Peter Lorimer Explained

Peter Lorimer
Fullname:Peter Patrick Lorimer
Birth Date:14 December 1946
Birth Place:Dundee, Scotland
Height:[1]
Position:Attacking midfielder
Years1:1962–1979
Clubs1:Leeds United
Caps1:450
Goals1:151
Years2:1971
Clubs2:Cape Town City (loan)
Caps2:6
Goals2:8
Years3:1979
Clubs3:Toronto Blizzard
Caps3:29
Goals3:9
Years4:1979–1980
Clubs4:York City
Caps4:29
Goals4:8
Years5:1980
Clubs5:Toronto Blizzard
Caps5:18
Goals5:2
Years6:1981–1983
Clubs6:Vancouver Whitecaps
Caps6:80
Goals6:22
Years7:1983
Clubs7:UCD (loan)
Caps7:3
Goals7:0
Years8:1983–1985
Clubs8:Leeds United
Caps8:76
Goals8:17
Years9:1985–1986
Clubs9:Whitby Town
Years10:1986
Clubs10:Hapoel Haifa
Totalcaps:691
Totalgoals:217
Nationalyears1:1963
Nationalteam1:Scotland Amateur
Nationalcaps1:7
Nationalgoals1:7
Nationalyears2:1969–1976
Nationalteam2:Scotland
Nationalcaps2:21
Nationalgoals2:4

Peter Patrick Lorimer (14 December 1946 – 20 March 2021) was a Scottish professional footballer, best known for his time with Leeds United and Scotland during the late 1960s and early 1970s. An attacking midfielder and the club's youngest-ever player, he was renowned for his powerful strikes from distance. From 1984 to 1985 he was club captain. Lorimer is the club record scorer with 238 goals in all competitions. He was voted Leeds' ninth greatest player ever and on to the greatest Leeds United team of all time.

After retiring as a player, Lorimer became a member of the Leeds board of directors, provided match commentary on BBC Radio Leeds and Yorkshire Radio and wrote a regular column in the Yorkshire Evening Post. From April 2013 he held the position of club ambassador.[2]

Early life

Lorimer was born in Dundee[3] to Janet and Peter Lorimer and was brought up in Broughty Ferry on the edge of the city.[4] He attended Eastern Primary School and later Stobswell Secondary School, where he played for the school's football team.[5] [6]

Club career

Leeds United

After playing junior football in Dundee for Stobswell Boys and Broughty YMCA, Lorimer signed for Leeds United in May 1962 after scoring for the Scotland Schoolboys team in a 4–2 win over England.[7] He made his Leeds debut on 29 September 1962 against Southampton, aged 15 years and 289 days, becoming the youngest player to play for the first team.

Lorimer came to regular prominence in the 1965–66 season, making 34 League Championship appearances and scoring 19 goals, more than any other player at Leeds United managed that season. A skilful and industrious player who operated best in a drifting position either wide on the right (though not as an orthodox winger – he was more likely to cut in and shoot than stay wide and cross) or behind two main strikers (usually Allan Clarke and Mick Jones), Lorimer was a frequent and often spectacular goalscorer, earning himself several nicknames stemming from his powerful shooting – HotShot and Lash being two of the more prevalent.[8] He became renowned for these strikes, with his shots reaching speeds of up to 90 mph.[9] One penalty kick was recorded at 107 mph.[10]

In the 1966–67 season, Lorimer made his first major headlines when a free-kick equaliser against Chelsea in an FA Cup semi-final was controversially ruled out by referee Ken Burns and retaken, for the Chelsea players had not retreated the necessary 10 yards. Chelsea held on to win the game.[11] In the 1975 European Cup Final, Lorimer scored to give Leeds a 1–0 lead, only for the goal to be controversially disallowed by referee Michel Kitabdjian, with Leeds going on to lose the game. In summer 1971, Lorimer had a short spell on loan at Cape Town City in South Africa. Lorimer left the club in 1979, having scored 219 goals in 616 appearances.[12] During this time he had won two League titles, an FA Cup, a League Cup, a Charity Shield, and two Inter-Cities Fairs Cups.[13]

Later career

He played for York City and then tried his luck in the North American Soccer League (NASL). Lorimer played for two clubs: the Toronto Blizzard (1979–1980) and the Vancouver Whitecaps (1981–83). In January 1983 he signed for University College Dublin.[14]

Lorimer returned to Leeds United in 1983, aged 37, two seasons after Leeds had fallen into the Football League Second Division. He played under former team-mate Eddie Gray (more than a year his junior) and broke the club's goalscoring record in the process, ending up with 238 goals from 705 appearances until retiring just before his 40th birthday at the end of the 1985–86 season. However, Leeds were still a Second Division team when Lorimer played his final game for them and it would be another four years before they returned to the First Division.[15]

International career

Lorimer made his international debut for Scotland against Austria in November 1969. He won 21 caps for Scotland and scored four goals, having played in all three of their matches at the 1974 FIFA World Cup.[16] His Scotland career was, however, affected by a ban imposed on him in 1971 after he spent a summer playing for Cape Town City in apartheid-era South Africa.

After playing

In his retirement Lorimer ran the Commercial Inn pub in the Holbeck area of the city.[17] Lorimer remained a dedicated spokesman for Leeds United after retirement – he was always one of the first ex-players to whom broadcasters and journalists turned when the club was in the news.[18] He worked as a pundit at games for BBC Radio Leeds and as a columnist for the local paper, the Yorkshire Evening Post. He wrote a column in the club's match programme (his final one being the match against Aston Villa on 27 February 2021) and acted as a summariser for Yorkshire Radio on every Leeds away match.

On 26 February 2021, it was announced that Lorimer had been placed under hospice care due to a long-term illness.[19] [20] He died on 20 March 2021, aged 74.

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[21] [22]
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupContinentalOther[23] [24] Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Leeds United1962–63Second Division10000010
1963–64Second Division00001000
1964–65First Division10000010
1965–66First Division34132300934519
1966–67First Division2996222514214
1967–68First Division371652641286030
1968–69First Division2992130734113
1969–70First Division3914823073105819
1970–71First Division381242101055319
1971–72First Division42237342215529
1972–73First Division41158353926323
1973–74First Division37125200504714
1974–75First Division369405384105316
1975–76First Division291020213311
1976–77First Division2632000283
1977–78First Division2860043329
1978–79First Division30001040
Total45015155203718743020618219
Cape Town City (loan)1971National Football League6868
Toronto Blizzard1979North American Soccer League299299
York City1979–80Fourth Division298298
Toronto Blizzard1980North American Soccer League182182
Vancouver Whitecaps1981North American Soccer League278278
1982North American Soccer League28102810
1983North American Soccer League254254
Total80228022
University College Dublin (loan)1982–83League of Ireland3030
Leeds United1983–84Second Division2243000254
1984–85Second Division40910314410
1985–86Second Division144002021185
Total7617405100218022
Career total69121759204219743041870287

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year[25]
National teamYearAppsGoals
Scotland196910
197120
197253
197330
197471
197530
Total214

Scores and results list Scotland goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Scotland goal.

List of international goals scored by Peter Lorimer[26]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
1Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland2–02–01971–72 British Home Championship
2Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland1–01–01971–72 British Home Championship
3Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland2–02–01974 FIFA World Cup qualification
4Westfalenstadion, Dortmund, Germany1–02–01974 FIFA World Cup

Honours

Leeds United

1968–69, 1973–74[27]

1971–72; runner-up: 1969–70, 1972–73

1967–68

1969

1967–68, 1970–71; runner-up: 1966–67

Individual

1971–72[28]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Butler . Frank . News of the World Football Annual 1973–74 . Collins . Patrick . 1973 . London . 274 . Frank Butler (British sportswriter).
  2. Web site: 26 April 2013 . Leeds United legend Lorimer appointed club ambassador . . 13 March 2014 . 13 March 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140313110047/http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.uk/sport/leeds-united/latest-whites-news/leeds-united-legend-lorimer-appointed-club-ambassador-1-5622652 . dead .
  3. Web site: Rayner . Stuart . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer, Leeds United's record goalscorer, has died . 20 March 2021 . The Yorkshire Post.
  4. News: Mason . Peter . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer obituary . en . The Guardian . London . 21 March 2021.
  5. News: Strachan . Graeme . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer: The Dundee boy who overcame homesickness to become a Leeds legend . en-GB . The Courier . Dundee . 21 March 2021.
  6. News: Brown . John . 6 June 2020 . BLETHER: Dundee Primary Schools Select, plea from Down Under to find boxing pal and World Cup winners who played on Dundee Violet's pitch . 20 March 2021 . Evening Telegraph.
  7. Web site: Mewis . Joe . 20 March 2021 . Leeds United legend Peter Lorimer has died, aged 74 . 20 March 2021 . LeedsLive.
  8. News: 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer: Leeds United's record goalscorer dies aged 74 . . 20 March 2021.
  9. News: Taylor . Louise . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer: a Leeds legend who had dynamite in his boots . . 20 March 2021.
  10. Book: Lorimer . Peter . Peter Lorimer: Leeds and Scotland hero . Rostron . Phil . 9 September 2002 . Mainstream . 1-84018-612-7 . Edinburgh . 51194080.
  11. News: McNulty . Phil . Phil McNulty . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer obituary: An 'explosive and influential member of the greatest Leeds side in history' . BBC Sport . 20 March 2021.
  12. Web site: 20 March 2021 . RIP Peter Lorimer . 20 March 2021 . leedsunited.com . Leeds United F.C..
  13. Web site: 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer 1946–2021 . 20 March 2021 . efl.com . English Football League.
  14. News: The Irish Times - Monday, January 17, 1983 - Page 003. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121023113537/http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/archive/1983/0117/Pg003.html. 2012-10-23. The Irish Times.
  15. Web site: Football photographic encyclopedia, footballer, world cup, champions league, football championship, olympic games & hero images by sporting-heroes.net . www.sporting-heroes.net.
  16. Web site: Smyth . Graham . 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer obituary: Leeds United's record scorer with one of hardest shots in football who won it all . 20 March 2021 . Yorkshire Evening Post.
  17. News: 18 January 2019 . Leeds United legend Don Revie showed his eye for detail long before Marcelo Bielsa . The Yorkshire Post . 20 March 2021.
  18. News: 20 March 2021 . Peter Lorimer: Leeds United's all-time record goalscorer dies aged 74 following a long-term illness . Eurosport . 20 March 2021.
  19. Web site: 26 February 2021 . Leeds United's record goalscorer Peter Lorimer in hospice as he battles illness . 27 February 2021 . The Athletic.
  20. Web site: Doyle . Tom . 27 February 2021 . Peter Lorimer: Leeds United legend receiving hospice care due to long-term illness . 26 February 2021 . Evening Standard.
  21. Book: Jarred . Martin . Leeds United: a complete record, 1919–1986 . MacDonald . Malcolm . Breedon Books Sport . 1986 . 0-907969-17-8 . Derby . 332 . 20934819.
  22. Web site: Lorimer: Peter Patrick . 20 March 2021 . www.ozwhitelufc.net.au.
  23. Web site: The Definitive History of Leeds United - Matches - 2 August 1969 - Leeds United 2 Man City 1 . 20 March 2021 . www.mightyleeds.co.uk.
  24. Web site: The Definitive History of Leeds United - Matches - 10 August 1974 - Liverpool 1 Leeds United 1 . 2 March 2021 . www.mightyleeds.co.uk.
  25. Web site: Peter Lorimer . 20 March 2021 . scottishfa.co.uk . Scottish Football Association.
  26. Web site: Brown . Alan . Tossani . Gabriele . Scotland – International Matches 1971–1975 . 20 March 2021 . . Rec.Sports.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
  27. Web site: Peter Lorimer: a career in words . 20 March 2021 . Leeds United FC. 20 March 2021 .
  28. Web site: Mewis . Joe . 29 April 2019 . Every Leeds United Player of the Season winner since award was first handed out in 1970 . 4 November 2020 . Leeds Live.
  29. Web site: 1969-1970 British Team of the Season . BigSoccer . 31 July 2011 . 17 April 2024 .