Bill Anderson (English footballer) explained

Bill Anderson
Fullname:William Anderson[1]
Birth Date:12 January 1913
Birth Place:High Westwood, England
Death Date:[2]
Death Place:Radcliffe-on-Trent, England
Position:Left back
Clubs1:Medomsley Juniors
Years2:1931–1932
Clubs2:Nottingham Forest
Caps2:0
Goals2:0
Clubs3:Chopwell Institute
Years4:1933–1935
Clubs4:Sheffield United
Caps4:23
Goals4:0
Years5:1935
Clubs5:Barnsley
Caps5:14
Goals5:0
Clubs6:Hartlepools United
Caps6:0
Goals6:0
Totalcaps:37
Totalgoals:0
Manageryears1:1946–1965
Managerclubs1:Lincoln City

William Anderson (12 January 1913 – 19 February 1986) was the manager of Lincoln City from 1946 to 1965.[3] He led the club to the Third Division North title in 1947–48 and 1951–52, as well as twelve Lincolnshire Senior Cup finals. As a player he appeared for Nottingham Forest, Sheffield United and Barnsley before an injury at Oakwell forced him to retire in November 1935. He came out of retirement to join Bradford (Park Avenue) in March 1938, but in two months at Park Avenue failed to break into the senior side and was released.

Management career

Anderson led the "Imps" to the Third Division North title in 1947–48 after spending just £2,000 building his team.[4] His cause was greatly helped by the division's top scorer Jimmy Hutchinson, who hit 32 of Lincoln's 81 goals.[4] Promotion was secured on the final day at Sincil Bank with a victory over Hartlepools United.[4] However they were immediately relegated in 1948–49 after finishing bottom of the Second Division, some seven points behind second-from-bottom Nottingham Forest.

They were four points short of promotion in 1949–50, before a fifth-place finish in 1950–51. Promotion was secured in 1951–52 though, as Lincoln finished three points ahead of Grimsby Town, scoring 121 goals in the process, 39 of which came from £5,000 Newcastle United signing Andy Graver.[4] The "Imps" remained in the second tier for the next nine seasons, with Graver (club record goalscorer) and Tony Emery (club record league appearance holder) being key players.[4] The 1957–58 campaign would be a particularly memorable one, as Lincoln won their last six games of the season to go from 19 points to 31 points, just one ahead of relegated Notts County.[4]

The club's unlikely success in maintaining second tier status came to a close in 1960–61, despite the best efforts of top scorer Roy Chapman, as Lincoln finished in last place, some nine points behind Portsmouth.[4] A second successive relegation came in 1961–62, as Lincoln dropped from the Third Division into the Fourth Division.[4] The fall was completed in 1962–63, as Lincoln finished third-from-bottom in the Football League. Anderson departed in 1965, after 855 games in charge.

Honours

with Lincoln City

Career statistics

Playing career

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Sheffield United1933–34[5] Division One70001080
1934–35[6] Division Two1601020190
Total2301030270
Barnsley1935–36[7] Division Two14000140
Career total3701030410

Managerial statistics

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . 2012 . SoccerData . Nottingham . 9.
  2. Book: Matthews, Clarebrough & Kirkham . The Official Encyclopaedia of Sheffield United . 2003 . Britespot Publishing . 11.
  3. Web site: Profile . https://archive.today/20130127154708/http://www.leaguemanagers.com/managers/history-1172.html . dead . 27 January 2013 . leaguemanagers.com . 17 January 2012.
  4. News: The Bill Anderson Years : 1947-1962 . 17 January 2012 . redimps.co.uk . 26 June 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120527151346/http://www.redimps.co.uk/page/History/0%2C%2C10440~70484%2C00.html . 27 May 2012.
  5. Book: Clarebrough & Kirkham . Sheffield United The Complete Record . 2012 . 357.
  6. Book: Clarebrough & Kirkham . Sheffield United The Complete Record . 2012 . 359.
  7. Web site: The English National Football Archive . www.enfa.co.uk . 2020-02-20.