Bobby Gough Explained

Bobby Gough
Fullname:Robert George Gough
Birth Date:20 June 1949[1]
Birth Place:Birmingham, England
Height:[2]
Position:Forward
Youthclubs1:Birmingham City
Years1:1966–1968
Clubs1:Walsall
Caps1:1
Goals1:0
Years2:1968–1974
Clubs2:Port Vale
Caps2:210
Goals2:33
Years3:1973–1974
Clubs3:Stockport County (loan)
Caps3:6
Goals3:0
Years4:1974–1976
Clubs4:Southport
Caps4:61
Goals4:16
Years5:1976–1981
Caps5:196
Goals5:65
Years6:1981–1982
Clubs6:Hendon
Caps6:25
Goals6:10
Years7:1982–198?
Clubs7:Chelmsford City
Totalcaps:499
Totalgoals:124

Robert George Gough (born 20 July 1949) is an English former footballer who played as a forward. In a fifteen-year professional career in the English Football League, he scored 114 goals in 474 league appearances.

After failing to make an impression at Birmingham City and Walsall, he made his name at Port Vale between 1968 and 1974, making a total of 229 appearances for the "Valiants". During this time, he helped the club to win promotion out of the Fourth Division in the 1969–70 season. Following a loan spell at Stockport County, he transferred to Southport in 1974, before arriving at Colchester United two years later. He helped Colchester out of the Fourth Division in 1976–77 and scored a total of 80 goals in 232 games before he departed for non-League Hendon in 1981. He later turned out for Chelmsford City before he left football for the building trade.

Career

Early career

Gough was a Birmingham City youth player but was not offered a professional contract with the club due to his small stature.[3] He then went on to join Third Division side Walsall in 1966, but only made one league appearance for the club.

Port Vale

He joined Port Vale in June 1968, when they were then in the Fourth Division. He was one of manager Gordon Lee's first signings. He scored his first senior goal on 16 September in a 3–0 win over York City at Vale Park. He added to his tally with a goal against Exeter City and also scored in both legs of Vale's FA Cup win over Shrewsbury Town. He finished the 1968–69 campaign with four goals in 42 games.

He was more prolific in the 1969–70 season, scoring nine goals in 45 league games to help the club achieve promotion in fourth place. The most notable of these goals was a effort that helped Vale to a 3–2 win at Oldham Athletic on 13 September; The Sentinel reporter Chris Harper noted that "Gough can certainly hit a ball".[4] He coped well in the Third Division, and scored a hat-trick at the Gay Meadow on 12 September, in what finished as a 7–3 defeat for the "Valiants". By the end of the 1970–71 campaign, he shot eight goals in 37 games, including a goal against fallen giants Aston Villa. He finished the 1971–72 season as the club's top scorer with ten goals in 47 appearances after forming an effective strike partnership with Sammy Morgan.[5]

However, in 1972–73, he was limited to two goals in 29 games, hitting the net in easy wins over Southend United and Rotherham United. Instead, Ray Williams and Sammy Morgan were forming an impressive attacking partnership, scoring 22 goals between them. Gough was dropped in November 1973 and went out on a one-month loan to struggling Fourth Division side Stockport County in December but failed to score in six appearances. He asked to leave Vale to sort out some personal problems but was persuaded to stay by new manager Roy Sproson.[5] He scored his final goal for the Vale against Southport on 2 March 1974. He finished the 1973–74 campaign with two goals in 26 games for Vale and six games for Stockport County. In May 1974, he was allowed to join Southport on a free transfer. He made 229 appearances (210 in the league) and scored 35 goals (33 in the league) for the Vale.[6]

Southport

Southport were starting their 1974–75 campaign in the Fourth Division, having suffered relegation out of the Third Division. The club entered free-fall and had to apply for re-election at the end of 1975–76, having finished second-from-bottom in the Football League. Gough managed sixteen goals in 61 league appearances for the club in his two seasons before he joined Colchester United for a £7,000 fee in January 1976.[2]

Colchester United

Bobby Roberts's Colchester United lost their third tier status at the end of 1975–76, despite Gough scoring five goals in 22 games during the second half of the season.[2] Colchester won promotion out of the Fourth Division in third-place in 1976–77, with Gough scoring nineteen goals in 52 games – five short of strike partner Colin Garwood.[2] The U's consolidated their Third Division status with an eighth-place finish in 1977–78. Gough finished as the club's top-scorer with seventeen goals in 51 games.[2] Garwood's tally of thirteen strikes meant the pair combined to bring the U's thirty goals throughout the campaign.[2]

United finished seventh in 1978–79, and Gough was again the club's top-scorer with 22 goals in fifty appearances.[2] In the FA Cup, he scored a hat-trick against Oxford United, two against Leatherhead and the winning goal against Newport County to bring Colchester a Fifth Round tie with Manchester United – which the "Red Devils" won 1–0.[2]

Colchester finished fifth in 1979–80; Gough scored twelve goals in 32 games, some six behind strike partner Trevor Lee.[2] The club suffered relegation at the end of the 1980–81 campaign after finishing two points below the safety of Walsall.[2] Gough spent much of the season out of the first-team, and made just eighteen appearances, scoring five goals, as Kevin Bremner was preferred to partner Lee up front.[2] Gough sustained an ankle injury and left the club for Hendon at the end of the campaign, having scored a total of 80 goals (65 in the league) in 232 games (196 in the league).[2] [5]

Later career

Gough later turned out for non-League side Hendon (Isthmian League Premier Division) and Chelmsford City.[5]

Later life

After hanging up his boots, Gough worked as a sports master at a college, bought a public house, then a restaurant, and worked builder in Essex.[5] He also coached at former club Colchester United.[5] His son, John, was signed to Colchester United and played cricket for Essex County Cricket Club.[5]

Career statistics

Source:[7]

ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Walsall1966–67Third Division10000010
Port Vale1968–69Fourth Division3625210424
1969–70Fourth Division4592010489
1970–71Third Division3681000378
1971–72Third Division421040104710
1972–73Third Division2722000292
1973–74Third Division2421010262
Total210331524022935
Stockport County (loan)1973–74Fourth Division60000060
Southport1974–75Fourth Division401000104110
1975–76Fourth Division2161022248
Total611610326518
Colchester United1975–76Third Division2250000225
1976–77Fourth Division431761315219
1977–78Third Division421341535117
1978–79Third Division421666205022
1979–80Third Division321030423912
1980–81Third Division1542011185
Total1966521815723280
Hendon1980–81Isthmian League Premier Division63000063
1981–82Isthmian League Premier Division197001573414
Total2510001574017
Career total49912437103716573150

Honours

Port Vale

Colchester United

Notes and References

  1. http://www.neilbrown.newcastlefans.com/player/bobbygough.html Profile at Post War English & Scottish Football League A–Z Player's Database
  2. Web site: Bobby Gough – Players – Colchester United . coludata.co.uk . 6 April 2019.
  3. News: Sam's late strike sees Vale in to next round. Sherwin. Phil. 15 October 2011. The Sentinel: The Way We Were. 16.
  4. News: Baggaley. Mike. First half of the season has provided memorable moments for Valiants. 3 January 2015. The Sentinel. 2 January 2015. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924133759/http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/Port-Vale-half-season-provided-memorable-moments/story-25797661-detail/story.html. dead.
  5. The Bobby Gough Interview Part 2 . The Vale Park Beano . 63.
  6. Book: Kent, Jeff. Port Vale Personalities. Witan Books. 114. 1996. 0-9529152-0-0.
  7. Web site: Greensnet – Official Hendon FC: Former Staff – Bobby Gough . hendonfc.net . 1 July 2018 . en.
  8. Book: Kent, Jeff. The Valiants' Years: The Story of Port Vale. Witan Books. 1990. 227–257. Surviving on a Shoestring (1969–1979). 0-9508981-4-7.