Jack Jennings (English footballer) explained

Jack Jennings
Birth Date:27 August 1902[1]
Birth Place:Platt Bridge, Wigan, England
Death Place:Northampton, England
Height:[2]
Position:Right half
Years1:1923–1925
Clubs1:Wigan Borough
Years2:1925–1930
Clubs2:Cardiff City
Caps2:94
Goals2:0
Years3:1930–1936
Clubs3:Middlesbrough
Years4:1936–1937
Clubs4:Preston North End
Years5:1937–1945
Clubs5:Bradford City
Caps5:28
Goals5:0
Totalcaps:126
Totalgoals:0

John Jennings (27 August 1902 – 14 April 1997) was an English professional footballer who played as a right half.

Career

Born in Platt Bridge, Jennings had worked as a railway fireman before beginning his footballing career with Wigan Borough.[3] He joined First Division side Cardiff City in 1925, making his debut in a 3–2 defeat to Birmingham City on 10 October 1925. However, due to competition from several established players including Billy Hardy and Harry Wake, he made just one further appearance during the 1925–26 season in a 0–0 draw with Arsenal on 31 February 1926.[4] The following season, Jennings did not make an appearance until the final three months of the season, being handed a chance at full back following an injury to Tom Watson, but impressed enough to eventually displace Watson from the side. He became a permanent fixture in the first team at Ninian Park, featuring in every league match that the club played for nearly two years between February 1928 and January 1930, before he was sold to Middlesbrough as part of a triple transfer that included Joe Hillier and Fred Warren.[3]

Jennings spent several years as club captain at Middlesbrough, eventually relinquishing the role to Tom Griffiths following his arrival from Bolton Wanderers in 1933,[3] and was selected in an FA XI for a tour of Canada in 1931.[5] He signed for Bradford City in February 1937 from Preston North End, leaving the club in 1945 to become a trainer at Northampton Town.[6] During his time with Bradford City he made 28 appearances in the Football League, and 3 appearances in the FA Cup.[7]

He later worked as a coach for the England national amateur football team and the Great Britain Olympic football team, working as a trainer for Norman Creek, Charles Hughes and Walter Winterbottom between 1952 and 1971.[8] [9] He also worked as a trainer for player-manager Jimmy Armfield on an FA XI tour of Tahiti, New Zealand, Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand in 1969.[5]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dykes. Garth. Wigan Borough in the Football League : A Complete Record and Who's Who, 1921-31. 2011. Tony Brown. Nottingham. 978-1-905891-53-5. 54.
  2. News: Cardiff City . subscription . Athletic News . 6 . 24 August 1925 . 13 November 2020 . British Newspaper Archive.
  3. Hayes, p. 99
  4. Shepherd, pp. 27-31
  5. Web site: British FA XI Tours. 1 February 2017. Neil Morrison. The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  6. Frost, p. 400
  7. Frost, p. 384
  8. Web site: Great Britain's Amateur history. 1 February 2017. England Football Online.
  9. Web site: The 17 Middlesbrough FC heroes who have made it to international dugouts. 2 July 2016. 1 February 2017. Anthony Vickers & Dave Allan. Gazette Live.