George Allen (footballer, born 1932) explained

George Allen
Fullname:George Henry Allen[1]
Birth Date:23 January 1932
Birth Place:Small Heath, Birmingham, England
Death Place:Solihull, England
Height:[2]
Position:Left back
Years1:19??–1952
Years2:1952–1962
Caps2:134
Goals2:0
Years3:1962–1965
Caps3:134
Goals3:0
Years4:1965–19??
Clubs4:Bideford

George Henry Allen (23 January 1932 – 13 July 2016) was an English footballer who played more than 250 games in the Football League.

Playing career

Allen was born in Small Heath, Birmingham.[3] A strong-tackling left-back, he joined Coventry City as an amateur while in the army but made no first-team appearances. In November 1952, he joined Birmingham City on a free transfer, and made his league debut the following season on 19 April 1954 in a Second Division game against Nottingham Forest at St Andrew's which ended 2–2. The form of established full-back pairing Ken Green and Jeff Hall meant Allen was unable to establish himself as a regular in the side, making only 30 appearances in his first seven years at the club. When Green sustained the injury which eventually forced his retirement, Allen took his place and kept it until suffering a fractured skull in 1961. On his recovery, he could not regain his place, mainly due to the form of Graham Sissons. After almost ten years at the club, and 166 games in all competitions, he joined Torquay United in January 1962, following in the footsteps of Birmingham teammate Gordon Astall who had made the same move six months earlier.

He made his Torquay debut in a 4–2 home win over Hull City on 20 January 1962[4] and was ever-present for the remainder of the season. The following season, he missed just one game as Torquay finished sixth in Division Four. He began the 1963–64 season out of the side, Frank Austin beginning the season at left-back in his place. However, after three games, Allen regained his place and Austin switched to right-back in place of Colin Bettany. Allen went to play in 40 league games that season, as well as all three of Torquay's cup ties. He began the 1964–65 season as a regular, but lost his place to Tony Hellin late in the season.

In 1965 he moved to north Devon club Bideford, who played in the Western League. He had played 134 league games for Torquay, and failed to score for either of his league clubs. He died on 13 July 2016.[5]

Club statistics

Source:[6]

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupFairs CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Birmingham City1953–54Second Division100010
1954–55Second Division13000130
1955–56First Division20001030
1956–57First Division802010110
1957–58First Division40002060
1958–59First Division2706030360
1959–60First Division3601030400
1960–61First Division380303060500
1961–62First Division50100060
Total1340120401601660
Torquay United1961–62Third Division190190
1962–63Fourth Division4502020490
1963–64Fourth Division4002010430
1963–64Fourth Division3004010350
Total134080401460
Career total2680200801603120

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hugman, Barry J. . The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946-1998 . 1998 . Queen Anne Press . 1-85291-585-4.
  2. Book: Golesworth, Maurice . Soccer Who's Who . The Sportsmans Book Club . 1965.
  3. Book: Matthews, Tony . Birmingham City: A Complete Record . 1995 . Breedon Books . Derby . 978-1-85983-010-9 . 68.
  4. Book: Edwards, Leigh . The definitive Torquay United F.C. . March 1997 . The Association of Football Statisticians . 40–43 . 1-899468-09-9.
  5. News: Ex-Birmingham City defender George Allen passes away . Brian . Dick . Birmingham Mail . 18 July 2016 . 18 March 2020.
  6. Web site: Player search: Allen, GH (George) . English National Football Archive . 18 March 2020 . subscription.