Allan Clarke (footballer) explained

Allan Clarke
Fullname:Allan John Clarke
Birth Date:31 July 1946
Birth Place:Short Heath, Willenhall, Staffordshire, England
Height:[1]
Years1:1963–1966
Clubs1:Walsall
Caps1:72
Goals1:41
Years2:1966–1968
Clubs2:Fulham
Caps2:86
Goals2:45
Years3:1968–1969
Clubs3:Leicester City
Caps3:36
Goals3:12
Years4:1969–1978
Clubs4:Leeds United
Caps4:273
Goals4:110
Years5:1978–1980
Caps5:47
Goals5:15
Totalcaps:514
Totalgoals:223
Nationalyears1:1970–1975
Nationalteam1:England
Nationalcaps1:19
Nationalgoals1:10
Manageryears1:1978–1980
Managerclubs1:Barnsley
Manageryears2:1980–1982
Managerclubs2:Leeds United
Manageryears3:1983–1984
Managerclubs3:Scunthorpe United
Manageryears4:1985–1989
Managerclubs4:Barnsley
Manageryears5:1990
Managerclubs5:Lincoln City

Allan John Clarke (born 31 July 1946), nicknamed "Sniffer", is a former professional footballer who played in the Football League for Walsall, Fulham, Leicester City, Leeds United and Barnsley, and won 19 international caps for England.[2]

Career

Early career

Clarke was born in Short Heath, Willenhall, Staffordshire.[3] He is the third of seven children. Clarke joined Walsall F.C. in 1961 as an apprentice, playing his debut for the Saddlers in October 1963, against Reading. Whilst at the club he scored 46 goals in 82 appearances.[3] He moved to Fulham in March 1966 for a fee of £35,000, in a transfer deadline deal.[3] Such was his early promise that Leicester City paid £150,000 for Clarke in 1968, a then British football transfer fee record. Frank Large moved to Fulham from Leicester as part of the deal. [4] He spent just one season at Leicester City, in which he scored the winning goal in the semi-final of the 1969 FA Cup, knocking out the team he had supported as a boy – West Bromwich Albion.[5] He also played in the FA Cup final, and he was man of the match, despite Leicester City losing 1–0 to Manchester City.[5]

Leeds United

On 24 June 1969, Leeds United manager Don Revie paid £165,000 to Leicester City for Clarke's services.[6] For the second time, Clarke had topped the British football transfer fee record.[4]

Clarke scored 26 goals in his first season at Leeds and earned the nickname "Sniffer",[6] because of his predatory instincts of "sniffing out" scoring opportunities.[6] Leeds United chased a dream "treble" of League championship, FA Cup and European Cup though ultimately they won nothing.[6] Clarke hit the post in the FA Cup Final at Wembley (with strike partner Mick Jones following up to score the rebound) and then went on a run through several Chelsea defenders in the replay to set up a goal for Jones again, but Leeds United still lost. The title had already gone to Everton who had clinched the title several weeks before the end of the season, and the European Cup campaign ended with defeat to Celtic in the semi-final,(0–1 at Elland Road and 1–2 at Hampden Park).[6]

Clarke was in the Leeds United side that won its second Fairs Cup in 1971,[6] scoring in the final against Juventus.[6] Leeds United reached the FA Cup Final again in the competition's centenary year, and at Wembley they faced the Cup holders, Arsenal. Clarke scored the only goal of the game with a diving header from a Jones cross early in the second half.[6] He had hit the crossbar with another diving header earlier in the game. Unfortunately for Clarke and Leeds, they lost the League title and the chance of emulating Arsenal's previous season "double" when they lost to Wolverhampton Wanderers two days after winning the FA Cup.

Clarke played again at Wembley – and lost – when Leeds United were beaten 1–0 by Sunderland in the 1973 FA Cup Final. Clarke was again Leeds United's top scorer as Leeds United won the league title in 1974, including a run of 29 opening matches without defeat. Leeds United lost the 1975 European Cup Final to Bayern Munich 2–0 and were denied a clear penalty when Clarke was tackled from behind and felled by Franz Beckenbauer in the penalty area.[6]

After this match the Revie side began to break up;[6] their manager had left in 1974 to take the England job,[6] and Clarke himself left the club in 1978 after 351 appearances and 151 goals, with a knee injury curtailing his ability to play at top-flight level.[6] He scored in the 1977 FA Cup semi-final, but the game ended in a 2–1 win by Manchester United.[6]

International career

Clarke was called up for England's 1970 World Cup squad in Mexico, despite being uncapped.[7] He made his debut for his country against Czechoslovakia in the heat and pressure of a World Cup first-round match. Clarke scored the only goal of the match, from the penalty spot.[6] He remains the most recent England player to make his international debut in a World Cup finals match. Over the next five years he appeared a total of 19 times for England, scoring ten goals.

In 1973, he was in the England team which needed to beat Poland at Wembley to qualify for the 1974 World Cup.[8] A goal down, England were awarded a penalty from which Clarke scored,[8] but other than that, he was among many England players to be thwarted by the Polish goalkeeper Jan Tomaszewski.[8] A 1–1 draw was not enough, and England did not go through to play in the 1974 World Cup.[8]

Managerial career

Clarke was appointed Barnsley player-manager on 1 June 1978,[9] and under him they won promotion to the old third Division in May 1979, Clarke scoring 12 goals himself that season including a hat-trick against Port Vale on Boxing Day. On 29 December 1979, Barnsley lost 7–0 at Reading, and Clarke decided to end his playing career. He took his players down Woolley Colliery to show them what they could have been doing for a living.[10] [11] Clarke then began to bring in new players such as Trevor Aylott and Derrick Parker and Ian Evans and Barnsley finished mid-table. Clarke left Barnsley in September 1980 to manage Leeds United.[9] Leeds finished 9th under Clarke at the end of his first season as manager, but the following season, they were beaten 5–1 at Swansea on the opening day, and only won once until October. Leeds were relegated and Clarke was sacked on 25 June 1982.[9] He then became manager at Scunthorpe United between February 1983, and 24 August 1984,[9] when he and the chairman both resigned. He led Scunthorpe to promotion to the Third Division in May 1983, but a year later they were relegated.

Clarke had another spell at Barnsley between 1 July 1985 and 8 November 1989.[9] Despite having no money to spend, low gates, and being forced to sell players such as David Hirst and John Beresford, Clarke led Barnsley to the fifth round of the FA Cup twice, when they were knocked out by Arsenal in 1987 and Everton in 1989. At the end of 1988–89 season, Barnsley finished just two points off securing a play-off place, losing only twice in the last 17 games. However, in the following season, after a bright start, a bad run saw Barnsley move, by 4 November, to fifth-from-bottom. Four days later Clarke was sacked.[9] He was Lincoln City caretaker manager for six months, being replaced by Steve Thompson on 30 November 1990.[9]

Life outside football

From 1993 until he reached retirement age,Web site: Life After United Episode 1 Part 1 . YouTube. Clarke was a travelling salesman for MTS Nationwide, a firm based at Wakefield, West Yorkshire. He has, however, remained an outspoken critic of the game, and like all the Leeds United players of the Revie era, has remained fiercely protective of the reputation of both the manager and the club. He has suffered from arthritic knees in recent years. Clarke now lives in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire.

The Clarke footballing brothers

Allan was the second of five brothers to play the professional game – four of whom played for Walsall across three decades.Frank was the only Clarke brother not to represent Walsall, playing for Shrewsbury Town, Queens Park Rangers, Ipswich Town and Carlisle United; Derek played for Walsall, Oxford United and Orient; Kelvin played for Walsall; and the youngest sibling, Wayne Clarke, played for Walsall towards the end of his career.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition"
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupEuropeTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Walsall[12] 1963–64Third Division60000060
1964–65Third Division432300004323
1965–66Third Division241921312921
Total73422131007844
Fulham1965–66First Division81000081
1966–67First Division422433224729
1967–68First Division362032654527
Total864565870010057
Leicester City1968–69First Division361281234616
Leeds United1969–70First Division281797524226
1970–71First Division411941101035623
1971–72First Division351164404515
1972–73First Division36188640525326
1973–74First Division341330534216
1974–75First Division34147331845222
1975–76First Division361121113913
1976–77First Division2045310267
1977–78First Division931010113
Total27311045251523314366151
Barnsley1978–79Fourth Division341232203914
1979–80Third Division1332130184
Total47155350005718
Career total515224663533133314647286

Honours

Leicester City[13]

Leeds United[14]

1973–74

1969

1970–71

Individual

1973–74 First Division[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rothmans Football Yearbook 1980–81 . registration . Jack . Rollin . Queen Anne Press. London . 1980 . 0362020175 . 58.
  2. Web site: Allan Clarke . live . UK A–Z Transfers . Neil Brown . 24 January 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100130171136/http://www.neilbrown.newcastlefans.com/player/allanclarke.html . 30 January 2010.
  3. Web site: Walsall welcome back legend Allan Clarke . expressandstar.com . 22 March 2019.
  4. Web site: British transfer fees: From Francis & Ferdinand to Angel Di Maria . BBC Sport . 26 August 2014 . 15 November 2023.
  5. Web site: Hutchinson . John . So close and yet so far – The story of Leicester City's FA Cup final near misses . Leicester Mercury . 14 May 2021.
  6. Web site: Leeds United Centurions - Allan Clarke was the magnetising frontman of Don Revie's Leeds . LeedsLive . 31 July 2019.
  7. Web site: FIFA World Football- Statistics and Records – Allan Clarke . . https://web.archive.org/web/20080627040909/http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/statisticsandrecords/players/player=47813/index.html . dead . 27 June 2008.
  8. Web site: England v Poland 1973: When Clough's 'clown' stopped England . BBC Sport . 14 October 2013.
  9. Web site: Allan Clarke . leaguemanagers.com . 21 June 2023.
  10. Web site: How History was made . Reading F.C. . 21 January 2014.
  11. A Yorkshire Tragedy: The Rise and Fall of a Sporting Powerhouse By Anthony Clavane
  12. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Complete Record of Walsall Football Club. Breedon Books. 1999. 978-1859831564.
  13. Web site: Manchester City 1 Leicester City 0 . FA Cup Finals . 26 April 1969 . 1 October 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100415223938/http://www.fa-cupfinals.co.uk/1969.htm . 15 April 2010.
  14. Web site: Leeds United F.C. History - Allan Clarke . OZ White LUFC . 1 October 2014 .
  15. Web site: Allan Clarke . England Football Online . 1 October 2014.