Harry Stapley Explained

Harry Stapley
Fullname:Henry Stapley
Birth Date:29 April 1883
Birth Place:Southborough, Kent, England
Death Place:Glossop, England
Position:Centre-forward, inside-right
Height:[1]
Clubs1:Manor Park Albion
Caps4:0
Goals4:0
Clubs5:Woodford Town
Years6:1905–1908
Caps6:71
Goals6:39
Years7:1908–1914
Caps7:188
Goals7:93
Nationalyears1:1907–1909
Nationalteam1:England Amateur
Nationalcaps1:11
Nationalgoals1:22
Nationalyears2:1908
Nationalteam2:Great Britain
Nationalcaps2:3
Nationalgoals2:6

Henry Stapley (29 April 1883 – 29 April 1937) was an English amateur footballer who played for West Ham United and Glossop. Internationally, he played for the England amateur team and competed for Great Britain at the 1908 Summer Olympics, where he scored six goals.[2]

Club career

Stapley played for Manor Park Albion, Bromley and Norwich CEYMS before joining Reading, where he played for the reserve and amateur teams. He then played for Woodford Town, where he was made captain,[3] before signing for West Ham United, then of the Southern League,[4] on 28 September 1905. He continued to play for Woodford Town after signing.[5]

Stapley made his West Ham debut against Portsmouth on 23 December 1905 and scored the only goal of the game. He spent three seasons at Upton Park and was the Irons' top scorer in all three, even though his job as a schoolteacher prevented him from traveling to certain midweek away games.[4] In total, he scored 41 goals in 75 appearances.[6]

He joined Second Division club Glossop in 1908 and continued his scoring record, ending as the club's top-scorer for seven consecutive seasons.[4] He played 188 League games for Glossop, scoring 93 goals.[7]

International career

Stapley made 14 appearances for the England amateur team, netting 28 goals, thus averaging two goals a game.[8] Only Vivian Woodward has scored more goals for the amateur side than him with 44. Stapley's tally includes a 5-goal haul against the Netherlands in 1907, a 4-goal haul against the same opponents in 1908 and three hat-tricks against Belgium(2) and Sweden for a total of five trebles. Again, only Woodward has scored more hat-tricks for the amateur side than him, with six.[9] Stapley scored a further six goals in unofficial matches, which came in the form of two hat-tricks against Ireland to help his side with 6–1 and 5–1 wins, thus bringing his goal tally to 34 goals and his hat-trick tally to a record-breaking seven, since Woodward never scored one in an unofficial match.[9]

In 1908, he was a member of the English amateur team that represented Great Britain at the 1908 Summer Olympics, winning the gold medal in the football tournament. He scored two goals in the first-round match, a 12–1 drubbing of Sweden, and scored all four in the semi-final against the Netherlands. He also appeared in the final against Denmark, helping his side with a 2—0 win.[3] [10] With these 6 goals, he is the second 'Highest British goal scorer within the Olympics' only behind Harold Walden who scored 9 in the 1912 Summer Olympics.[9]

Outside football

Stapley tutored the sons of Glossop chairman Samuel Hill-Wood in football and cricket and saw three of his students attain blues in cricket at Oxford and Cambridge. He was later private secretary to Hill-Wood after his election as Member of Parliament for High Peak.[4]

His brother, William Stapley, also played League football for Glossop.[4]

International goals

England Amateurs score listed first, score column indicates score after each Stapley goal.

List of international goals scored by Harry Stapley
scope=col No.scope=col Capscope=col Date scope=col Venue scope=col Opponent scope=col Score scope=col Resultscope=col Competitionscope=col class=unsortable
scope=row11 21 December 1907 Feethams, Darlington, England 12–2
scope=row2
scope=row3
scope=row4
scope=row5
scope=row62 18 April 1908 Sukkelweg, Bruxelles, Belgium 8–2
scope=row7
scope=row8
scope=row93 20 April 1908 Viktoria field, Berlin-Mariendorf, Germany 5–1
scope=row10
scope=row114 20 October 1908 White City, London, England 12–1
scope=row12
scope=row135 22 October 1908 4–0
scope=row14
scope=row15
scope=row16
scope=row176 12 April 1909 Oud Rosenburg, Amsterdam, Netherlands 7–0
scope=row187 17 April 1909 White Hart Lane, London, England 11–2
scope=row19
scope=row20
scope=row218 20 May 1909 Landhof, Basel, Switzerland 9–0
scope=row229 22 May 1909 Stade de FGSPF, Gentilly, France 5–1
scope=row23
scope=row2410 6 November 1909 Anlaby Road, Hull, England 7–0
scope=row25
scope=row26
scope=row2711 11 December 1909 Stamford Bridge, Fullham, England 9–1
scope=row28

Notes and References

  1. News: The coming of the big ball: the Second Division: Fulham . Athletic News . Manchester . 18 August 1913 . 5 . British Newspaper Archive . subscription.
  2. Web site: Harry Stapley . Olympedia . 26 March 2021.
  3. Harry Stapley . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418042101/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/st/harry-stapley-1.html . dead . 18 April 2020 . 8 April 2018.
  4. Book: Hogg, Tony . 2005 . Who's Who of West Ham United . Profile Sports Media . 1-903135-50-8 . 192–193.
  5. Web site: Harry Stapley . englandfootballonline.com . 6 May 2015 . 8 April 2018 .
  6. Web site: Harry Stapley . westhamstats.info . 8 April 2018 .
  7. Book: Joyce, Michael. Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. 2012. 2002. SoccerData. Nottingham. 978-1-905891-61-0. 275.
  8. Web site: Harold S Stapley . Association of Football Statisticians . 11v11.com . 8 April 2018 .
  9. Web site: England Matches - The Amateurs 1906-1939 . englandfootballonline.com . 28 July 2022 . 28 March 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220328123742/http://englandfootballonline.com/MatchRsl/MatchRslAm.html . live .
  10. Book: The Fourth Olympiad - London 1908 - Official Report . British Olympic Association . May 1909 . 8 April 2018.