Dick Swiveller
Well-known member
- Sep 9, 2011
- 9,524
- Thread starter
- #21
Alec was railing against the transfer system and this is an interesting snippet.
An outstanding example of the transfer market in players was enacted on our very doorstep at Brighton. We were playing Swansea on a certain Wednesday afternoon, who announced that the had placed Norman Lockhart, their 23-year-old Irish international left winger, on the transfer list. His price was £10,000, a seemingly huge amount for the Third Division standard. Now whether it was that our match was a lone one on the fixture list that day, or the anticipated competition for this player appealed, I cannot say. It may have been neither, and an outing to Brighton on a glorious sunny day may have afforded the sports writers the attraction of a breather by the sea. In any event, practically all of the London sporting Press descended upon us. Added to which, I may say without giving away any state secrets, many prominent Clubs' Directors and Managers also took a particular interest in the game.
Whether it be a record, I'm not sure, but I had yet to learn of a Manager travelling by 'plane in England to watch a player - Mr Joe Smith, the Blackpool manager, is reputed to have done so for this match. Others known to me were representatives from Luton, Chelsea, Bournemouth, and in addition, several were there with whom I had not previously become acquainted.
My colleagues and I had the unique experience of being overwhelmed to the extent of feeling strangers in our own domain! The scene outside our offices after the match was one which only happens perhaps once in a life-time to we smaller fry, and was aptly described as reminiscent of an Irish hiring Fair. The chief actors in this remarkable spectacle were the Swansea Manager, who was then Mr Haydn Green, taking the role of auctioneer, with the chief bidders Messrs. Joe Smith of Blackpool and "Dally" Duncan of Luton.
Looks like we lost 1-0 on Wednesday 1st October 1947.
An outstanding example of the transfer market in players was enacted on our very doorstep at Brighton. We were playing Swansea on a certain Wednesday afternoon, who announced that the had placed Norman Lockhart, their 23-year-old Irish international left winger, on the transfer list. His price was £10,000, a seemingly huge amount for the Third Division standard. Now whether it was that our match was a lone one on the fixture list that day, or the anticipated competition for this player appealed, I cannot say. It may have been neither, and an outing to Brighton on a glorious sunny day may have afforded the sports writers the attraction of a breather by the sea. In any event, practically all of the London sporting Press descended upon us. Added to which, I may say without giving away any state secrets, many prominent Clubs' Directors and Managers also took a particular interest in the game.
Whether it be a record, I'm not sure, but I had yet to learn of a Manager travelling by 'plane in England to watch a player - Mr Joe Smith, the Blackpool manager, is reputed to have done so for this match. Others known to me were representatives from Luton, Chelsea, Bournemouth, and in addition, several were there with whom I had not previously become acquainted.
My colleagues and I had the unique experience of being overwhelmed to the extent of feeling strangers in our own domain! The scene outside our offices after the match was one which only happens perhaps once in a life-time to we smaller fry, and was aptly described as reminiscent of an Irish hiring Fair. The chief actors in this remarkable spectacle were the Swansea Manager, who was then Mr Haydn Green, taking the role of auctioneer, with the chief bidders Messrs. Joe Smith of Blackpool and "Dally" Duncan of Luton.
Looks like we lost 1-0 on Wednesday 1st October 1947.
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