John Irving (footballer, born 1867) explained

John Irving
Birth Date:1867
Birth Place:Dumfries, Scotland
Death Date: (aged 75)
Death Place:Nottingham, England
Position:Inside right
Years1:1887–1889
Years2:1889–1895
Caps2:44
Goals2:9
Years3:1895–1896
Years4:1896–1897
Caps4:7
Goals4:1

John Irving (1867 – 20 November 1942),[1] also known as Johnnie[2] or Johnny Irving,[3] was a Scottish professional association footballer who scored 10 goals from 51 appearances in the Football League in the 1890s playing as an inside right for Lincoln City.[4]

Playing career

Irving was born in Dumfries in 1867.[3] He played for home-town club Queen of the South Wanderers for two years before moving to England to join Lincoln City.[2] He made his debut on 5 November 1889 in the Midland League, and played for the club until the 1894–95 season, their second in the Football League. In the 1890–91 season, Irving was the club's leading scorer, with 12 goals from Football Alliance and FA Cup games.[1] He is believed to have been the first Lincoln player to be sent off in a Football League match: in November 1894, he and Grimsby Town's Tom Frith were dismissed for fighting.[5]

After losing his first-team place, Irving moved on in February 1895 to Newark Town in the Midland League before returning to Lincoln City a few months later.[3] His last game for their first team came in the Football League Second Division, a 3–0 defeat to Loughborough on 6 March 1897,[1] and he retired as a player later that year.[3] Over both spells with Lincoln, Irving scored 43 goals from 123 senior appearances.[1]

After playing

After finishing his playing career, Irving became Lincoln City's trainer, and served on their board of directors between 1897 and 1901.[2] It was during this period that David Calderhead, who had been a team-mate of Irving's at Queen of the South Wanderers, joined Lincoln as manager.[6] [7] Irving's two sons also went on to become directors of the club.[2] Irving then kept a pub in Lincoln until his retirement in 1930, when he moved to Nottingham with one of his sons, who had joined the board of Notts County F.C. Irving died in that city in 1942 aged 75.[3]

Notes

A. : Lincoln City appearances and goals are for Football League matches only, not those in the Midland League or Football Alliance.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: John Irving . The Lincoln City FC Archive . . 6 April 2010. Access individual season statistics via Season Stats dropdown menu.
  2. Web site: Questions and Answers . Ian . Black . . 8 April 2010.
  3. Web site: Profiles: Johnny Irving . The Forgotten Imp . 9 April 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110928065334/http://www.theimp.lincolnfans.co.uk/retro48.shtml . 28 September 2011 .
  4. Book: Joyce, Michael . Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939 . SoccerData (Tony Brown) . Nottingham . 2004 . 135 . 978-1-899468-67-6.
  5. Web site: We've Met (Grimsby) Before . Gary . Parle . Lincoln City F.C . 19 February 2010 . 8 April 2010.
  6. Web site: The Managers . The Lincoln City FC Archive . . 23 November 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120215131933/http://www.redimps.com/archive3/index.mv?cat=managers&drop=matchsearch . 15 February 2012 .
  7. Web site: David Calderhead – A Squad . Scottish Football Association . 23 November 2010.