Tommy Lowes Explained

Tommy Lowes
Birth Date:1891
Birth Place:Walker, Newcastle upon Tyne, England
Position:Inside forward
Years1:1910–1914
Clubs1:Newcastle United
Caps1:16
Goals1:4
Clubs2:Coventry City
Clubs3:Caerphilly
Clubs4:Newport County
Years5:1926–1929
Clubs5:Yeovil Town
Manageryears1:1928–1929
Managerclubs1:Yeovil Town
Manageryears2:1932–1937
Managerclubs2:Barrow
Manageryears3:1937–1944
Managerclubs3:Walsall

Tommy Lowes (1891–1993) was an English football player and manager.

Biography

Lowes, an inside forward, played sixteen First Division games, scoring four goals, for his hometown club Newcastle United, before the outbreak of World War I.[1] He later turned out for Coventry City, Caerphilly, and Newport County.[2]

He became a player-coach at non-league side Yeovil Town, taking charge for the 1928–29 season.[2] He took charge at Barrow in 1932, and remained in the hotseat for more than 200 games at Holker Street, until he was appointed manager of Walsall on 30 April 1937.[2] The club struggled near the foot of the Third Division South table in 1937–38, and had to apply for re-election.[2] He signed Johnny Hancocks in October 1938,[2] who would go on to be capped by England and be one of the finest post-World War II players at high-flying Wolverhampton Wanderers. However the "Saddlers" continued to struggle under Lowes' management, and had to apply for re-election again in 1938–39, having finished second-from-bottom.[2] The Football League was abandoned due to the outbreak of war in 1939–40.

Having departed Fellows Park, Lowes scouted for Arsenal and Norwich City, discovering another talent in John Barnwell. He remained at Carrow Road right up until 1972, and died sometime in 1993.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Player Profile: Tommy Lowes. toon1892.co.uk. 13 November 2011.
  2. Web site: Past Managers. saddlers.co.uk. 13 November 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120601072237/http://www.saddlers.co.uk/page/PastManagers. 1 June 2012. dmy-all.