Tommy Boyle (footballer, born 1886) explained

Tommy Boyle
Fullname:Thomas William Boyle[1]
Birth Date:29 January 1886
Birth Place:Hoyland, England
Position:Half back
Death Place:Whittingham, England[2]
Height:[3]
Youthclubs1:Hoyland Star
Youthclubs2:Elsecar Athletic
Years1:1906–1912
Clubs1:Barnsley
Caps1:160
Goals1:17
Years2:1912–1923
Clubs2:Burnley
Caps2:210
Goals2:36
Years3:1923–1924
Clubs3:Wrexham
Caps3:7
Goals3:0
Totalcaps:377
Totalgoals:53
Nationalyears1:1912–1919
Nationalteam1:Football League XI
Nationalcaps1:4
Nationalgoals1:1
Nationalyears2:1913
Nationalteam2:England
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:1916
Nationalteam3:England (wartime)
Nationalcaps3:1
Nationalgoals3:0

Thomas William Boyle (29 January 1886 – 5 January 1940) was an English footballer, primarily associated with Burnley.[4] He was the only player to have captained a Burnley team in a winning FA Cup Final.

Career

Boyle was born in the village of Hoyland in Yorkshire in 1886. He started his career at Barnsley. In 1912 Boyle crossed the Pennines to sign for Burnley for what was then a club record fee of £1,150.

He was described as a great header of the ball, an excellent passer with great leadership qualities, and as being one of the best players ever to play for Burnley. Having lifted the FA Cup in 1914, he then became the first Burnley captain to lift the League Championship Trophy as Burnley won the 1920–21 title.

By then, he was 33 and his career was coming to an end. That season was to be his last full season in the first team. He made his last appearance for Burnley during the 1921–22 season, and after a further year playing in the reserves he signed for Wrexham, where he ended his playing career.

After his playing career, he had a spell coaching in Germany.[1]

He won only one England cap against Ireland in Belfast in 1913.[5] He also played in four representative matches for the Football League.

Personal life

Boyle served as a gunner in the Royal Field Artillery during the First World War and was wounded in 1917.[6] After the war, Boyle worked as a landlord, but was committed to a psychiatric hospital in 1930. He died at Whittingham Hospital, Lancashire, ten years later, and was buried in an unmarked grave in Hoyland.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tommy Boyle. www.englandfootballonline.com. 23 February 2014.
  2. Book: Smith, Mike . The Road to Glory – Burnley's FA Cup Triumph in 1914 . 10 March 2014 . Grosvenor House Publishing . 9781781482605 . en.
  3. News: First Division prospects. Burnley . Centaurus . Athletic News . Manchester . 22 August 1921 . 5.
  4. Book: Betts, Graham . England: Player by player . Green Umbrella Publishing. 2006. 1-905009-63-1. 43.
  5. Web site: Tommy Boyle . 11v11.com . 25 July 2018.
  6. Web site: Thomas William Boyle Service Record . Football & the First World War . 1 May 2020.