Sammy Smyth Explained

Sammy Smyth
Fullname:Samuel Smyth
Birth Date:25 February 1925
Birth Place:Belfast, Northern Ireland
Death Place:Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands
Position:Striker
Years1:1942–1945
Clubs1:Distillery
Years2:1945–1947
Clubs2:Linfield
Years3:1947
Clubs3:Dundela
Years4:1947–1951
Caps4:102
Goals4:34
Years5:1951–1953
Clubs5:Stoke City
Caps5:40
Goals5:17
Years6:1953–1954
Clubs6:Liverpool
Caps6:44
Goals6:20
Years7:1954
Clubs7:Bangor
Totalcaps:186
Totalgoals:71
Nationalyears1:1948–1952
Nationalteam1:Northern Ireland
Nationalcaps1:9
Nationalgoals1:5

Samuel Smyth (25 February 1925 – 19 October 2016) was a Northern Irish footballer who played in the Football League for Wolverhampton Wanderers, Stoke City and Liverpool.[1]

Career

Smyth was born in Belfast in 1925[1] and played for local clubs Distillery, Linfield and Dundela in the Irish League before being signed by English Football League side Wolverhampton Wanderers in July 1947 for a fee of £1,100.[1] Despite taking Wolves to third place in the 1946–47 season manager Ted Vizard was replaced by his assistant Stan Cullis in June 1948. The following year Cullis led Wolves to the FA Cup final against Leicester City, Jesse Pye scoring two goals in the first half and Smyth netting another in the 68th minute.[1] Smyth had scored both Wolves goals in the two semi-final games against Manchester Utd. The following season Wolves finished in 2nd place in the First Division. He had scored 43 goals in 116 cup and league appearances for Wolves.[1]

In September 1951 Stoke City paid a club record fee of £25,000 to Wolves for Smyth in a bid to help them avoid relegation after an awful start to the 1951–52 season.[1] Smyth had the desired impact at the Victoria Ground as he scored 12 vital goals as Stoke escaped the drop by three points.[1] He scored five goals in 14 matches in 1952–53 before being sold to Liverpool in January 1953 for a fee of £12,000.[1] Smyth made his debut for his new club against the side he just departed, Stoke just days later. He spent two seasons at Anfield scoring 20 goals in 44 appearances.[1]

After football

Smyth returned to Belfast where he played for Bangor and also worked as a bookmaker. He later opened his own sports distribution business which sold sports equipment throughout Ireland. He and his wife Enid regularly traveled to the Caribbean to visit their daughter and after his wife's passing in 2002 he later moved to live with his daughter.[1] He died on 19 October 2016 at the age of 91 and was the last surviving player from the 1949 FA Cup winning team and the Stoke City team.[2]

Career statistics

Club

Source:

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Wolverhampton Wanderers1947–48First Division30800308
1948–49First Division3916764621
1949–50First Division299633512
1950–51First Division300030
1951–52First Division110011
Total1023413911542
Stoke City1951–52First Division2612423014
1952–53First Division14500145
Total4017424419
Liverpool1952–53First Division18700187
1953–54First Division261300263
Total4420004420
Career Total18671171120382

International

Source:

National teamYearAppsGoals
Northern Ireland194722
194820
194933
195010
195110
Total95

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. 1994. Lion Press. 0-9524151-0-0.
  2. Web site: Wolves FA Cup final hero and former Stoke and Liverpool star Sam Smyth dies at 91. Stoke Sentinel. 23 October 2016. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20161025223036/http://www.stokesentinel.co.uk/wolves-fa-cup-final-hero-and-former-stoke-and-liverpool-star-sam-smyth-dies-at-91/story-29833790-detail/story.html. 25 October 2016.