Walter Bussey Explained

Walter Bussey
Fullname:Walter Bussey
Birth Date:1904 12, df=y
Birth Place:Eckington, England
Death Place:Exeter, England
Position:Inside forward
Height:5 ft 10 in[1]
Years1:1924
Years2:1924–1932
Caps2:185
Goals2:46
Years3:1933–1934
Caps3:25
Goals3:8
Years4:1934–1936
Caps4:72
Goals4:18
Years5:1936–1938
Caps5:75
Goals5:16
Totalcaps:357
Totalgoals:88

Walter Bussey (6 December 1904 – January 1982) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Blackpool, Exeter City, Swansea Town and Stoke City. He made 185 appearances for Stoke.[2] [3]

Career

Bussey was born in Eckington on the Yorkshire border and began working as a collier. Whilst employed in the mines Bussey played amateur football with teams in the Doncaster area.[3] He was spotted by scouts at Stoke City and signed for the club in March 1924 initially retaining his amateur status so he could also turn out for Denaby United.[3] He eventually signed a professional contract in November 1925 becoming one of 34 players used by Tom Mather in 1925–26 as Stoke suffered relegation from the Second Division. Bussey broke into the side in 1926–27 campaign scoring eight goals in 15 appearances as Stoke went on to win the Third Division North title.[3]

Despite lacking in height Bussey became a vital member of Mather's team being used mainly as a playmaker and provided many goals for Charlie Wilson whilst also having a decent scoring record himself.[3] His most prolific season in a Stoke shirt came in the 1928–29 season with saw him score 12 goals in 38 appearances. Whilst Bussey was a clear favourite with Mather and the supporters he was notoriously inconsistent being described as having "spasms of form and scoring".[3]

With the emergence of Harry Ware and Tommy Sale, Bussey left Stoke in October 1933 for Sandy MacFarlane's Blackpool.[3] He scored 9 goals in 27 appearances for the Seasiders before moving on to Swansea Town. He spent two season at the Vetch Field before ending his career with Exeter City. He later worked as a painter and decorator in the Exeter area until his death in January 1982.[3]

Career statistics

Source:

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Stoke City1925–26Second Division400040
1926–27Third Division North15800158
1927–28Second Division21841259
1928–29Second Division3711113812
1929–30Second Division31610326
1930–31Second Division39530425
1931–32Second Division378324010
1932–33Second Division100010
Total18546124197!50
Blackpool1933–34Second Division25821279
Swansea Town1934–35Second Division37721398
1935–36Second Division3211003211
1936–37Second Division300030
Total72182174!19
Exeter City1936–37Third Division South20531236
1937–38Third Division South3662010396
1938–39Third Division South1950010205
Total751651208217
Career total357882172038095

Honours

Stoke City

Notes and References

  1. News: Swansea Town. Eleven recruits: six are forwards . Sunday Dispatch Football Guide . London . 23 August 1936 . vii . Newspapers.com.
  2. Book: Matthews, Tony. The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. 1994. Lion Press. 0-9524151-0-0.
  3. Book: Stoke City 101 Golden Greats. 2002. Desert Islands Books. 1-874287554.