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Jock Rutherford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English footballer and manager (1884–1963)

Jock Rutherford
Personal information
Date of birth(1884-10-12)12 October 1884
Place of birthPercy Main, Northumberland, England
Date of death21 April 1963(1963-04-21) (aged 78)
Height5 ft8+12 in (1.74 m)[1]
PositionOutside right
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1902–1913Newcastle United290(78)
1913–1923Arsenal177(21)
1923Stoke0(0)
1923–1926Arsenal45(4)
1926–1927Clapton Orient9(0)
1928Tunbridge Wells Rangers
Total521(103)
International career
1904–1908England11(3)
Managerial career
1923Stoke
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

John Rutherford (12 October 1884 – 21 April 1963) was an Englishfootballer who played inthe Football League forArsenal,Clapton Orient andNewcastle United. He played 11 times forEngland, and had a short and unsuccessful spell as manager ofStoke.[2]

Club career

[edit]

Born inPercy Main,North Shields, Northumberland, Rutherford was known for his longevity; he played nearly six hundredFootball League andFA Cup matches, despite four seasons of football being cancelled due toWorld War I. He started his career atNewcastle United, making his debut in 1902 againstWest Bromwich Albion, scoring twice. Nicknamed "the Newcastle flyer", he spent ten seasons at the "Magpies", as anoutside right renowned for his pace and close control. Newcastle were a dominant force at the time with Rutherford picking up threeFirst Division medals, and played in five FA Cup finals. Although Newcastle only won the1910 final againstBarnsley, by 2–1 in a replay. Rutherford himself scored the equaliser in the first match, in the very last minute of normal time for a 1–1 draw.[3][4][5]

At the start of the1913–14 season, Rutherford fell out with the Newcastle management over his wages, and he was promptly sold toWoolwich Arsenal, who had just been relegated to theSecond Division. He made his Arsenal debut againstNottingham Forest on 1 November 1913 and scored twice in a 3–2 win, and quickly became a regular in the side. When the First World War broke out, Rutherford continued to guest for Arsenal in wartime matches. Despite being 35 when first-class football resumed in 1919, he continued to play regularly for Arsenal who had been promoted back to the First Division for another four seasons.[6]

In March 1923 Rutherford was approached byStoke, who had heard that he interested into moving into management.[2] There were testing times for Stoke who after being promoted to the First Division the year before were now four points adrift at the bottom of the table with one win in 11.[2] So it seemed perfect timing for Rutherford, at the age of 38 he was being offered not only the chance to take over the reins of a First Division club but to continue playing in a player-manager role, an offer he found too good to refuse.[2] It was only when he arrived at theVictoria Ground on 3 April that he realised what poor condition the club was in.[2] With five games of the1922–23 season left, Stoke needed to win four to have any chance of staying up.[2] It didn't happen and Stoke suffered relegation to the Second Division but there was optimism that an instant return could be had with Rutherford in charge.[2]

But a strange set of circumstances led to his swift departure. Firstly his old club Arsenal held a retirement party for him where he was presented with a silver tea set. But instead of the party and gift acting as closure with Arsenal, it merely served to reacquaint him with former friends.[2] Then he was involved in a car accident which left him unable to return toStoke-on-Trent for the start of the1923–24 season. Then the saga took a bizarre twist: as Stoke were still waiting him to return to the club, Rutherford instead quit and re-signed as a player for Arsenal.[2] In total, he was in charge of Stoke for just four weeks, making him the club's shortest-serving manager.[2]

The 39-year-old Rutherford re-signed for Arsenal in September, and played over twenty matches in each of the next two seasons. He retired in the summer of 1925, but found the temptation to play football too much, and promptly signed for Arsenal for a third time in January 1926, and played for the remainder of that season. He played his final match for the Gunners againstManchester City on 20 March 1926, at the age of 41 years and 159 days. With that, Rutherford set a record, as Arsenal's oldest ever first-team player, which still stands to this day.[6][7]

Rutherford left Arsenal for the final time in the summer of 1926; in all, he played 232 matches and scored 27 goals for the club.[7]He spent a single season atClapton Orient before finally hanging his boots up in 1927. In 1928 he came out of retirement and signed forTunbridge Wells Rangers, playing in only one game in the FA Cup. After retiring, he settled inNeasden and ran anoff-licence.

International career

[edit]

While at Newcastle, Rutherford also played forEngland, making his debut againstWales on 9 April 1904. He went on to win eleven caps for his country and score three goals, making his last appearance againstBohemia, a country that technically did not exist at the time, in1908.[3]

Family

[edit]

Rutherford's brothersSep andBob were also professional footballers. He was married twice: first to Edith Olive McQueen in May 1908 – with whom he had a son,John, who was on Arsenal's books at the same time as his father, but only ever played one League match for the club – and then to Blodwen Jones in 1944.[3] His great-grandsonGreg Rutherford is the2012 Olympic long jump champion.[8][3]

Career statistics

[edit]

As a player

[edit]
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[9]
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Newcastle United1901–02First Division11500115
1902–03First Division22600226
1903–04First Division33710347
1904–05First Division3110503610
1905–06First Division349824211
1906–07First Division3410103510
1907–08First Division1911642515
1908–09First Division24552297
1909–10First Division248743112
1910–11First Division15151202
1911–12First Division23410244
1912–13First Division20251253
Total29078441433492
Arsenal1913–14Second Division21600216
1914–15Second Division26320283
1919–20First Division36321384
1920–21First Division32710337
1921–22First Division36141402
1922–23First Division26100261
Total177219218623
Stoke1922–23First Division000000
Arsenal1923–24First Division22200222
1924–25First Division20200202
1925–26First Division301040
Total45410464
Clapton Orient1926–27Second Division900090
Career total5211035416575119

International

[edit]

Source:[10]

National teamYearAppsGoals
England190410
190730
190873
Total113

As a manager

[edit]
Managerial record by club and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Stoke[2]1 March 19236 May 192311236018.2
Total11236018.2

Honours

[edit]

Club

[edit]
Newcastle United[3]

Individual

[edit]
  • Newcastle United Hall of Fame[4]

References

[edit]
Specific
  1. ^The Vagrant (22 August 1921). "First Division prospects. Arsenal".Athletic News. Manchester. p. 5.
  2. ^abcdefghijkMatthews, Tony (1994).The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. Lion Press.ISBN 0-9524151-0-0.
  3. ^abcde"Jock Rutherford".EnglandFootballOnline.com. Retrieved25 April 2017.
  4. ^ab"Jock Rutherford".NUFC.co.uk.
  5. ^"Newcastle City Games a chance for Greg Rutherford to follow in his Toon hero great-grandpa's footsteps".Mirror.co.uk. 11 September 2015.
  6. ^ab"John Rutherford".Arsenal.com.
  7. ^ab"31. Rutherford becomes oldest Gunner".Arsenal.com.
  8. ^"Greg Rutherford wins Olympic long jump gold for Great Britain". BBC Sport. 4 August 2012. Retrieved25 April 2017.
  9. ^Jock Rutherford at the English National Football Archive(subscription required)
  10. ^Rutherford, Jock at National-Football-Teams.com
General
Newcastle United F.C. – Hall of Fame inductees
(c) =caretaker manager
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