincoln, said he was "afraid of the responsibility of living up to such a price tag".[8]

Playing alongside Leicester's record goalscorer Arthur Rowley, Graver scored in his first two games, but produced little more as the club failed to avoid relegation.[6][10] Lincoln paid £14,000 for Graver's return, but a few months later he moved on again, this time to Second Division Stoke City for a "large" fee.[3] He had less success at Stoke, producing 12 goals from 37 League games over a season and a half.[11] In August 1957, expectation was that he would return again to Lincoln; terms were agreed between the clubs, but Boston United – where his brother Alf was already playing – made the player a better contract offer.[12][13] Not only did Boston pay a Midland League record fee of £3,500 for Graver, they also signed Johnny Garvie from Carlisle United with the intention of reviving their previous goalscoring partnership.[13]

Graver provided 24 League goals in the 1957–58 season[13] as Boston finished in third place in the Midland League.[14] He remained with the club as they began their 1958 campaign in the Southern League, scoring at a goal a game, before returning to Lincoln City for his third spell.[13] He stayed with Lincoln until the end of the 1960–61 season, bringing his goals total to 150 from 289 games in all competitions and establishing his position as Lincoln's all-time top scorer.[2] After retiring from full-time football, he played for Skegness Town and then for Ilkeston Town, where he was reunited with Garvie yet again. However, injury restricted Garvie to five appearances, and although Graver's 16 goals made him leading scorer in 1961–62, and contributed to a fourth-place finish in the Midland Counties League and a Derbyshire Senior Cup-winner's medal, he was soon dropped to the reserves, where a broken ankle brought about his retirement as a player. He had scored 19 goals from 48 appearances in all first-team competitions for Ilkeston.[15][16]

During the 1960s, Graver coached Lincoln City's youth team. He worked for a finance company in the Lincoln area for 30 years, and lived locally after retiring.[3] Graver and 1950s teammate Tony Emery were the first two former players admitted to the club's Hall of Fame in May 1996.[17] In 2006, Graver topped the poll as Lincoln fans voted for "100 League Legends" as part of the celebrations of the club's 100th season in the Football League.[3][18] The following year, to mark the centenary of the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA), supporters were asked to vote for their club's all-time favourite player; Graver was again the Lincoln City choice.[19]

He died in 2014, aged 86.[20]

Career statistics

Club Season League FA Cup Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Newcastle United 1949–50 First Division 100010
Total 100010
Lincoln City 1950–51 Third Division North 3719213920
1951–52 Third Division North 3536333839
1952–53 Second Division 4018204218
1953–54 Second Division 4024414425
1954–55 Second Division 18900189
Total 170106115181111
Leicester City 1954–55 First Division 11310123
Total 11310123
Lincoln City 1955–56 Second Division 15400154
Total 15400154
Stoke City 1955–56 Second Division 24752299
1956–57 Second Division 13500135
Total 3712524214
Lincoln City 1958–59 Second Division 2913002913
1959–60 Second Division 2912203112
1960–61 Second Division 318223310
Total 8933429335
Career Total 323158219344167

Honours

Lincoln City

References

  1. Hugman, Barry J., ed. (2005). The PFA Premier & Football League Players Records 1946–2005. Queen Anne Press. p. 246. ISBN 1-85291-665-6.
  2. 1 2 "Most Goals in All Competitions For LCFC". The Lincoln City FC Archive. Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "#1 – Andy Graver". League Legends. Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Andy Graver". The Lincoln City FC Archive. Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 2 May 2010. Access individual season statistics via Season Stats dropdown menu.
  5. "Leeds United player profiles: Graver: Frederick (Fred)". Leeds United F.C. History. Tony Hill. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  6. 1 2 "Player Profile: Andy Graver". Toon1892. K.H. Scott. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  7. "Johnny Garvie". The Lincoln City FC Archive. Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 2 May 2010. Access individual season statistics via Season Stats dropdown menu.
  8. 1 2 MacKenzie, Arch (25 December 1954). "Soccer Player Market Hit By Inflation". The Gazette (Montreal). The Canadian Press. p. 10. Retrieved 2 May 2010. The way in which the big clubs skim the cream at top prices is illustrated by young Andy Graver, who reluctantly left second-division Lincoln City for Leicester City, struggling at the bottom of the first division. The deal was more than £20,000, and nobody was particularly pleased, including Graver, who said he was afraid of the responsibility of living up to such a price tag. Walker of Nottingham Forest made five bids for Graver, but had to give up.
  9. "League Side From Four Clubs". The Times. 20 September 1963. p. 5. Leicester's previous record payment for a player was the £28,000 paid for Graver, of Lincoln, in December, 1954.
  10. "The History of Leicester City Football Club". Leicester City F.C. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  11. "Andy Graver". UK A–Z Transfers. Neil Brown. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  12. "Lincoln City FC fans await graver's verdict on signing" (reprint; subscription required for full story). Lincolnshire Echo. Highbeam Research. 19 August 2008. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  13. 1 2 3 4 "Boston United Roll Call: G". Boston United FC. Ken Fox. Archived from the original on 19 April 2010. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  14. "Midland League Table – 57/8". Boston United FC. Ken Fox. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  15. Payne, Duncan. "Player Biographies: G". Ilsonfootball. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  16. Payne, Duncan. "1962/63". Ilsonfootball. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  17. Nannestad, Ian (13 December 2005). "The PFA pays tribute to Lincoln legend Tony Emery who sadly passed away recently". Professional Footballers' Association. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  18. "League Legends – The Results". Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  19. Smith, Martin (19 December 2007). "Best footballers: Shearer a hero on two fronts". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  20. "Andy Graver: 1927-2014". Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
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