Billy McCullough explained

Fullname:William James McCullough
Birth Date:27 July 1935
Birth Place:Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland
Position:Left back
Years1:–1958
Years2:1958–1966
Caps2:253
Goals2:4
Years3:1966–1967
Caps3:19
Goals3:0
Clubs6:Derry City
Nationalyears1:1961–1966
Nationalteam1:Northern Ireland
Nationalcaps1:10
Nationalgoals1:0

William James McCullough (born 27 July 1935) is a former footballer who made more than 250 appearances for Arsenal in the Football League and was capped 10 times for Northern Ireland.

Career

Born in Carrickfergus, McCullough first played for Portadown, before being signed in 1958 for £5,000 by London club Arsenal.[1] A left back, he soon made his debut for the club, against Luton Town on 26 December 1958. He only played ten matches that season, but after Len Wills was moved to right back at the start of 1959-60, McCullough became Arsenal's' regular left back.

McCullough became known for his consistency and fitness – he wore the No. 3 shirt for Arsenal for the next six seasons, missing only a handful of matches. Although Arsenal had reached third place in his first season at the club, for the rest of his career in the side the club dwelled in mid-table and never challenged for honours.

He won his first cap for Northern Ireland in a friendly against Italy on 25 April 1961, which Northern Ireland lost 3-2. He went on to appear ten times for his country, scoring no goals, with his final cap coming against England in a 2-0 defeat on 22 October 1966.

By 1965-66, McCullough had competition for his place, in the shape of the young Peter Storey. When Bertie Mee took over at Arsenal at the end of that season, looking to build a young side, he transfer listed the 31-year-old McCullough during the close season. He had played 268 matches in total for Arsenal, scoring 5 goals. He was sold to Millwall in August 1966, and later had spells at Bedford Town, Cork Celtic and Derry City.[2]

Club statistics

Club! rowspan="2"
SeasonLeagueFA CupEuropeTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Arsenal1958–59First Division10010110
1959–60First Division33000330
1960–61First Division41010420
1961–62First Division40020420
1962–63First Division42330453
1963–64First Division4014041482
1964–65First Division30000300
1965–66First Division17000170
Career total2534110412685

References

General

Specific

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Billy McCullough . Arsenal F.C. . 2 November 2017.
  2. News: Arsenal legend Billy McCullough discusses becoming a father figure to George Best, joining the Gunners' 100 Club and taking Cork Celtic to the Irish Cup final . Tom . Sharp . Welwyn Hatfield Times . 20 February 2016 . 7 April 2017.