William Sherrard Explained

William Sherrard
Birth Date:1872 8, df=yes
Birth Place:Limavady, Ireland
Death Place:Belfast, Ireland
Position:Inside Forward
Years1:1889–1894
Clubs1:Limavady
Clubs2:Derry Olympic (Guest)
Caps2:6
Goals2:0
Years3:1894
Clubs3:Glentoran
Goals3:5
Years4:1894–1896
Clubs4:Cliftonville
Goals4:11
Nationalyears1:1895
Nationalteam1:Ireland Amateurs
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:2

William Sherrard (25 August 1872 – 9 October 1895), familiarly known as Beg, was an Irish international footballer who played for Limavady, Glentoran and Cliftonville.

The youngest of 12 children, Sherrard's older brother Joe Sherrard would also play for Ireland.

Club career

Sherrard began playing football with his local club, Limavady, alongside older brothers Joe and Jack[1] and won the North West Cup on three occasions, scoring twice in five cup final appearances. After playing briefly as a guest for Derry Olympic, Sherrard moved to Glentoran in September 1894, scoring five goals before moving to Cliftonville in November.

Sherrard scored five times for Cliftonville during the remainder of the 1894/95 season, and would also appear in the final of the Belfast Charity Cup for his new side, a match which Cliftonville lost 3–1 to Linfield. He started the following season in good form, scoring six goals before his death in October 1895.[1]

International career

Sherrard made his Ireland debut against England in the opening match of the 1894–95 British Home Championship, a game Ireland would lose 9–0. He retained his place for the next match, scoring in a 2–2 draw against Wales[2] and also scored the consolation goal in a 3–1 defeat to Scotland.[3]

Death and funeral

Sherrard died at the age of 23 from influenza whilst staying with his sister, Tilly Oliver, on 9 October 1895. His funeral was reportedly attended by over 2,000 mourners.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Willie Sherrard . Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats . 18 November 2020.
  2. Web site: Ireland vs Wales, 16 March 1895 . EU Football . 18 November 2020.
  3. Web site: Scotland vs Ireland, 30 March 1895 . EU Football . 18 November 2020.