Billy Steel Explained

Billy Steel
Fullname:William Steel
Birth Date:1923 5, df=y
Birth Place:Denny, Stirlingshire, Scotland
Death Place:Lancaster, California, United States
Position:Inside-left
Youthclubs1:Dunipace Thistle
Youthyears2:1938
Youthclubs2:Bo'ness Cadora
Youthyears3:1938–1939
Youthclubs3:Leicester City
Years1:1939–1942
Years2:1942–1947
Years3:1947–1950
Years4:1950–1954
Clubs4:Dundee
Caps1:0
Caps2:9
Caps3:109
Caps4:94
Goals1:0
Goals2:2
Goals3:27
Goals4:27
Nationalyears1:1947–1952
Nationalteam1:Scottish Football League XI
Nationalcaps1:4
Nationalgoals1:2
Nationalyears2:1947–1953
Nationalteam2:Scotland
Nationalcaps2:30
Nationalgoals2:12
Nationalyears3:1947
Nationalteam3:United Kingdom
Nationalcaps3:1
Nationalgoals3:1
Totalcaps:212
Totalgoals:56

William Steel (1 May 1923 – 13 May 1982) was a Scottish professional footballer who played for St Mirren, Morton, Derby County, Dundee and the Scotland national team.

One of Scotland's greatest inside forwards, Billy Steel combined a brilliant footballing brain with a busy work ethic and explosive shot. Steel was the subject of two record transfer fees during his career. As well as receiving 30 caps for Scotland, Steel made four appearances with the Scottish League, was a Scottish Cup finalist in 1952, and was a Scottish League Cup winner in 1952 and 1953. He scored a memorable goal for a Great Britain XI against the Rest of Europe in 1947. He was inducted into Scottish Football Hall of Fame in 2006.[1]

Early career

Steel began his career at local juvenile side Dunipace Thistle, signing for Junior side Bo'ness Cadora in the summer of 1938, whilst still 15 years of age. He played several games at inside-left before being developed into a winger by Cadora. Leicester City manager Frank Womack was determined to get his man halfway through the season and took him on to the Filbert Street ground staff at the end of 1938; things did not work out as the boss was sacked and nobody remembered to renew his contract.[2]

While still contracted to Morton, Steel played for the British Army of the Rhine, (BAOR) who, in 1944 to 1946, were re-establishing footballing connections with other teams on the Continent. The team "visited" France, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzerland, the Channel Islands and Germany, and Steel played along with such notables as Leslie Compton, Eddie Hapgood, and Matt Busby. Demobbed in December 1946 he returned to Morton.[3] [4]

Derby County

His £15,500 transfer from Morton to Derby County in 1947 was a then British transfer record. He was brought to Derby County after playing just a few first team games for Morton and was a good buy, going on to play for three seasons at the Baseball Ground. In that time he made 124 appearances, scoring 35 goals.[5] Steel was not always popular at Derby, especially among his fellow professionals: one dressing room incident ended in Steel being threatened with being hung on a cloakroom peg by a member of his own team. Players often accused Steel of saving his best performances for when the Rams travelled down to play the London teams. He was further disliked for his "moonlighting" (though in the days of the maximum wage for footballers he could hardly be blamed); he received payments for articles that he wrote for several newspapers, enabling him to have a more luxurious life style than his teammates. A deal with News Chronicle was said to be worth as much again as his football wage.[6]

Dundee

Steel left Derby in September 1950 to return to his native Scotland, Dundee paying a Scottish record transfer fee of £22,500. He helped the club to win the Scottish League Cup in 1951–52[7] and 1952–53.[8] He was also a finalist in the 1951–52 Scottish Cup. He retired as a player in 1954.

In May 2009, Steel was inducted into Dundee F.C.'s Hall of Fame.

International career

He won a total of 30 caps for Scotland, scoring 12 goals. Despite having played only a handful of league games for Morton, he was selected for a Great Britain XI for a match against the Rest of Europe in 1947,[9] in which he scored from 30 yards out in a 6–1 win.[10]

Retirement and emigration

In 1954 he announced he was emigrating to the US, where he managed the Los Angeles Danes, before later working in advertising.[11]

Playing style

Billy Steel had springs for muscles, a choirboy's face that masked a devouring, often ruthless determination to achieve football perfection, a caustic tongue that frequently angered team-mates more bitterly than opponents, and a style and ability that, in this modern age, would have the wealthy clubs of Europe bidding frantically for his transfer. Unlike so many of his predecessors, who were indelibly stamped with the style of their birthplace, Steel was classless. No one watching this chirpy little man in action could have said from which soccer school he graduated. His touch was Scottish of course, but later in his career he welded to that eternal grace an iron physique. He belonged to the elite corp of players: the global greats. His secret was that of Denis Law, an agile brain, a puma's pounce, and extraordinary gymnastic ability that put him a move ahead of his colleagues. There was nothing svelte about Steel: he exuded vitality, he had the killer instinct of a boxing champion, he was the type of aggressive attacker who was so keen to win that he would have sworn at his best friend if he felt he hadn't been pulling his weight.[12]

Career statistics

International appearances

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Scotland194753
194840
194944
195074
195161
195220
195320
Total3012

International goals

Scores and results list Scotland's goal tally first.

Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition Ref
1. 18 May 1947 1–1 1–2 [13]
2. 24 May 1947 2–0 6–0
3. 3–0
4. 9 April 1949 2–0 3–1
5. 27 April 1949 1–0 2–0
6. 2–0
7. 1 October 1949 3–0 8–2
8. 1 November 1950 3–1 6–1
9. 4–1
10. 5–1
11. 6–1
12. 12 May 1951 1–1 3–1 [14]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.scottishfootballmuseum.org.uk/scottish_football.cfm?curpageid=1236 2006 Hall of Fame inductees at scottishfootballmuseum.org
  2. https://dundeefc.co.uk/news/billy-steel-profile/ Billy Steel profile
  3. How to Play Football by Billy Steel pp.19-28
  4. Billy Steel – Scotland′s Little Maestro by Bob MacAlindin pp.18-21
  5. Web site: Derby County-Mad – the definitive Derby County website. Independent news and stats from footymad.net. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20030521021338/http://www.derbycounty-mad.co.uk/news/loadROLL.asp?cid=ED31&id=56546. 2003-05-21.
  6. Book: Garrick , Frank . Raich Carter The Biography . 2003 . SportsBooks Limited . 1-899807-18-7 . 142.
  7. Web site: Soccerbase – 1951-52 Scottish Lge Cup Final . 25 October 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120505235815/http://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd . 5 May 2012 . dead .
  8. Web site: Soccerbase – 1952-53 Scottish Lge Cup Final . 25 October 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120505235815/http://www.soccerbase.com/matches/results.sd . 5 May 2012 . dead .
  9. http://www.englandfootballonline.com/TeamHons/HonsRepTms.html England Player Honours – International Representative Teams
  10. https://www.britishpathe.com/video/great-britains-easy-win-over-the-rest-of-europe/query/Hampden Great Britain's Easy Win Over The Rest Of Europe
  11. Web site: League Cup Winner – Steel. Dundee Football Club. 28 December 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120403021601/http://www.dundeefc.co.uk/club.asp?page=LEAGUE-CUP-WINNER---STEEL&pageid=1049. 3 April 2012.
  12. Book: We'll Support You Evermore . Trevor Royle . Ian Archer . Mainstream Sport . 2012 . 9781780574219.
  13. Web site: Scotland – International Matches 1946-1950 . 11 April 2019 . 26 February 2020 . Alan . Brown . Gabriele . . Tossani.
  14. Web site: Scotland – International Matches 1951-1955 . 11 April 2019 . 26 February 2020 . Alan . Brown . Gabriele . . Tossani.