Dai Ward Explained

Dai Ward
Fullname:David Ward[1]
Birth Date:16 July 1934
Birth Place:Barry, Wales
Position:Forward
Years1:1952–1954
Years2:1954
Years3:1954–1961
Years4:1961–1962
Years5:1962–1963
Years6:1963–1965
Years7:1965–1966
Years8:1966–1967
Years9:1967–1968
Clubs1:Barry Town
Clubs2:Cardiff City
Clubs3:Bristol Rovers
Clubs4:Cardiff City
Clubs5:Watford
Clubs6:Brentford
Clubs7:Worcester City
Clubs8:Bath City
Clubs9:Cambridge United
Caps1:2
Caps2:0
Caps3:175
Caps4:35
Caps5:59
Caps6:47
Caps7:42
Caps8:30
Caps10:34
Goals1:1
Goals2:0
Goals3:90
Goals4:18
Goals5:31
Goals6:21
Goals7:8
Goals8:15
Goals9:22
Goals10:15
Nationalyears1:1959–1961
Nationalteam1:Wales
Nationalcaps1:2
Nationalgoals1:0
Death Place:Cambridge, England
Years10:1968–1970
Clubs10:Cambridge City

David Ward (16 July 1934 – 12 January 1996)[2] was a Welsh former professional footballer and Wales international. During his career in The Football League, he averaged a goal every other game, scoring 160 goals in 316 matches between 1954 and 1965.

Career

Ward began his career at his hometown side Barry Town and his eight goals in five appearances during the 1951–52 Southern and Welsh League seasons led a number of teams to take an interest in him.[3] He eventually signed for Bristol Rovers but it was a number of years before he managed to hold down a regular place in the side due to the presence of one of the club's all-time greats in Geoff Bradford. Eventually handed a chance in the side he responded by scoring nine times in his first eight games. His most prolific season for the club was in 1958–59 when he finished the season with 27 goals in 38 matches.[4] It was this form that resulted in him earning his first cap for Wales in a 2–2 draw with England on 26 November 1958 in the 1959 British Home Championship.[5]

Ward's spell at the club turned sour when he fell out with manager Bert Tann and began a bitter battle to leave the club, even at one time threatening to quit football entirely unless he was allowed to leave. He left the club in February 1961 to return to his home country to sign for Cardiff City. In his first full season at the club he finished as the top scorer with 17 goals and was handed his second Wales cap in a 1–1 draw with England on 14 October 1961.[6] However his efforts could not stop the club being relegated from Division One and the following season he fell out of favour and was allowed to join Watford, where he spent one year before finishing his professional career at Brentford. Dai went on to play for Worcester City, Bath City, Cambridge United and Cambridge City. He also was assistant manager at Histon in 1983 where his son, also a David, was a member of the squad.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Search 1984 to 2006 – Birth, Marriage and Death indexes . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090806073425/http://www.findmypast.com/post84BMDSearchStart.action?redef=0&searchType=B . 6 August 2009 . 28 December 2009 . Findmypast.com.
  2. Web site: Dai Ward . worldfootball.net . 3 December 2021 .
  3. Web site: Barry Town AFC 1951–52 . live . 19 September 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210920212557/https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/files.pitchero.com%2Fclubs%2F30793%2FBarryTown1951-52Season.xls . 20 September 2021 .
  4. Book: Hayes, Dean . The Who's Who of Cardiff City . Breedon Books . 2006 . 1-85983-462-0 . Derby . 196.
  5. Web site: England 2–2 Wales . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20191216023342/http://www.thefa.com/England/MensSeniorTeam/Archive.aspx?x=328 . 16 December 2019 . 28 December 2009 . thefa.com.
  6. Web site: Wales 1–1 England . 28 December 2009 . thefa.com.