Joe Cockroft Explained

Joe Cockroft
Fullname:Joseph Cockroft
Birth Date:20 June 1911
Birth Place:Barnsley, England
Death Place:Heacham, England
Height:5 ft 7+1/2 in[1]
Position:Wing half
Clubs1:Wombwell
Caps1:?
Goals1:?
Years2:1931–1932
Clubs2:Rotherham United
Caps2:3
Goals2:1
Years3:1932–1933
Clubs3:Gainsborough Trinity
Caps3:?
Goals3:?
Years4:1933–1939
Clubs4:West Ham United
Caps4:251
Goals4:3
Clubs5:West Ham United (wartime)
Clubs6:Dartford (guest)
Clubs7:Sheffield Wednesday (guest)
Years8:1945–1948
Clubs8:Sheffield Wednesday
Caps8:87
Goals8:2
Years9:1948–1949
Clubs9:Sheffield United
Caps9:12
Goals9:0
Years10:1949–19??
Clubs10:Wisbech Town (player-manager)
Caps10:?
Goals10:?
Manageryears1:1949–1952
Managerclubs1:Wisbech Town (player-manager)

Joseph Cockroft (20 June 1911 – February 1994) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Rotherham United, West Ham United, Sheffield Wednesday and Sheffield United.[2]

Cockroft played for Yorkshire Paper Mills, Barnsley Old Boys, Ardsley Athletic, Wombwell, Rotherham United and then Gainsborough Trinity before moving to West Ham United, then of Division Two, in 1933.[3]

Signed after a months trial from Gainsborough by Charlie Paynter, Cockroft made his West Ham debut on 14 April 1933, having made just four reserve appearances for the club. Drafted in after injuries to first-choice left-halves Albert Cadwell and Joe Musgrave, he made the position his own and rarely missed a game up to the outbreak of World War II.[3] [4]

Cockroft played as a left-half, but often switched positions with Len Goulden during matches to dumbfound oppositions.[3] He was an ever-present in the team for the 1933–34, 1934–35, 1935–36 and 1936–37 seasons, making 217 consecutive appearances.[3] [4] [5]

Cockroft played in the first three games of the 1939–40 season, but these were expunged from the records after the League was suspended following the outbreak of World War II. The war saw Cockroft's home destroyed in the Blitz.[5] He was part of West Ham's War Cup-winning side of 1940, appearing in all 9 games including the final, and made 20 appearances in the League South.[4] He guested for Sheffield Wednesday as direction of labour laws compelled his employment at Edgar Allen and Company, a steelworks in Sheffield.[6] He made 198 wartime appearances for Wednesday, more than any other player, and scored 13 goals.[7] He played for the Owls in the northern final of the War Cup in 1943, and went on to join the club after hostilities ended.[8]

Cockroft spent almost three years at Hillsborough after the war, making a total of 97 appearances in all competitions.[9] His debut came on 5 January 1946 in a goalless FA Cup 3rd round first leg game against Mansfield Town. He went on to play in all of the Owls' FA Cup games in the 1945–46 season; the club were eventually knocked out by Stoke City in the 5th round following comprehensive wins over York City and Mansfield.

He joined Sheffield United for £4,000[8] in November 1948[10] and became the oldest First Division debutant as a 37-year-old.[5] [11] He left a year later to take on a player-manager role at Wisbech Town.[12] His tenure of 1,065 days makes him one of Wisbech's longest serving managers.[13]

He was also an FA coach, outside of football, Cockroft had many other interests. He was a keen golfer, swimmer and motorist, and was also interested in anatomy.[14] He was landlord of the Angel Inn, Wisbech. He retired to Hunstanton, Norfolk with his wife Winifred. He died on 8 February, 1994. He had two children, a son Terry and daughter Joyce.[15]

Career statistics

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Rotherham United1930–31Division 3 North2121
1931–32Division 3 North1010
Total3131
West Ham United1932–33Division 2600060
1933–34Division 242020440
1934–35Division 242020440
1935–36Division 242120441
1936–37Division 242120441
1937–38Division 238010390
1938–39Division 239130421
Total25131202633
Sheffield Wednesday1945–46N/A006060
1946–47Division 233120341
1947–48Division 241020430
1948–49Division 213100131
Total872100972
Sheffield United1948–49Division 112020140
Career total35362403776

Notes and References

  1. News: West Ham. 'We can't go on being pipped' . Sunday Dispatch Football Guide . London . 23 August 1936 . vi . Newspapers.com.
  2. Book: Joyce, Michael. Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. 2012. 2002. SoccerData. Nottingham. 978-1-905891-61-0. 61.
  3. Book: Hogg, Tony . Who's Who of West Ham United . 2005 . Profile Sports Media. 1-903135-50-8 . 49.
  4. Web site: Joe Cockroft. westhamstats.info. 10 July 2008.
  5. Web site: The Ex-Files - Rare trade in Owls and Hammers . The Independent . 13 December 1997 . 26 March 2018 .
  6. Web site: Joe Cockroft. DOC. Rotherham United F.C.. 26 March 2018.
  7. Book: The Wednesday Boys: A Definitive Guide to Sheffield Wednesday Football Club. Jason. Dickinson. John. Brodie. Pickard Communication. 2005. 0-9547264-9-9. 65.
  8. Book: 1986-1987 Official Handbook. Sheffield Wednesday F.C.. 24. https://web.archive.org/web/20180326141917/http://hillsborough.independent.gov.uk/repository/docs/SWF000003230001.pdf . 26 March 2018 . dead.
  9. Web site: Joe Cockroft. Jackson. Stuart. The Sheffield Wednesday Archive. 10 July 2008.
  10. News: Morrison's No To Sheffield United . 6 November 1948. Derby Daily Telegraph. 8 . British Newspaper Archive. subscription.
  11. Web site: The game in numbers: seesaw start for Premier League . Edgar . Bill . The Times . 14 August 2017 . 26 March 2018 .
  12. Web site: Sheffield United. Brown. Neil. Post War Football League Player Database. 10 July 2008.
  13. Web site: 'Appy anniversary: Wisbech Town boss celebrates 1,000 days in charge as St Ives Town arrive for FA Vase replay . Armstrong . Mark . Caney . Gavin . The Pink Un . Norwich . 20 November 2012 . 26 March 2018 .
  14. Web site: Popular Footballers cigarette card. Carreras Limited. theflysohigh.
  15. News: Former West Ham Cup Final Hero. Lynn Advertiser . 15 February 1994. 4.