Errr dick knight maybe
Tony Bloom.
TB
No, our truely great Chairmen from the 70s & 80s! Unlike our current joker, he put a fortune into the club and took us all the way to Wembly and the top Div! It must be him!
There is only one candidate really, it has to be Charlie Webb.
Checking Tim Carder's book, he made 275 appearances for us scoring 79 goals between 1909 and 1914, before managing us for 28 years (!), from 1919 to 1947, a total of 1,215 matches.
He was a full Irish international and scored the winner in the 1910 Charity Shield which earnt us the unofficial title of 'Champions of England'. In all, he was associated with the club for 40 years.
He also fought in the First World War and was captured by the Germans, spending eight months in a PoW camp.
A true Albion legend.
There is only one candidate really, it has to be Charlie Webb.
Checking Tim Carder's book, he made 275 appearances for us scoring 79 goals between 1909 and 1914, before managing us for 28 years (!), from 1919 to 1947, a total of 1,215 matches.
He was a full Irish international and scored the winner in the 1910 Charity Shield which earnt us the unofficial title of 'Champions of England'. In all, he was associated with the club for 40 years.
He also fought in the First World War and was captured by the Germans, spending eight months in a PoW camp.
A true Albion legend.
There is only one candidate really, it has to be Charlie Webb.
Checking Tim Carder's book, he made 275 appearances for us scoring 79 goals between 1909 and 1914, before managing us for 28 years (!), from 1919 to 1947, a total of 1,215 matches.
He was a full Irish international and scored the winner in the 1910 Charity Shield which earnt us the unofficial title of 'Champions of England'. In all, he was associated with the club for 40 years.
He also fought in the First World War and was captured by the Germans, spending eight months in a PoW camp.
A true Albion legend.
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
I have to say that I'm a Mike Bamber fan. The 70's was an amazing time to follow the Albion and it was all down to him. A walk of fame would be a great way to honour our greatest heroes, many of whom never kicked a ball for the club; Bamber, Knight, Gritt, Mullery, Bloom and Lord Perry of Falmer.
A fitting epitaph:
In his 1994 autobiography, Clough said that Bamber was the nicest and best chairman he ever worked for, and if Bamber had been alive, and Clough was tempted to come out of retirement, Bamber's would have been the offer he would have taken.
Dick Knight, Martin Perry and Tony Bloom!