Geoff Barnett (footballer) explained

Geoff Barnett
Fullname:Geoffrey Colin Barnett
Birth Date:16 October 1946
Birth Place:Northwich, England
Death Place:Fort Myers, Florida, U.S.
Position:Goalkeeper
Years1:1962–1969
Clubs1:Everton
Caps1:10
Goals1:0
Years2:1969–1976
Clubs2:Arsenal
Caps2:49
Goals2:0
Years3:1976–1980
Clubs3:Minnesota Kicks
Caps3:67
Goals3:0
Totalcaps:126
Totalgoals:0
Nationalteam1:England U21
Manageryears1:1981
Managerclubs1:Minnesota Kicks

Geoffrey Colin Barnett (16 October 1946 – 15 January 2021)[1] was an English footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

Career

Barnett played as a goalkeeper and started out at Everton in 1962, winning the 1965 FA Youth Cup and gaining schoolboy and U21 honours with England. However, with the goalkeeping spot being dominated by Gordon West and Andy Rankin through most of the 1960s, Barnett could only be content with being their understudy, making just ten league appearances in seven seasons for the Toffees, all in his final three seasons.

In October 1969, Barnett was hurriedly signed for £35,000 by Arsenal after their No. 1 goalkeeper Bob Wilson broke his arm early in the season, and Barnett made his debut against Coventry City on 4 October 1969. Barnett made 11 league appearances and successfully kept a clean sheet over both legs against Sporting CP in the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Second Round (saving a penalty in the goalless first leg), but once Wilson recovered from his injury, Barnett was relegated to the reserves and Wilson was in goal for the final.

Barnett missed out entirely on Arsenal's 1970–71 Double-winning season but after an injury to Wilson late on in the 1971–72 season, played against Leeds United in the 1972 FA Cup Final. He was blameless for the goal which saw Arsenal lose 1–0 in a match better known for ill-discipline rather than the quality of play. Barnett started the 1972–73 season as Wilson struggled to recover from injury, playing 25 matches (of his 49 appearances), but Wilson always assumed the goalkeeper's jersey ahead of Barnett when fully fit. He made no appearances in over 2 years, between February 24 1973 and April 26 1975.

After Arsenal signed Jimmy Rimmer as Wilson's long-term replacement in February 1974 (Wilson would retire from the game that summer), it was clear Barnett would never take the No. 1 spot at Arsenal full-time. Nevertheless, he stayed loyal to Arsenal and played for another two years as Rimmer's understudy, his last appearance coming against Stoke City on 13 December 1975 (his only match in the 1975/6 season). In January 1976 he left Arsenal to join the Minnesota Kicks in the US; in total he played 49 matches for Arsenal, with only an FA Cup runners-up medal to his name.

Barnett stayed in America for a number of years, briefly becoming the Kicks' coach on 14 May 1981. He had a record of 16–10. The team folded after the 1981 NASL season[2] However, he never pursued a career in management and eventually returned to England. He ran a pub, the George & Dragon, in Holmes Chapel in his native Cheshire until 2010.[3]

Death

Barnett died from complications of COVID-19 in Fort Myers, Florida, on 15 January 2021, at the age of 74.[1]

Honours

Everton[4]

1965

Arsenal

Minnesota Kicks

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Former Kicks goalkeeper and coach Geoff Barnett dies at 74. Patrick. Reusse. Star Tribune. 15 January 2021. 15 January 2021.
  2. http://national.soccerhall.org/history/NASL_AllTimeCoachesRegistry.htm NASL Coaches Registry
  3. Web site: Former Everton and Arsenal star is mine host. Northwich Guardian.co.uk. 9 November 2009 .
  4. Web site: The Class of '65: Everton's First FA Youth Cup Winning Team – 50 Years On. Toffee Web.com.
  5. Book: Leslie . Jack . Vernon . Rollin . Rothmans Football Yearbook 1977–78 . 1977 . Brickfield Publications Ltd . London . 0354 09018 6 . 491.