Ron Harris (English footballer) explained

Ron Harris
Fullname:Ronald Edward Harris
Height:[1]
Birth Date:1944 11, df=y
Birth Place:Hackney, London, England
Position:Defender
Youthyears1:1960–1962
Youthclubs1:Chelsea
Years1:1962–1980
Years2:1980–1983
Years3:1984–1985
Clubs1:Chelsea
Clubs2:Brentford
Caps1:655
Caps2:61
Goals1:13
Goals2:0
Nationalyears1:1966–1968
Nationalteam1:England U23
Nationalcaps1:4
Nationalgoals1:0
Manageryears1:1984–1985
Managerclubs1:Aldershot
Totalcaps:716
Totalgoals:13

Ronald Edward Harris (born 13 November 1944), known by the nickname "Chopper" for his tough style of defending, is an English former footballer who played for Chelsea in the 1960s and 1970s. Harris captained Chelsea to FA Cup and UEFA Cup Winners' Cup success, and made a club record 795 appearances. His brother Allan Harris was also a professional footballer and they were teammates at Chelsea in the mid-1960s.

Chelsea

Harris was a member of the Chelsea side which won the FA Youth Cup in 1961 and made his senior club debut in February 1962 in a 1–0 win against Sheffield Wednesday. Within a year, he had established himself as a regular in the side, a position he would hold for the next eighteen years. He formed an important part of new Chelsea manager Tommy Docherty's youth-oriented re-building of the club after relegation from the First Division alongside the likes of Peter Bonetti, Peter Osgood and Bobby Tambling.

Upon the club's return to the top division, Harris solidified his reputation as an uncompromising – yet talented – defender with a series of strong (and sometimes notorious) performances. His first honours with Chelsea came with a League Cup win over Leicester City in 1965. In the same season, Chelsea were challenging for the league title for most of the year but ultimately finished third after winning just one of their final five matches. He became club captain the following year when Terry Venables left for Tottenham Hotspur and became the youngest ever captain to lead out a side in the 1967 FA Cup Final, although they lost 2–1 to Tottenham. Chelsea, led by Harris, reached another FA Cup final three years later, this time against Leeds United – a side then at their peak in English football. He won four caps for England U23 between 1966 and 1968.[2]

That 1970 FA Cup Final is notorious for being one of the most physical of all time, it saw Harris come into his own in the role of both inspirational leader and uncompromising tackler. With Leeds having taken a 2–1 lead at Wembley with just six minutes remaining, it was his quick free kick which led to Ian Hutchinson's headed equaliser to take the game to a replay. During the replay at Old Trafford his late tackle on Leeds' playmaker Eddie Gray after just eight minutes (just one of many late tackles committed by both sides), left the latter a virtual passenger for the rest of the match: Chelsea eventually won 2–1 after extra-time.

The following season saw Harris lift Chelsea's first major European honour – the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup – in another replayed final against Real Madrid in Athens. Chelsea also reached a second League Cup final in 1972, but surprisingly lost to Stoke in what proved to be his last major final for the club.

Moves

While many of Chelsea's star players departed during the 1970s (due to Peter Osgood and Alan Hudson falling out with manager Dave Sexton, and due to the financial crisis caused by the building of the new East Stand, and the financial impact of relegation), Harris remained ever-present in the side throughout a decade which saw them relegated twice and promoted once, although he was replaced as Club Captain by John Hollins at the tail end of the 1971/72 season. Harris was primarily a central defender in the mould of Bobby Moore and Norman Hunter but in later years he was often played out of position as circumstances dictated. After the retirement of Eddie McCreadie, he played at left back for a considerable time and was used as cover at right back when injuries left the financially struggling Chelsea short of cover.

In the closing stages of his career, he also played as a holding midfielder in a role similar to Claude Makélélé, providing a screen for a defence that was often caught out by counter-attacks. Over an 18-year period Harris was rarely out of the first team. In 10 seasons he averaged 41 league games out of 42 and in 5 other seasons he averaged over 37 games. He finally left Chelsea in 1980 to become a player-coach at Brentford, having played a record 795 games for Chelsea.[3] He later had a brief stint as player-manager of Aldershot.

In retirement

Harris was a professional greyhound trainer for several years during the 1990s.[4]

Career statistics

ClubSeasonDivisionFA CupLeague CupEuropeOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Chelsea1961–62[5] First Division30000030
1962–63Second Division70000070
1963–64First Division4123010452
1964–65First Division4225060532
1965–66First Division3626000100522
1966–67First Division4207030520
1967–68First Division4005010460
1968–69First Division400503040520
1969–70First Division3008030410
1970–71First Division38130409010551
1971–72First Division410309041571
1972–73First Division4213070521
1973–74First Division3622010392
1974–75First Division4202040480
1975–76Second Division4004010450
1976–77Second Division1902010220
1977–78First Division3714010421
1978–79First Division4001010420
1979–80Second Division3921020422
Total655136404802711079514
Brentford1980–81[6] Third Division2903020340
1981–82Third Division2001020230
1982–83Third Division901040140
1983–84Third Division302050
Total6105010000760
Career total716136905802711087114

Honours

Chelsea Youth

1960–61

Chelsea

1969–70;[7] runner-up: 1966–67[7]

1964–65; runner-up: 1971–72

1970–71

Records

2010–11

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rollin, Jack . Rothmans Football Yearbook: 1981–82 . Queen Anne Press . 1981 . 0-362-02046-9 . London . 72 . 868301130.
  2. Web site: England – U-23 International Results – Details. RSSSF. 25 January 2018.
  3. Web site: Players Appearances He-Ho . Bounder.friardale.co.uk . 11 February 2014.
  4. Book: Barnes/Sellers, Julia/John. Ladbrokes Greyhound Fact File. 1992. Ringpress Books. 0-948955-22-8.
  5. Web site: Ron Harris . 11v11.com . 6 August 2018.
  6. Book: Croxford, Mark . The Big Brentford Book of the Eighties . Lane . David . Waterman . Greville . Legends Publishing . 2011 . 978-1906796716 . Sunbury, Middlesex . 422–425.
  7. Book: Leslie . Jack . Vernon . Rollin . Rothmans Football Yearbook 1977–78 . 1977 . Brickfield Publications Ltd . London . 0354 09018 6 . 491.