Bobby Irvine (footballer, born 1942) explained

Bobby Irvine
Fullname:Robert James Irvine
Birth Date:17 January 1942
Birth Place:Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland
Position:Goalkeeper
Clubs1:Carrick Technical School
Years2:1957–1963
Clubs2:Linfield
Years3:1963–1966
Caps3:25
Goals3:0
Years4:1966–1967
Years5:1967–1974
Clubs5:Wellington Town/Telford United
Nationalyears1:1962–1965
Nationalteam1:Northern Ireland
Nationalcaps1:8
Nationalgoals1:0

Robert James Irvine (born 17 January 1942) is a Northern Irish former footballer who played in the Football League for Stoke City.[1] His younger brother Willie was a star striker for Burnley in the sixties.

Club career

Linfield

Irvine was signed by Linfield as a teenager in 1957 from Carrick Tech and established himself in the first team at Windsor Park when at 16. In the fifties, he featured in some of the south Belfast club's earliest European Cup games.[2] Irvine found disfavour with the Linfield selection committee during the 1960–61 season and at one stage it seemed he would be released.[3]

Stoke City

In June 1963 Irvine was transferred to Stoke City for £6,000 and made his debut in the opening game of the season, a 2–1 defeat of Spurs. He lost his place after seven games, however, to Lawrie Leslie and remained out of the side for most of the season. Irvine did pick up a League Cup runners-up medal at the end of his first season. He was largely out of favour in 1964–65, making just one league appearance but returned to the first team the following year. Irvine was given the honour of captaining Stoke in a League Cup tie against Burnley, who were captained in that game by his brother Willie. The idea of them both captaining their sides came from Clarets' manager Harry Potts.[4] The brothers met in the centre circle to shake hands and toss the coin and then played against each other for the first time since schooldays.[5] Irvine's career at the Victoria Ground was brought to an end after an FA Cup third-round game against Walsall.[1] He gave away a penalty that helped the Third Division side to a 2–0 win. Furious with Irvine's antics, manager Tony Waddington never picked him again.[6]

International career

Irvine was capped at both schoolboy and Under 23 level for Northern Ireland before making his senior debut against the Netherlands in Rotterdam in 1962. He was brought in to replace Harry Gregg and would keep his place for the next six international matches. Irvine made his eighth and final international appearance in 1965 against Wales.

Career statistics

Club

Source:[1]

ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupLeague CupTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Stoke City1963–64First Division1100010120
1964–65First Division10001020
1965–66First Division1301030170
Career Total2501050310

International

Source:

National teamYearAppsGoals
Northern Ireland196250
196320
196510
Total80

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. 1994. Lion Press. 0-9524151-0-0.
  2. http://nifootball.blogspot.com/2007/01/bobby-irvine_08.html Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats
  3. http://nifootball.blogspot.com/2007/01/bobby-irvine_08.html Ibid
  4. Web site: Clarets Mad . 30 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170312060844/http://www.clarets-mad.co.uk/news/loadfeat.asp?cid=EDX4&id=230309 . 12 March 2017 . dead .
  5. Web site: Ibid . 30 January 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170312060844/http://www.clarets-mad.co.uk/news/loadfeat.asp?cid=EDX4&id=230309 . 12 March 2017 . dead .
  6. http://nifootball.blogspot.com/2007/01/bobby-irvine_08.html NIFG