Jack Shaw (footballer, born 1916) explained

Jack Shaw
Fullname:John Shaw
Position:Wing half / centre half
Birth Date:2 October 1916
Birth Place:Oldham, England
Death Place:Shaw, England
Clubs1:South Shore Wesleyans
Years2:1933–1934
Clubs2:Lytham
Years3:1934–1936
Caps3:2
Goals3:0
Years4:1936–1937
Clubs4:Mossley
Years5:1937–1939
Caps5:7
Goals5:0
Years6:1939–1945
Caps6:11
Goals6:0
Years7:1945–1946
Clubs7:Watford
Caps7:0
Goals7:0
Years8:1946–1951
Clubs8:Mossley

John Shaw (2 October 1916 – 22 October 1973) was an English professional footballer who played in the Football League for Oldham Athletic, Grimsby Town and Birmingham.[1] He played as a wing half or centre half.

Life and career

Shaw was born in Oldham, Lancashire. A nephew of George Tyson, who played Rugby league for Oldham and Great Britain, Shaw played local football for South Shore Wesleyans and for Lytham before joining Oldham Athletic in 1934.[2] He appeared only twice in the Football League in two seasons with Oldham,[1] and joined Mossley of the Cheshire County League, where he made 44 appearances in all competitions in the 1936–37 season.[3] Returning to the Football League with Grimsby Town, he played seven First Division games before moving on to fellow First Division club Birmingham.[1] He went straight into the starting eleven, and played 11 consecutive games, but the team failed to avoid relegation.[4] The outbreak of the Second World War meant Shaw was unable to establish himself with the club.[2]

He joined Watford in 1945, but returned to Mossley before the Football League resumed after the war. In his first season back he made 50 appearances, and "was to continue as the first name on the team sheet for the next five years" until he retired from the game at the end of the 1950–51 season after 238 games in all competitions.[3] [5] Though with Birmingham he played as a "destructive" left half,[2] Mossley describe him as a "skilful and dominating centre half".[5] He was the star player in Mossley's 1949–50 FA Cup run which took them victorious through seven rounds of the competition, starting from the Extra preliminary round, to eventual defeat in the second round proper after a replay.[3] [6]

Shaw died in 1973 in Shaw, Lancashire, at the age of 57.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . SoccerData . Nottingham . 2004 . 235 . 978-1-899468-67-6.
  2. Book: Matthews, Tony . Birmingham City: A Complete Record . 1995 . Breedon Books . Derby . 123 . 978-1-85983-010-9.
  3. Web site: The Mossley AFC 'Hall of Fame': Jack Shaw . Mossleyweb: the Mossley AFC history website . John A. Cawthorne . 18 February 2023.
  4. Matthews, p. 181.
  5. Web site: Complete A–Z of Mossley Players Salisbury to Szabo . Mossleyweb: the Mossley AFC history website . John A. Cawthorne . 18 February 2023.
  6. Web site: Mossley . Football Club History Database . Richard Rundle . 12 April 2009.
  7. Web site: Players: S . Watford Football Club archive 1881–2012 . Trefor Jones . 4 October 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923033637/http://www.watfordfcarchive.com/downloads/players/MergedplayersS.pdf . 23 September 2015 .