Fred Slater Explained

Fred Slater
Fullname:Frederick Benjamin Slater
Position:Centre forward
Birth Date:25 September 1925
Birth Place:Burton upon Trent, England
Death Date:September
Death Place:Isle of Wight, England
Years1:
Clubs1:Burton Albion
Years2:1947–1951
Caps2:5
Goals2:1
Years3:1951–1952
Caps3:13
Goals3:3
Years4:1952–1955
Clubs4:Corby Town
Years5:1955–1957
Clubs5:Nuneaton Borough
Years6:1957–1959
Clubs6:Hinckley Athletic

Frederick Benjamin Slater (25 September 1925 – September 2002) was an English professional footballer who played in the Football League for Birmingham City and York City, primarily as a centre forward.[1] He also played in non-league football for Burton Albion, Corby Town, Nuneaton Borough and Hinckley Athletic.

Life and career

Slater was born in 1925 in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire. He played football while in the Army as well as for home-town club Burton Albion, and had a reputation as a "rough and tumble striker", by the time Birmingham City signed him on professional forms on 13 November 1947.[2] He was prolific in reserve-team football, scored in first-team friendlies in Scotland and Switzerland,[3] and made his senior debut on 13 November 1948a year to the day after signing[4] standing in for Cyril Trigg. Ten minutes into the match, at home to Huddersfield Town in the First Division, he injured a leg in a tackle. He played on, in increasing discomfort, went to hospital after the match, and X-rays revealed a broken bone, just above the ankle. He said afterwards, "I thought it was a bit painful, but had not realised it was as bad as that."[5] He missed only four months of the season, but by the time he was fit again, Jimmy Dailey had taken over at centre forward. It was the first instance of what the Sports Argus dubbed "an unhappy knack of bumping into trouble". Over the next 18 months, he injured himself tripping on the stairs, twisted his ankle when he trod on a brick, and what he thought was "just a cold" had turned into pneumonia that left him hospitalised for weeks.[6] He played just five first-team games for Birmingham, and was transfer-listed at the end of the 1950–51 season.[7]

In June 1951, Slater signed for York City of the Third Division North.[8] After York's opening-day opponents, Lincoln City, took the lead after 14 minutes, Slater equalised a minute later, but Lincoln regained and kept the lead.[9] He failed to score in the next five matches and lost his place.[10] Brought back into the side to face Darlington at the end of September, Slater scored both goals in a 2–1 win, but those goals were his last for the first team. He made 14 appearances in league and FA Cup, and was placed on the transfer list.[11]

There were no takers from the Football League, and he moved into non-league football with Corby Town, newly admitted to the Midland League.[12] He helped them finish as runners-up in his first season,[13] scored 38 goals in his second,[14] but lost form at the start of his third. In December 1954, Corby turned down Peterborough United's offer of a player swap with the ageing and equally out of form Doug Taft.[15] [16] Slater then missed six weeks with a rib injury,[17] but his form returned along with his fitness, and according to the Peterborough Citizen & Advertiser, "there has been a perceptible improvement on the part of Corby since Fred Slater returned and started to score goals again"[18]

He signed for Nuneaton Borough for the 1955–56 season, and finished it with 50 goals in all competitions as his team won the Birmingham LeagueBirmingham Senior Cup double. He set a club record of 8 goals in a single match, an 11–1 league defeat of Bilston. The season summary on the club's heritage website records that without Slater, Nuneaton would not have won the title: Although he top-scored again in 1956–57 with 23 goals, his form was poor compared with that of the previous season, and he was released. He spent the next two seasons with Hinckley Athletic, another Birmingham League club. By December 1958, the Leicester Evening Mail was suggesting that some of those ageing professionals who had been out of the senior team, including Slater, might be allowed to leave.[19] A couple of weeks later, he returned to the first team and scored twice, "to show he is far from finished."[20] He left the professional game at the end of the season, but played on for a few years for his works team, Dunlop, in the Birmingham Works League.[21]

Slater died in September 2002 on the Isle of Wight.

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Birmingham City1948–49First Division300030
1949–50First Division210021
1950–51First Division000000
Total510051
York City1951–52[22] Third Division North13310143
Career total18410194

Honours

Nuneaton Borough

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fred Slater . UK A–Z Transfers . Neil Brown . 16 April 2021.
  2. News: The thirteeth . Daily Mirror . London . 12 November 1948 . 7.
  3. News: Leaves of my Notebook. Salute the Blues . Argus Junior . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 21 August 1928 . 3 . This young six-footer strong man from Burton-on-Trent shapes like one who will make a stir. He has a flair for collecting "hat-tricks" in reserve company: he showed, too, in the senior friendly with Dundee United and in the Swiss tour match at Basle that he had quality and punch. Keep an eye on Mr. Slater..
    Web site: Dundee Utd 1 Birmingham 5 Friendly . Arab Archive . 15 April 2021.
    Web site: FC Basel – Birmingham City FC 0:5 (0:4) . FC Basel Archiv . 15 April 2021.
  4. News: The thirteeth . Daily Mirror . London . 12 November 1948 . 7.
  5. News: Played football wth broken leg . Sunday Dispatch . London . 14 November 1948 . 5.
  6. News: Leaves of my Notebook. Salute the Blues . Argus Junior . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 12 August 1950 . 5.
  7. News: Dennis Jennings to leave Blues . Birmingham Gazette . 4 May 1951 . 6.
  8. News: York City signing . Yorkshire Evening Post . 14 June 1951 . 12.
  9. News: Lincoln City get off the mark splendidly . Football Post . Nottingham . 18 August 1951 . 7.
  10. News: For Valley Parade . Bradford Observer . 6 September 1951 . 8.
  11. News: Fred Slater on list . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 3 May 1952 . 4.
  12. News: Fred Slater and that number 13 . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 9 August 1952 . 5.
  13. Web site: Corby Town . Football Club History Database . Richard Rundle . 15 April 2021.
  14. News: Football Chatter . Charles . Matheson . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 22 May 1954 . 4.
  15. News: Grimsby's 25 goals have been netted by 16 players . Grantham Journal . 19 November 1954 . 11 . This time last season, Doug Taft had 21 goals to his credit, but this season he has been unable to retain a regular place as Peterborough's centre-forward..
  16. News: The Taft–Slater deal with Corby is off . Peterborough Standard . 17 December 1954 . 12.
  17. News: Not Slater v. Rigby this time . Peterborough Standard . 25 February 1955 . 12.
  18. News: This should encourage them . Fred . Walters . Peterborough Citizen & Advertiser . 22 April 1955 . 10.
  19. News: Others to go? . Leicester Evening Mail . 6 December 1958 . 20.
  20. News: Veterans in form . Leicester Evening Mail . 20 December 1958 . 20.
  21. News: Birmingham Works Review . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 31 October 1959 . 6.
    News: Busmen have new drive! . Sports Argus . Birmingham . 28 October 1961 . 6.
  22. Web site: Slater, FB (Fred) . English National Football Archive . 16 April 2021 . subscription.