Charlie Webb

For other people with similar names, see Charles Webb (disambiguation).
Charlie Webb

Pictured in 1910
Personal information
Full name Charles Graham Webb
Date of birth (1886-09-04)4 September 1886
Place of birth Curragh Camp, Ireland
Date of death 13 June 1973(1973-06-13) (aged 86)
Place of death Hove, England
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Playing position Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1902–1908 Worthing
1906–1908 Essex Regiment
1908–1909 Bohemians
1909–1915 Brighton & Hove Albion 248 (73)
National team
1909–1911 Ireland 3 (0)
Teams managed
1919–1947 Brighton & Hove Albion

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


Charles Graham "Charlie" Webb (4 September 1886 – 13 June 1973) was an Irish association football player who represented his country once as an amateur and three times as a professional. He was employed by English club Brighton & Hove Albion for nearly forty years as player and manager.[1]

Early life and career

Webb was born into a Scottish military family at the Curragh Camp, a military camp in County Kildare, Ireland, where his father, Sergeant William Webb of the Black Watch, was stationed. The family moved around following Sgt Webb's postings so the young Webb spent some of his childhood in Edinburgh Castle before settling in the Worthing, Sussex, area.[2][3] As a 16-year-old, Webb played first-team played football for the town club, Worthing F.C., and in his second season, he contributed to Worthing winning a treble of the Sussex Senior Cup, the West Sussex Senior League, and a local charity cup.[4][5]

In 1904, Webb followed in the family tradition by enlisting in the 2nd Battalion of the Essex Regiment. His trade in the Army was a clerk,[5] and while serving in Ireland, he furthered his football career playing for his regimental team in the Leinster Senior League,[6] and later, in the Irish Football League for Bohemians.[2] He scored freely for his regiment – in November 1907 he scored all seven in a 7–4 defeat of Dublin University[7] – and early the following year was the only player from outside the Irish League to be selected for the Leinster representative team to play Ulster.[8] He had a trial with Scottish club Rangers in 1908, and later that year was chosen to represent the Irish League in a match against the English League.[2] In November, he was capped by the Ireland amateur national team, in a match against the England amateurs in Dublin. Described by The Times' reporter as "distinctly the best of an indifferent forward line", he scored Ireland's late consolation goal in a 5–1 defeat.[9]

In January 1909, while on Christmas leave from his regiment, Webb played and scored for Brighton & Hove Albion in a Southern League match against West Ham United.[10] On his return, the Army discovered he had appeared alongside professionals and banned him from military football for 12 months. The Football Association fined the Brighton club £5 "for having approached and played Webb in violation of the Rules of the Association."[2][11] Rumours that the military authorities would prevent him playing for Bohemians in the semifinal of the Irish Cup proved unfounded,[12] but when Webb finished on the winning side, the Irish Times reported that Glentoran, the losing club, intended to protest his inclusion, on the grounds that playing in the Southern League made him ineligible to appear in the Irish Cup competition.[13] The result stood, though by the time the final was played, Webb had left the club.[14] Forced to choose between his military and his football career, he bought himself out of the Army and signed for Albion as an amateur.[2]

Brighton & Hove Albion

A few days later, Webb became the first Brighton player to be capped at full international level[2] when he made his debut for Ireland against Scotland at Ibrox Park on 15 March 1909. Ireland lost 5–0.[3] In his second international match, a week later against Wales in Belfast, Ireland lost 3–2, and Webb had to play the second half out of position at left half because of an injury sustained by English McConnell.[15] Called up after Aberdeen's Charlie O'Hagan withdrew from the party selected to play England in 1910, Webb was unable to accept the invitation.[16] His third and last cap came the following year, as replacement for James Macauley; given "one rare chance to open the scoring ... with no one to beat but the goalkeeper", he shot wide as Scotland went on to win 2–0.[3][17]

I have the feeling the majority of those non-partisan thousands who flocked in were secretly hoping it would be another David and Goliath story.

Charlie Webb, on the 1910 Charity Shield[18]

At the end of the 1909–10 season, the Times reported that "Brighton and Hove Albion have not had much difficulty in finishing at the head of the Southern League".[19] Webb played in every game as Albion won their first and, as of 2010, only major title.[20] This achievement earned them a place in the FA Charity Shield in which they faced reigning Football League champions Aston Villa at Stamford Bridge in London. The only goal of the game was scored in the second half, following a corner kick taken by Albion's Bert Longstaff. Aston Villa's goalkeeper parried the ball into a knot of players, from where Bill Hastings touched it to Webb, "who cleverly evaded a couple of Villa defenders and found the net with a rising cross-shot."[21] Crowds packed the area around Brighton railway station to welcome the victors home at 11:30 pm, and the Sussex Daily News suggested that the team could "now be dubbed as Champions of England".[21] A testimonial fund raised more than £120 which was distributed among the professional players. As an amateur, Webb could receive no prize money, so the club presented him with a gold tie-pin instead.[22] He turned professional soon afterwards.[2]

He finished as the club's leading scorer in 1912–13, with 13 goals in all competitions,[23] and went on to set a club record for goals scored in the Southern League of 64.[2] Though his Ireland career was at an end, Webb continued to be selected in representative teams. In September 1912, he scored for the Southern League as the Football League XI beat them 2–1 at Old Trafford, Manchester,[24] and the following season, he was selected for a Southern Alliance eleven to play that league's champions, Croydon Common; among his teammates was Patsy Hendren, the England Test cricketer.[25] A serious leg injury sustained in a match against Millwall in November 1914 effectively put an end to his playing career.[2]

First World War

On the outbreak of war, Brighton & Hove Albion supported the war effort by having a rifle range built at the Goldstone Ground. Webb led rifle drill on the pitch, using wooden replicas where there were insufficient actual weapons to go round.[26] He re-enlisted as a second lieutenant in the King's Royal Rifle Corps, and served on the Western Front from July 1917. Promoted to acting captain (the rank was confirmed after the war), he was leading a patrol near Nesle in March 1918 when they were challenged in French. Unfortunately for Webb and his men, the French speakers were German troops. Preferring to avoid unnecessary injury or death, Webb surrendered. He saw out the duration as a prisoner of war in Mainz, Germany. While awaiting repatriation, he received a letter from the chairman of Brighton & Hove Albion offering him the post of team manager, an appointment he took up on his demobilisation in 1919.[2][27]

Managerial career

The club had closed down during the war, so Webb's first task was not only rebuilding the team but also involving himself with rebuilding the ground.[27] Competition resumed in 1919–20, and the following season, Webb led the team into the Football League as a Third Division was formed largely comprising the Southern League First Division teams of the year before. Awarded a testimonial in recognition of his service to the club, Webb chose the League game against Watford in April 1921 as his benefit match; it attracted more than 10,000 spectators and raised nearly £500.[2][28] In the 1923–24 FA Cup, Webb led Albion to the fifth round (last 16), defeating First Division Everton on the way in what he later described as "the best Cup exhibition of any Albion team under my management".[29]

He earned a reputation as a sound judge of a player. Immediately after the war, the signing of former England international forward George Holley for a club record £200 fee was viewed as quite a coup. Holley suffered a career-ending injury, so hardly played, but Webb replaced him with Jack Doran who finished as the club's top scorer despite joining halfway through the season.[30] He brought Tommy Cook through from the juniors into the first team; Cook was top scorer in three seasons, but when he left the club to concentrate on his cricket career, Webb brought in the Queens Park Rangers reserve Hugh Vallance, who turned out to be a "goalscoring phenomenon" alongside Dan Kirkwood.[31] Again, when twice top scorer Arthur Attwood succumbed to appendicitis in 1933, Webb signed former Norwich City centre-forward Oliver "Buster" Brown who had failed to break into the first team at West Ham United; with regular football at Albion, Brown produced 41 goals in his first two seasons.[32]

Between the wars, Webb's teams finished in the top five of the Third Division South on ten occasions, but challenged seriously for promotion only in the latter half of the 1930s. He led the team to third place in 1936–37,[33] despite an uneasy relationship with the club's board, the supporters, and the press. The board came under criticism for alleged interference in team affairs, having undue influence over the manager in pressing the claims for selection of one player over another. Letters to the local press suggested that Webb should "be allowed greater freedom",[34] while in the Evening Argus, the pseudonymous "Crusader"'s "vitriolic attacks on the directors and management of Brighton and Hove Albion for their alleged lack of ambition and inept team selections ... generated a massive readership response" and led to "near physical confrontations with Charlie Webb, the beleaguered manager and former Albion player, despite the team usually finishing in a respectable position in the League table."[35] The club's relationship with the local newspaper worsened during the 1937–38 season, to the extent that "Crusader" was "either banned by the directors or was voluntarily taken off by [the editor]".[36] Webb himself told the Daily Express: "Here you have a town full of people with money, yet hardly one of them will give us a hand. Without attractive new players and a winning team you can't get gates and without gates you can't have money."[37]

Nevertheless, the national press recognised his achievements. A Daily Mirror feature in 1939 compared him to George Allison of Arsenal and Frank Buckley of Wolverhampton Wanderers,

but where some think and act in thousands of pounds, Charles is compelled to do the same in pence, and the consistently good football of Brighton is a tribute in itself ... His great knowledge of the game has saved his club money in the way of transfer fees, and the reserve team is composed entirely of players found by him, costing not a penny. Even the first team cost very little, the highest fee paid being £50, and yet Brighton have been keen fighters for promotion for the past three seasons.[38]

A Guardian retrospective on the club, written in 1973, described how "Brighton had a skilful team usually playing to the top six" under Webb, "whose transfer acquisitions were as often as not costed on the price of his train ticket and buffet sandwiches".[39]

Second World War and after

No longer of an age for active service, Webb joined the Home Guard during the war.[2] Albion continued to compete in the various wartime leagues, and Webb skilfully exploited the regulations allowing players to make guest appearances for the club nearest to their base.[20] He was particularly fortunate that the King's Liverpool Regiment's posting to Newhaven in 1941 gave him the pick of Liverpool F.C.'s pre-war team.[40] In their absence, he was reduced to selecting youngsters or soliciting members of the crowd to make up the numbers, as at Norwich City at Christmas 1940, when his travelling party of one senior player and three amateurs was supplemented by Jimmy Ithell of Bolton Wanderers, Norwich City juniors and local servicemen; Albion lost 18–0.[41] At the end of the 1946–47 season, at the age of 60, Webb handed over responsibility for team affairs to former player Tommy Cook, remaining with the club on the administrative side, as secretary and general manager. A few days after a 4–0 home defeat to Walsall left Albion at the bottom of the table, provoking a demonstration after the match, the directors appointed Don Welsh as secretary-manager. Webb stayed on until the end of the 1947–48 season to assist his successor, then left the club and retired from football.[2][42]

Such was Webb's standing in the game that he was awarded a second testimonial. In September 1949, Portsmouth, reigning Football League title-holders, though unable to field a full first team because "[their] dressing-room [was] like a hospital",[43] beat Arsenal, their predecessors as champions, by two goals to one in "an exhibition of memorable football" at the Goldstone Ground.[2][44] After his retirement, he wrote a regular column in the Sussex Daily News.[2] Webb continued living in the Frith Road house until shortly before his death in a Hove nursing home in 1973, at the age of 86.[45]

Personal life, character and legacy

Webb was married to Minnie for more than 60 years.[27] Their son, Ken, was married with a child and employed by the local newspaper, the Evening Argus, when he was killed while training as a pilot in the Second World War.[46] Their daughter, Joyce – born on the same day as the 1910 Charity Shield[47] – survived her parents. She spoke on screen at the football club's centenary evening,[48] at which her father was one of 24 former players and managers nominated as "legends" and profiled in the commemorative volume,[1][49] and, in 2003, unveiled a memorial plaque on the former family home in Frith Road.[50]

According to Jess Willard, one of Webb's post-Second World War signings, "everybody called him Mr Webb because he was a perfect gentleman".[51] A 1929 feature on the club in the Sussex County Magazine spoke of him as "one of the most dominating personalities associated with the club", discharging his managerial duties "with such conspicuous success" while remaining "genial and popular with directors, players and public alike".[52]

Statistics

Brighton & Hove Albion playing statistics by season and competition[2]

Season Southern League FA Cup Charity Shield Western League Western League Championship Game* Southern Alliance Southern Charity Cup Total
AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals
1908–09 155 00 00 10 20 00 20 205
1909–10 429 10 00 00 00 00 30 469
1910–11 3314 30 11 00 00 00 51 4216
1911–12 3817 10 00 00 00 00 31 4218
1912–13 3710 31 00 00 00 132 00 5313
1913–14 369 42 00 00 00 137 10 5418
1914–15 180 00 00 00 00 00 00 180
Total 2196412311102026914227579
Managerial statistics by competition[53]

CompetitionPWDLGFGAWin %
The Football League 8403611912881329112842.98
Southern League 4214820607233.33
FA Cup 7737172315610448.05
Third Division South Cup 13436212330.77
Totals 9724162193371566133742.80

References

  1. 1 2 "Albion Centenary Evening Of Legends". Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. 21 May 2001. Archived from the original on 3 June 2001.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Carder & Harris, Albion A–Z, pp. 254–55.
  3. 1 2 3 Dewart, Jonny, ed. (13 October 2007). "Charlie Webb". Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  4. "History". Worthing F.C. Retrieved 14 January 2011.
  5. 1 2 Vinicombe, p. 16.
  6. "Association Football". Weekly Irish Times. 18 January 1908. p. 23. (subscription required (help)).
  7. "Association Football: Comment on Matches". Weekly Irish Times. 9 November 1907. p. 15. (subscription required (help)).
  8. "Association Football". Weekly Irish Times. 11 January 1908. p. 23. (subscription required (help)).
  9. "Association Rules. Amateur International Match. Ireland v. England". The Times. 23 November 1908. p. 14. (subscription required (help)).
  10. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 50.
  11. Minutes of the Football Association Emergency Committee, quoted in "The Disqualification of Corporal Webb". The Irish Times. 6 February 1909. p. 5. (subscription required (help)).
  12. "Association Football: Irish Cup Gossip". Weekly Irish Times. 30 January 1909. p. 23. (subscription required (help)).
  13. "Notes on Sport: Association Football: Amateurs for the Irish Final". Weekly Irish Times. 13 February 1909. p. 22. (subscription required (help)). |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)
  14. "Association: Irish Cup Final Cliftonville v. Bohemians A Scoreless Draw". The Irish Times. 5 April 1909. p. 5. (subscription required (help)).
  15. "Association Rules. Ireland v. Wales". The Times. 22 March 1909. p. 20. (subscription required (help)).
  16. "Football. Ireland v. England". The Scotsman. 12 February 1910. p. 12. (subscription required (help)).
  17. "Scotland v. Ireland. A Scottish Victory". The Scotsman. 20 March 1911. p. 5. (subscription required (help)).
  18. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 54.
  19. "Association Football. The League Championship". The Times. 2 May 1910. p. 2. (subscription required (help)).
  20. 1 2 "Charlie Webb". Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. Archived from the original on 10 August 2002.
  21. 1 2 Sussex Daily News match report, 6 September 1910, cited in Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 55.
  22. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 55.
  23. Carder & Harris, Albion A–Z, p. 338.
  24. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 322.
  25. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 63.
  26. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 66.
  27. 1 2 3 "Time To Honour One Of Albion's All-time Greats". The Argus. Brighton. 15 April 2001. Retrieved 15 January 2011.
  28. UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Gregory Clark (2016), "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)" MeasuringWorth.
  29. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 80.
  30. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, pp. 68–70.
  31. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 91.
  32. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 102.
  33. "1930's". Brighton & Hove Albion F.C. Archived from the original on 16 June 2001.
  34. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 110.
  35. Hounsome, p. 58.
  36. Hounsome, p. 65.
  37. Macadam, John (16 December 1937). "Brighton should be higher class". Daily Express. p. 15.
  38. Thompson, John (18 February 1939). "John Thompson's Sportfolios". The Daily Mirror. p. 29.
  39. Samuel, John (2 November 1973). "New twist to an old tale". The Guardian. p. 27. (subscription required (help)).
  40. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, pp. 117–119.
  41. Camillin & Weir, p. 39.
  42. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 134.
  43. Thompson, John (28 September 1949). "Captain ill, they rush to buy a new star". The Daily Mirror. p. 10.
  44. Carder & Harris, Seagulls!, p. 139.
  45. Vinicombe, p. 55.
  46. Hounsome, p. 72.
  47. Vinicombe, p. 20.
  48. "Albion: Night of legends". The Argus. Brighton. 21 May 2001. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  49. Camillin, Paul (2006). Brighton & Hove Albion Miscellany. Brighton: Pavilion. pp. 113–14. ISBN 978-1-84196-188-0.
  50. "Plaque for Charlie Webb". The Argus. Brighton. 20 November 2003. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  51. "Survivor Jess cherished sporting life with Albion". The Argus. Brighton. 31 March 2001. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
  52. Shaw, Sidney Thornton (December 1929). "The Rise of Brighton & Hove Albion". Sussex County Magazine. Eastbourne: T.R. Beckett. III (12): 826.
  53. Carder & Harris, A–Z, p. 309.

Bibliography

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