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Archie Macauley...........



hitony

Administrator
Jul 13, 2005
16,284
South Wales (im not welsh !!)
Dont spose theres to many on here actually saw him when he was the manager, didnt realise he ended up as a TRAFFIC WARDEN !!!




Archibald Renwick Macaulay (July 30, 1915 – June 1993) was a Scottish football player and manager.

Born in Falkirk, Macaulay started his playing career with Rangers, where he became a regular at the age of only 18. Playing in midfield as an inside right, he won a Scottish Cup medal in 1936 and a Scottish League Championship medal the year after. In 1937 he was transferred to West Ham United for £6,000; the Second World War interrupted his career somewhat but he still won a Wartime Cup medal in 1940 and played five unofficial wartime matches for Scotland.

Macaulay was signed by Brentford in October 1946, and made his official Scotland debut (against England at Wembley Stadium on April 12, 1947) but Brentford were relegated to the Second Division at the end of the 1946-47 season, and he was signed by Arsenal in July 1947 for £10,000. In his first season with the Gunners, Macaulay played 40 league matches and won a First Division medal. He continued to play for Arsenal as a near ever-present for the next two seasons, although he missed out Arsenal's 1950 FA Cup triumph after manager Tom Whittaker preferred fellow Scot Alex Forbes in the final.

Macaulay left Arsenal for Fulham in June 1950; in all he made 108 appearances in three seasons, scoring one goal. He also won six more caps for Scotland while at Arsenal, bringing his total tally to seven. He spent three season at Fulham, though he could not save them from relegation to Division Two in 1951-52. He moved to Guildford City after that, to become the club's player-manager.

In 1957 he succeeded Tom Parker as manager of Norwich City, where he led the Third Division side to the FA Cup semi-finals in 1959 in one of the most famous FA Cup runs of all time, and promotion to the Second Division the following year. In 1961 he moved on to West Bromwich Albion, though the Baggies did little under his two-year reign, instead enjoying mid-table obscurity. Macaulay finished his managerial career at Brighton & Hove Albion between 1963 and 1968, leading the club to promotion from the Fourth Division in 1965. After that, he left football management completely, and later worked as a traffic warden.[1] He died in June 1993, aged 77.
 




Clapham Old Mug

New member
Aug 6, 2004
182
Clapham
I began going to the Goldstone in the mid-60s and remember him as being a good, solid, professional manager.
Interesting point though - if you read the "where are they now" type newspaper articles about the good and high-profile players from the 70s and 80s, they all ended up doing pretty menial jobs post retirement. Can't see many of the present-day Premiership show-ponies doing that... Not sure they're any better footballers though.
 


hitony

Administrator
Jul 13, 2005
16,284
South Wales (im not welsh !!)
Clapham Old Mug said:
I began going to the Goldstone in the mid-60s and remember him as being a good, solid, professional manager.
Interesting point though - if you read the "where are they now" type newspaper articles about the good and high-profile players from the 70s and 80s, they all ended up doing pretty menial jobs post retirement. Can't see many of the present-day Premiership show-ponies doing that... Not sure they're any better footballers though.


My first albion game was in 1967, and yes you are right, he was a solid manager, what amazes me is he was only 53 when he retired from football for good, very young really, i wonder why he gave it up so early in life ?
 


sams dad

I hate Palarse
Feb 7, 2004
6,383
The Hill of The Gun
What an entertaining team Archie Macauley built.
With Bobby Smith leading the line , Jimmy Collins Jack Smith, Bill Cassidy ,Johnny Goodchild ,and Wally Gould in support , they were great days at the Goldstone.
Those 6 players all got 10 or more goals in a team that scored a total of 102 League goals in the 1964-65 promotion season.
Hardly surprising that the average home crowd was over 17000 ( in the 4th division!)
 


dougdeep

New member
May 9, 2004
37,732
SUNNY SEAFORD
He was a nice bloke. (For a Scot).
 




Freddie Goodwin.

Well-known member
Mar 31, 2007
7,186
Brighton
I also started watching in 67 and, at that time, all managers were required to be old, white haired and preferably Scottish so Archie fitted the bill.

Surprised he was only 53 when he left football though.
 




Cheshire Cat

The most curious thing..
3114019989

http://www.gdfcartophily.co.uk/item.php/IID/285242586
http://www.gdfcartophily.co.uk/item.php/IID/285242585
 


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