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Tommy Lawton

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English association footballer (1919–1996)

Tommy Lawton
Lawton circa 1951
Personal information
Full nameThomas Lawton[1]
Date of birth(1919-10-06)6 October 1919
Place of birthFarnworth, England
Date of death6 November 1996(1996-11-06) (aged 77)
Place of deathNottingham, England
Height5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[2]
PositionCentre-forward
Youth career
1933Rossendale United
1933–1936Burnley
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1936–1937Burnley25(16)
1937–1945Everton87(65)
1945–1947Chelsea42(30)
1947–1952Notts County151(90)
1952–1953Brentford50(17)
1953–1955Arsenal35(13)
1955–1956Kettering Town30(15)
Total420(246)
International career
1939–19??The Football League XI3(2)
1938–1948England23(22)
1939–1946England (wartime)23(24)
1947United Kingdom1(2)
Managerial career
1953Brentford (player-manager)
1956–1957Kettering Town (player-manager)
1957–1958Notts County
1963–1964Kettering Town (caretaker-manager)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Thomas Lawton (6 October 1919 – 6 November 1996) was an Englishfootball player and manager.

Born inFarnworth and raised inBolton, he played amateur football atRossendale United, before he turned professional atBurnley on his 17th birthday. He also playedcricket forBurnley Cricket Club before his potential as a footballer won him a £6,500 move toEverton in January 1937. He went on to finish as theFirst Division's top-scorer in1938 and1939, helping Everton to finish aschampions of the Football League in the latter campaign. League football was then suspended for seven full seasons due to the outbreak of war in Europe, during which time he scored 24 goals in 23 appearances for England whilst guesting for Everton and some other clubs. In November 1945, he moved toChelsea for £14,000 and scored a club-record 26 goals in 34 league games in the 1946–47 season.

In November 1947, he made a surprise move toThird Division South clubNotts County for aBritish record transfer fee of £20,000. He helped the club to win promotion as champions in 1949–50 before he moved on toBrentford in March 1952 for a club record £16,000. In January 1953, Brentford appointed him player-manager, though he would only remain in charge for nine months. He joinedArsenal as a player in November 1953 for £10,000, where he saw out the remainder of his playing career. Despite losing much of his best years toWorld War II, he scored 260 goals in 433 league and cup competitions in 14 full seasons in theFootball League.

He had a promising start to his managerial career by leadingKettering Town to theSouthern League title in 1956–57, but then only had two more seasons as manager, getting relegated with Notts County in 1957–58 and then relegated with Kettering Town in 1963–64. During the 1970s, he struggled withdebt and related legal problems, which were reported in the media as an example of a celebrated person falling from grace.

He scored 22 goals in his 23England appearances over a ten-year international career from 1938 to 1948, including four againstPortugal in May 1947. He helped England to win twoBritish Home Championship titles outright (1946–47 and 1947–48) and to share the Championship in 1938–39. He fell out of international contention at the age of 28 due to his contempt for managerWalter Winterbottom, his decision to drop out of the First Division, and the emergence ofJackie Milburn andNat Lofthouse. In addition to his England caps, he also representedThe Football League XI and played in a specialGreat Britain game against Europe in 1947. He married twice and had two children and one step-child. His ashes are held in theNational Football Museum, and he was inducted into theEnglish Football Hall of Fame in 2003.

Early life

[edit]

Thomas Lawton was born on 6 October 1919 to Elizabeth Riley and Thomas Lawton Senior inFarnworth, Lancashire.[3] His father was a railway signalman, and his mother worked as a weaver at Harrowby Mill.[3] His father left the family 18 months after Lawton was born, and Elizabeth moved back into her parents' home inBolton.[3] Elizabeth's father, James Hugh "Jim" Riley, became Lawton's surrogate father.[3] Lawton's natural footballing ability earned him a place on the Bolton Town Schools team in 1930.[4] Lancashire Schools picked him at the age of 13.[5] Despite scoring a hat-trick in a trial game for England Schoolboys, he never earned a full England Schoolboy cap.[6] At the age of 14, he began playing for Hayes Athletic in the Bolton Senior League and went on to score 570 goals in three seasons.[7]

The FA's rules meant he was unable to turn professional at a club until he was 17, and Lawton's grandfather rejectedBolton Wanderers's offer for Lawton to work as a delivery driver for two years before turning professional at the club.[8] Lawton instead played as an amateur forRossendale United in theLancashire Combination, scoring a hat-trick on his debut againstBacup.[9] He took up temporary work at atannery and then joinedBurnley as assistant groundsman after his mother rejected an offer fromSheffield Wednesday as she objected to him travelling toSheffield daily.[10]

Club career

[edit]

Burnley

[edit]

Lawton played his first game for Burnley Reserves againstManchester City Reserves in September 1935. Though he struggled in this game, he became a regular Reserve team player by age 16.[11] After a poor run of form fromCecil Smith, Lawton was selected ahead of Smith for theSecond Division game againstDoncaster Rovers atTurf Moor on 28 March 1936; aged 16 years and 174 days, this made him the youngestcentre-forward ever to play in theFootball League.[12] Rovers centre-halfSyd Bycroft, also making his league debut, marked Lawton out of the game, which ended in a 1–1 draw.[13] Burnley had played poorly, though Lawton was praised for his "keen and fearless" performance by theExpress & News newspaper.[13] He retained his place for the following game, and scored two goals in a 3–1 victory overSwansea Town atVetch Field.[14] He picked up a groin strain in his third appearance, which caused him to miss two fixtures before he returned to the first team for the final four games of the1935–36 season; he claimed three more goals to take his season tally to five goals from seven games.[15]

Lawton continued to train his heading skills intensely in the summer of 1936 and also playedcricket forBurnley Cricket Club as a batsman in theLancashire League.[16] He scored asix against bothLearie Constantine andAmar Singh.[17] He scored 369 runs in 15 completedinnings for an average of 24.06.[18]

He turned professional at Burnley at 17 on wages of £7 a week.[19] His grandfather attempted to negotiate a £500 signing-on fee on his behalf but was rebuffed after the club alertedCharles Sutcliffe, Secretary of the Football League, who informed them that any attempt to circumvent the league'smaximum wage was illegal.[20] Lawton scored in his first appearance since signing the contract after just 30 seconds before going on to record a hat-trick in a 3–1 win overTottenham Hotspur, scoring a goal with either foot and one with his head.[21]

Everton

[edit]

In January 1937,First Division clubEverton paid Burnley £6,500 to secure Lawton's services and also gave his grandfather a job as deputy groundsman atGoodison Park; the fee was a record for a player under 21.[22] The move to Everton made him a teammate ofDixie Dean, his boyhood idol, who he was expected to gradually replace as first-choice centre-forward.[23][24] He later recalled that on his way to Goodison Park on his first day as an Everton player, he was told by atram conductor that "You're that young Lawton, aren't you? You'll never be as good as Dixie."[25] Dean was finally rested on 13 February, which allowed Lawton to make his first team debut againstWolverhampton Wanderers atMolineux; the match ended in a 6–2 defeat, though Lawton scored a penalty.[26] He spent the rest of the season at inside-left, with Dean at centre-forward, and ended the1936–37 campaign with four goals in 11 games.[27] He started the1937–38 season in the Reserves. He was installed as first choice centre-forward in September after Dean was dropped for punching club secretaryTheo Kelly.[28] On 2 October, Lawton scored the winning penalty in a 2–1 victory overMerseyside derby rivalsLiverpool atAnfield.[29] He ended the campaign with 28 goals in 39 appearances to become thedivision's top-scorer.[30]

Everton had a young but highly effective team for the1938–39 campaign, and Lawton was praised for the way he led the attack, with theEvening Standard's Roland Allen describing Lawton as a "clever footballer, bringing his wing men into the game with shrewd flicks and widely flung and accurate passes" after Everton recorded a 2–1 victory overArsenal atHighbury.[31] The game against Arsenal was part of a run of six wins in the first six games of the campaign, during which time Lawton scored eight goals.[32] Everton lost their lead at the top of the table toDerby County over Christmas, but returned to form and to first position by Easter.[33] They faced a difficult final run of games, but beatChelsea and recorded two victories overSunderland to secure the club's fifth league title, finishing four points ahead of second-place Wolverhampton Wanderers.[34] Lawton scored 35 goals in 38 league games to finish as the division's top-scorer for the second successive season.[24][35] However, in the summer he wrote toLeicester City to request that the club buy him from Everton; it was reported that he reached out to Leicester as they were managed byTom Bromilow, his former Burnley manager.[36] Everton were fifth in the league and Lawton was the division's top-scorer with four goals when league football was suspended three games into the1939–40 season due to the outbreak ofWorld War II.[37] Lawton later remarked that "I'm convinced that if it hadn't been for the War, we'd have won the Championship again, the average age of those players was about 24 or 25".[38]

World War II

[edit]

Lawton continued to play for both Everton and England during the war. However, the FA decided not to award full caps for England appearances during the war. As a result, his 24 goals in 23 international games were not counted in statistics for the official England team.[39] As was common for footballers during the war, he also made guest appearances for several clubs besides Everton, including Leicester City,Greenock Morton,Chester City,Aldershot, andTranmere Rovers.[40][41] He was called up to theBritish Army in January 1940, and his status as an England international saw him recruited to theArmy Physical Training Corps.[42] He also played for the British Army team and his Area Command team.[43] He was posted inBirkenhead, which allowed him to appear for Everton frequently.[44]

On Christmas Day 1940, he played for Everton against Liverpool at Anfield in the morning and Tranmere Rovers atCrewe Alexandra in the afternoon.[45] Explaining this later, he said, 'The Tranmere people came into the dressing room and asked if anyone wanted to play as they were two men short. I said, "Go on, I'll help you out." And I did.'[46] In 1942, he scored a hat-trick for England in a 5–4 win over Scotland at Hampden Park.[47] Later in the year, he scored six goals for Aldershot in a 9–0 win overLuton Town.[48] On 16 October 1943, he scored four goals in an 8–0 victory over Scotland atMaine Road.[49]

Chelsea

[edit]

In July 1945, Lawton handed in a transfer request at Everton as he wanted a move to a Southern club to see more of his increasingly estranged wife.[50] In November 1945, he was sold toChelsea for a fee of £14,000.[51] Chelsea continued to play regional wartime fixtures as national league football had not resumed for the1945–46 season, and Lawton also continued his uncapped appearances for the England national team.[52] In the summer of 1946, following his demobilisation, he coached for the FA in a summer camp in Switzerland.[53] He scored aclub record 26 goals in 34 league games in the1946–47 season.[54] However, he struggled to settle atStamford Bridge. He came into conflict with managerBilly Birrell after refusing to go on a pre-season tour ofSweden in 1947, which resulted in him requesting a transfer.[55] He favoured a move to Arsenal, but the Chelsea hierarchy ruled this out.[56] Lawton turned down an approach by Sunderland managerBill Murray as he held out hope that Chelsea would relent and allow him a move to Arsenal.[57]

Notts County

[edit]
Jackie Sewell and Tommy Lawton

In November 1947, Lawton was sold toNotts County of theThird Division South for aBritish record transfer fee of £20,000[58] (equivalent to £988,400 in 2023).[59] He made the surprise decision to drop down two divisions to be reunited with manager Arthur Stollery, his former masseur and friend at Chelsea, and because he was promised a job outside of football upon his retirement by vice-chairman Harold Walmsley.[58] Walmsley told theNottingham Guardian Journal that "we are prepared to spend to the limit to put this old club back where it belongs".[60] He scored two goals on his home debut, a 4–2 win overBristol Rovers in front of 38,000 spectators atMeadow Lane – a huge increase on previous home games of typically 6,000 to 7,000 supporters.[61] He ended the1947–48 season with 24 goals in as many games, though he was resented by the club's directors after he insisted on pay rises for his teammates and stopped the practice of director's friends and family travelling to away games on the team coach.[62]

He formed a productive forward partnership withJackie Sewell in the1948–49 campaign and scored 23 goals in 40 league and cup appearances.[62] County finished in mid-table despite scoring 102 goals, 15 more than champions Swansea.[63] Stollery was sacked, and upon Lawton's suggestion, the club appointedEric Houghton as manager after Lawton turned down the role as player-manager.[64] Lawton and Sewell's understanding grew throughout the1949–50 campaign, and Lawton finished as the division's top-scorer with 31 goals in 37 league games as County won promotion as champions, seven points ahead of second-placedNorthampton Town.[65] Promotion was secured with a 2–0 win overlocal rivalsNottingham Forest at Meadow Lane on 22 April.[65]

However, he struggled with poor form during the1950–51 season as his first marriage ended, and he came into increasing conflict with his teammates.[66] He was angered when the club sold Jackie Sewell toSheffield Wednesday in March 1951 – breaking Lawton's own transfer record in the process – as he felt the move showed a lack of ambition from the club's directors.[67] He also found that the well-paid job he was promised outside of football did not transpire.[68] His tally of nine goals in 31 games in 1950–51 and 13 goals in 31 games in1951–52 was disappointing, and he was made available for transfer.[69] He voluntarily relinquished the captaincy to teammateLeon Leuty in November 1951, expressing that he no longer wanted the responsibility.[70]

Brentford

[edit]

In March 1952, Lawton joined Second Division sideBrentford for aclub record £16,000 fee.[71] ManagerJackie Gibbons left the club at the start of the1952–53 season and was succeeded by his assistantJimmy Bain, who proved ill-suited to management, and so in January 1953 Lawton was appointed as player-manager, with Bain as his assistant.[72] However he lost the dressing room due to his excessive demands of the players, and the strains of management were hurting his form.[72] Brentford also lost their best players having sold bothRon Greenwood andJimmy Hill.[72] He signed two veterans in former Notts County teammateFrank Broome andIan McPherson to play on the wings, who, with Lawton, formed an attacking trio with a combined age of 104.[73] They got off to a poor start to the1953–54 season, and Lawton resigned as manager after theGriffin Park crowd began to mock the forward line by singingDear Old Pals.[73]

Arsenal

[edit]

In November 1953, Lawton was traded to First Division champions Arsenal for £7,500 plusJames Robertson who was valued at £2,500.[45][74] He was signed by managerTom Whittaker, who had previously found success in bringing in veterans such asRonnie Rooke andJoe Mercer.[74] However Lawton was limited to ten appearances in the 1953–54 campaign after picking up an injury on his debut.[75] He also played in the1953Charity Shield, scoring one goal as Arsenal beatBlackpool 3–1.[45] He scored seven goals in 20 appearances throughout the1954–55 season, including winning goals against Chelsea andCardiff City.[76] He scored a hat-trick past Cardiff City on the opening day of the1955–56 season, before he announced his decision to leave Arsenal to pursue a career in management eight games into the campaign.[77]

"More than 20 years of soccer. What glorious years. Years that all the money in the world couldn't buy. I have been lucky. I have played with great clubs; I have escaped serious injury; I have played for my country; I have even captained my country; I have won many of the game's top honours. Soccer has been good to me and I hope that I have repaid the game in some small way. I have had great experiences. I have met some wonderful people. I have memories that nobody can take away from me. If I could turn the clock back 20 years, I would still go into the game as a full-time professional and I can say to any lad who is contemplating a career in football: Go ahead son ... providing you are willing to work and work hard and providing you are willing to learn the craft thoroughly. You will meet some of the grandest fellows you could ever wish to meet and you will have a pleasant, healthy life and be quite well paid for it.

— Lawton reflected on his career in his bookMy Twenty Years of Soccer.[78]

International career

[edit]

Lawton was called up to play forThe Football League XI against aLeague of Ireland XI atWindsor Park on 21 September 1938, and scored four goals in what finished as an 8–2 win.[79] A month later he went on to win his first cap forEngland on 22 October, England's first game of the1938–39 British Home Championship, a 4–2 defeat toWales atNinian Park, and converted a penalty kick to mark his first England appearance with a goal.[80] This made him the youngest player to score on his England debut, a record which lasted untilMarcus Rashford broke it in 2016.[81] Four days after Lawton's debut, he scored again for England at Highbury in a 3–0 win over 'The Rest of Europe', a team of players selected from Italy, Germany, France, Belgium, Hungary and Norway.[82] Later in the year he also scored in victories overNorway andIreland.[83] He played in all four games of 1939, scoring againstScotland andItaly; the goal against Scotland secured a 2–1 win in front of 149,269 spectators atHampden Park.[84]

Newly appointed England managerWalter Winterbottom played Lawton in England's first official match in seven years on 28 September 1946, a 7–2 win over Ireland.[85] He played the remaining three fixtures of 1946 and scored four goals in an 8–2 victory over theNetherlands atLeeds Road on 27 November.[86] On 10 May 1947, he scored two goals playing for theGreat Britain XI in a 6–1 victory over a Rest of Europe XI that was billed as the 'Match of the Century'.[87] Five days later he scored four goals in a 10–0 victory overPortugal atLisbon'sEstádio Nacional.[56] On 21 September, he scored after just 12 seconds in a 5–2 win overBelgium atHeysel Stadium.[56]

He retained his place in the England team following his club move to Notts County, and in doing so, became the first Third Division footballer to represent England when he scored from the penalty spot in a 4–2 win overSweden on 19 November.[88] However, he only won three further caps in 1948, his final appearance coming in a 0–0 draw withDenmark inCopenhagen on 26 September.[89] He had become increasingly disillusioned with the England set-up, and told Winterbottom that "if you think you can teachStanley Matthews to play on the wing and me how to score goals, you've got another think coming!"[90] Winterbottom was also frustrated by Lawton's smoking habit and preferredJackie Milburn ahead of Lawton.[89] Hopes of any future comeback were ended by the emergence of powerful centre-forwardNat Lofthouse, who made his England debut in November 1950.[91]

Style of play

[edit]

Lawton was widely regarded as the finestcentre-forward of his generation.[92] He boasted a strong physique and good ball control skills, as well as a great passing range and a powerful shot.[93][94] He was naturally right-footed, though worked to improve his left foot to a good enough standard to be considered a two-footed player.[95] His greatest strength though was his ability to head the ball with power and accuracy, as he possessed muscular legs to give himself a strong jump and long hang-time, and was also able to time his jumps to perfection.[94][96] Stanley Matthews surmised that "Quite simply, Tommy was the greatest header of the ball I ever saw."[97] Lawton was never booked throughout his career.[98][99]

Coaching career and later life

[edit]

An Arsenal director helped Lawton to secure the position of player-manager atSouthern League sideKettering Town. He took up the role at the club on wages of £1,500 a year in the summer of 1956.[77] At the helm he thereafter signed several footballers such asJim Standen of Arsenal,Amos Moss ofAston Villa,Jack Wheeler who played forHuddersfield Town and Brentford's Jack Goodwin. He was also successful in bringing to KetteringFulham'sBob Thomas,Harry McDonald who was previously withCrystal Palace and Sunderland's Geoff Toseland.[100] During his debut season as manager, 1956–1957, Kettering found themselves ten points clear at the top of the table by Christmas.[101] As a result of this success, in January 1956, he turned down an approach from Notts County.[102] Lawton then went on to foster Kettering towards their winning of the league title in1956–57 by eight points. Out of Kettering's 106 league goals, Lawton scored 15.[103]

He was appointed Notts County manager in May 1957, controversially replacing caretaker-managerFrank Broome. Broome, who had steered the club away from being relegated from the Second Division, was installed as his assistant manager.[104] He found it tedious making new signings due to financial constraints on the part of the club.[105] He did though take on forwardsJeff Astle andTony Hateley as apprentices, who would both go on to have long careers in the First Division.[105] Lawton agreed to go without his wages for six months to improve the club's finances.[106] County were, however, relegated at the end of the1957–58 season, finishing one point short of safety, and Lawton was sacked.[107] He received a total of just three months' pay for his time at the club, having only a verbal offer of a three-year contract to fall back on and nothing in writing.[108]

After being sacked as Notts County manager, Lawton ran theMagna Chartapublic house inLowdham from October 1958.[109] An employee stole £2,500 from the business, and Lawton decided to leave the pub trade after four years.[110] He then took up a job sellinginsurance.[111] He returned to football management with Kettering Town for the1963–64 season as a caretaker following the resignation ofWally Akers. The season ended with Kettering being relegated from the Southern League Premier Division.[112] He was offered the job permanently, but turned it down to concentrate on his job as an insurance salesman.[113] He lost his job in insurance in 1967 and then opened a sporting goods shop that bore his name after going into partnership with a friend, but was forced to close the business after just two months due to poor sales.[114] After a period onunemployment benefits he found work at a betting company inNottingham.[115]

He returned to Notts County as a coach and chief scout from 1968 to 1970.[94] He was sacked after new managerJimmy Sirrel decided to appoint his own backroom staff, and Lawton returned to unemployment.[116] In May 1970, he wrote to Chelsea chairmanRichard Attenborough asking for a loan of £250 and possible employment; Attenborough lent him £100.[117] He was interviewed byEamonn Andrews onITV'sToday programme on his fall from England star to the unemployment line.[118] After his financial troubles became public knowledge, a large furnishing company offered him a lucrative job as director of his own subsidiary furniture company onTottenham Court Road; however the company went intoliquidation the following year.[119] He continued to writecheques in the company's name, and in June 1972, pleaded guilty to seven charges ofobtaining goods and cash by deception.[120] He was sentenced to three yearsprobation, and ordered to pay £240 compensation and £100 in costs.[121]

In 1972, atestimonial match was organised by Everton on Lawton's behalf to help him pay off his debts of around £6,000.[122] However his financial situation was still bleak, and on two occasions he narrowly avoided a prison sentence for failing to pay hisrates after an Arsenal supporters club and later an anonymous former co-worker stepped in to pay the bill for him.[123][124] In August 1974, he was again found guilty of obtaining goods by deception after failing to repay a £10 debt to a publican. He was sentenced to 200 hours ofCommunity service and ordered to pay £40 costs.[125] In 1984, he began writing a column for theNottingham Evening Post.[94] Brentford also organised a testimonial match for him in May 1985.[126]

Lawton's health deteriorated in his old age, and he died in November 1996, aged 77, as a result ofpneumonia. His ashes were donated to theNational Football Museum.[127] He was inducted into theEnglish Football Hall of Fame in 2003.[128]

Personal life

[edit]

Lawton married Rosaleen May Kavanagh in January 1941; the marriage bore one child, Amanda.[2] Divorce was granted with adecree nisi in March 1951 after Rosaleen was found to have committed adultery with Notts County director Adrian Van Geffen; Lawton never saw Amanda again and was not required to paychild support.[68] Lawton married second wife Gladys Rose in September 1952, who bore him a son, Thomas Junior.[2] Gladys was also divorced, and her ex-husband cited Lawton as a co-respondent in the divorce proceedings as the pair had begun their relationship whilst Gladys was still married; her family were staunchCatholics, and her family ostracised Gladys following her divorce.[129] Gladys had a daughter, Carol, from her previous marriage, who Lawton raised as his own.[69] Thomas Junior went on to playrugby union forLeicester Tigers.[130]

He starred alongsideThora Hird andDiana Dors in the 1953 filmThe Great Game, playing himself in a cameo role.[72] Throughout the 1950s he went on to appear onWhat's My Line? amongst other radio and television programmes.[131] He published a total of five books:Football is My Business (1946),Tommy Lawton's all star football book (1950),Soccer the Lawton way (1954),My Twenty Years of Soccer (1955), andWhen the Cheering Stopped (1973).[132]

Career statistics

[edit]

Club

[edit]
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[133][134]
ClubSeasonLeagueFA Cup

League War Cup

OtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Burnley1935–36Second Division75000075
1936–37Second Division181100001811
Total251600002516
Everton1936–37First Division1031100114
1937–38First Division392820004128
1938–39First Division383454004338
1939–40War League Western Division1412663[a]42322
1940–41War League Western Division172248002130
1941–42War League Western Division111464001718
1942–43War League Western Division121558001723
1943–44War League Western Division2440816003256
1944–45War League Western Division1728610002338
Total182176435734228240
Chelsea1945–46First Division00610061
1946–47First Division342654003930
1947–48First Division84000084
Total4230115005335
Notts County1947–48Third Division South191856002424
1948–49Third Division South362043004023
1949–50Third Division South373132004033
1950–51Second Division3091000319
1951–52Second Division291222003113
Total15190151300166103
Brentford1951–52Second Division1020000102
1952–53Second Division341330003713
1953–54Second Division62000062
Total501730005317
Arsenal1953–54First Division91001[b]1102
1954–55First Division1862100207
1955–56First Division86000086
Total351321113815
Career total471350687045543425
  1. ^Three appearances and four goals in the league before the season was abandoned due to World War II and so are not included in the league totals column.
  2. ^Appearance in theCharity Shield.

International

[edit]
Appearances and goals by national team and year[135]
National teamYearAppsGoals
England193844
193942
194646
194789
194831
Total2322

Managerial statistics

[edit]
Managerial record by team and tenure[133]
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Brentford2 January 19537 September 1953288911028.6
Notts County7 May 19571 July 19584413625029.5
Total72211536029.2

Honours

[edit]

Player

[edit]

Everton

Notts County

Arsenal

England

Managerial

[edit]

Kettering Town

Individual

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Specific

[edit]
  1. ^"Tommy Lawton".Barry Hugman's Footballers. Archived fromthe original on 8 June 2024. Retrieved14 May 2015.
  2. ^abcdef"Tommy Lawton".englandfootballonline.com. Retrieved23 April 2016.
  3. ^abcdWilliams 2011, p. 6
  4. ^Williams 2011, p. 14
  5. ^Williams 2011, p. 23
  6. ^Williams 2011, p. 24
  7. ^Williams 2011, p. 25
  8. ^Williams 2011, p. 26
  9. ^Williams 2011, p. 27
  10. ^Williams 2011, p. 28
  11. ^Williams 2011, p. 37
  12. ^Williams 2011, p. 38
  13. ^abWilliams 2011, p. 39
  14. ^Williams 2011, p. 40
  15. ^Williams 2011, p. 43
  16. ^Williams 2011, p. 44
  17. ^Williams 2011, p. 45
  18. ^Williams 2011, p. 46
  19. ^Williams 2011, p. 47
  20. ^Williams 2011, p. 50
  21. ^Williams 2011, p. 52
  22. ^Williams 2011, p. 56
  23. ^Williams 2011, p. 59
  24. ^ab"Tommy Lawton".evertonfc.com. Archived fromthe original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved26 April 2016.
  25. ^"Everton: Tommy Lawton – The Striker Andy Carroll Wishes He Could Be".Sabotage Times. 20 January 2012. Archived from the original on 1 June 2016. Retrieved26 April 2016.
  26. ^Williams 2011, p. 66
  27. ^Williams 2011, p. 69
  28. ^Williams 2011, p. 73
  29. ^Williams 2011, p. 77
  30. ^abRoss, James M. (9 June 2016)."English League Leading Goalscorers".RSSSF. Retrieved2 March 2017.
  31. ^Williams 2011, p. 92
  32. ^Williams 2011, p. 94
  33. ^Williams 2011, p. 104
  34. ^Williams 2011, p. 106
  35. ^Williams 2011, p. 107
  36. ^Healy, Tim (27 September 2013)."Let me come and play for Foxes".Leicester Mercury. Retrieved26 April 2016.[permanent dead link]
  37. ^Williams 2011, p. 125
  38. ^Prentice, David (16 July 2003)."continues our series on the Everton stars who have topped football's goalscoring charts with Tommy Lawton".Liverpool Echo. Retrieved26 April 2016.
  39. ^Williams 2011, p. 128
  40. ^Williams 2011, p. 135
  41. ^Sumner, Chas (1997)On the Borderline: The Official History of Chester City F.C. 1885–1997ISBN 1-874427-52-6
  42. ^Williams 2011, p. 129
  43. ^Williams 2011, p. 133
  44. ^Williams 2011, p. 134
  45. ^abcd"Tommy Lawton".arsenal.com. Archived fromthe original on 27 April 2016. Retrieved26 April 2016.
  46. ^Rippon, Anton (2005)Gas Masks for Goal Posts Sutton PublishingISBN 978-0-7509-4031-3
  47. ^Williams 2011, p. 140
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General

[edit]
  • Lawton, T (1946)Football is My Business
  • Lawton, T (1950)Tommy Lawton's all star football book ISBN B0000CHTOA
  • Lawton, T (1954)Soccer the Lawton way ISBN B0000CIYT5
  • Lawton, T (1955)My Twenty Years of Soccer ISBN B0007JENCK
  • Lawton, T (1973)When the Cheering StoppedISBN 0-901482-17-X
  • McVay, D &, Smith, A (2000)The Complete Centre Forward: The Authorised Biography of Tommy LawtonISBN 1-899807-09-8
  • Williams, Barrie; Lawton Junior, Tom (2011)."Get in There!" Tommy Lawton: My Friend, my father. Kingston upon Thames: Vision Sports.ISBN 978-1-907637-00-1.
Awards
English Third Division top scorers

(N)Football League Third Division North; (S)Football League Third Division South

Players
Men
Women
Managers
Referees
Managerial positions
Brentford F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager
Notts County F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager; (s) = secretary
International
National
Other
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