1925 FA Charity Shield

The 1925 FA Charity Shield was the twelfth staging of the FA Charity Shield, an annual association football match arranged to raise funds for charitable causes supported by the Football Association (the FA), the governing body of football in England. For the fourth time, the match was contested by select teams of amateur and professional players. It was played on 5 October 1925 at White Hart Lane, London, and ended as a 6–1 win for the Amateurs. Claude Ashton scored four goals and Frank Macey two for the Amateurs; Charlie Hannaford scored the Professionals' goal.[1][3]

1925 FA Charity Shield
EventFA Charity Shield
Date5 October 1925
VenueWhite Hart Lane, Tottenham, London
Attendancec.5,000[1][2]

Pre-match

For the third year running, the Football Association decided the Shield should be contested not by club sides but by teams of amateur and professional players selected by the FA's International Selection Committee.[4][5] While the Amateur XI was made up of the top players in amateur football, including several with international experience, the professionals were chosen from among those who had taken part in the FA XI's tour of Australia from May to August, so included only players whose clubs had been prepared to release them for several months and risk their exhaustion or injury.[6][7] The match was to be played in the afternoon of Monday 5 October 1925 at White Hart Lane, the north London ground of Tottenham Hotspur F.C.

The teams lined up as originally selected, with two exceptions. Alfred Bower was chosen to captain the Amateurs, but dislocated his shoulder; he was replaced as left back by E.H. Gates of London Caledonians[8] and as captain by Claude Ashton.[6] The Professionals' forward line had to be reorganised at short notice after Stan Seymour replaced the injured Bert Batten of Plymouth Argyle, who had scored 47 goals on the Australian tour.[3]

Match summary

Centre-forward Ashton gave the Amateurs the lead after five minutes, with a hard shot into the corner off Walter Bellamy's cross.[3] In the next quarter of an hour, the Professionals hit the frame of the goal three times. On the first occasion, Benjamin Howard Baker rushed out of goal but failed to collect Ernie Simms' shot; the ball struck the foot of the post, and Gates was able to clear before it spun back into the net.[9] Then a shot from Jimmy Walsh and a volley by Jack Elkes each struck a post, rebounded into play, and were cleared by the defence.[3] Soon afterwards, Simms suffered a leg strain. He played on, limping on the wing, until half-time, but took no part in the second half.[3] After 35 minutes,[9] Ashton scored his second goal, in similar fashion to the first; he trapped Bellamy's cross and shot hard into the corner.[3] In what remained of the first half, Frank Macey had two close-range shots, "but both were saved most brilliantly" by Harry Hardy.[3]

Two minutes into the second half, the Professionals were awarded a penalty for handball. Seymour took the kick, but shot straight at Howard Baker, after which the Times' reporter felt the Professionals lost heart. Shortly afterwards, Ashton received a pass from Billy Bryant, dummied Cecil Poynton and hit a low drive past Hardy for his and the Amateurs' third goal. Macey chipped the ball over Hardy for the fourth, and after a passing move involving several players, Macey pulled the ball back to give Ashton a tap-in. Edgar Kail found Macey unmarked,[3] and he "got the last goal with both Spencer and Charlton trying to worry him off the ball [which] was typical of his work throughout."[9] With five minutes left, a move down the right wing between Walsh and Charlie Hannaford led to the latter's consolation goal for the Professionals.[3]

Match details

Amateurs6–1Professionals
Ashton 4
Macey 2
[1][3] Hannaford
Attendance: c.5,000
Amateurs[1][6] Professionals[1][5]
GoalkeeperBenjamin Howard BakerChelsea GoalkeeperHarry HardyStockport County
Full backSgt Frank TwineThe Army Full backStan Charlton Sr.Exeter City
Full backE.H. GatesLondon Caledonians Full backCecil PoyntonTottenham Hotspur
Wing halfBill CaesarDulwich Hamlet Wing halfJimmy HamiltonCrystal Palace
Centre halfGeorge ArmitageCharlton Athletic Centre halfCharlie Spencer (capt)Newcastle United
Wing halfBilly BryantMillwall Wing halfLen GrahamMillwall
ForwardReginald MorganClapton ForwardCharlie HannafordClapton Orient
ForwardEdgar KailDulwich Hamlet ForwardJimmy WalshLiverpool
ForwardClaude Ashton (capt)Corinthian ForwardErnie SimmsStockport County
ForwardFsr Frank MaceyThe Army ForwardJack ElkesTottenham Hotspur
ForwardWalter BellamyDulwich Hamlet ForwardStan SeymourNewcastle United

Post-match

While the individual skill of the forwards drew deserved attention, Ashton's ability to take his chances and Macey's footwork and clever use of the ball in particular,[2] the team as a whole intelligently exploited the recent amendment to the offside rule,[3] such that a player was on-side if two, rather than the previous three, opponents were ahead of him.[10] The half backs were strong defensively and constructive in their use of the ball, and the full backs were "capable spoilers".[2] The Amateurs were the better side all over the field; "C.H.C.", writing in the Daily Mirror, called them "as fine an amateur side as we have seen for some seasons. There was an abandon, a joie de vivre about their football that we would like to see in more matches."[6]

In the evening, the Football Association hosted a dinner at Frascati's restaurant in Oxford Street in honour of their Australian touring team, at which medals were presented to the tourists, many of whom had played in the afternoon's match, and to the winners of the Charity Shield. Speeches were made by Charles Clegg, president of the association, and others.[11] The Football Association were using the match as a trial for the forthcoming full international against Wales, and three members of the Amateur team were selected for the England team: Howard Baker in goal, George Armitage at centre half, and Ashton at centre forward.[3]

The attendance, "falling short of 5,000", was labelled "disappointing" by the Daily Express.[2] From the proceeds of the match, the Football Association donated £50 each to the Institute of Journalists Orphan's Fund, the Royal Surgical Aid Society, the London Lock Hospital and Sheffield Royal Infirmary. The balance, of £91 17s, went to the National Institute for the Blind.[12]

The next season's Charity Shield also pitted Amateurs against Professionals. The Amateurs again scored six goals, and Macey again scored twice.[13][14]

References

  1. "1925/26 F.A. Charity Shield". Footballsite. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  2. "Amateurs surprise the pros". Daily Express. London. 6 October 1925. p. 13.
  3. "Amateurs win". The Times. London. 6 October 1925. p. 6.
  4. Ross, James (15 August 2013). "England - List of FA Charity/Community Shield Matches". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 20 November 2013.
  5. "Our Australian tourists". Daily Mirror. 22 September 1925. p. 19.
  6. C.H.C. (7 October 1925). "Has England found another G.O. Smith". Daily Mirror. London. p. 19.
  7. Morrison, Neil (15 November 2012). "British "FA XI" Tours". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation (RSSSF). Retrieved 6 October 2013.
  8. "A.G. Bower's mishap". Daily Mirror. London. 2 October 1925. p. 23.
  9. G.P.S. (6 October 1925). "Amateurs' fine win over F.A. tourists". Daily Mirror. London. p. 23.
  10. Carosi, Julian (18 March 2006). "The History of Offside". Corsham Ref. Archived from the original on 30 March 2010. Source includes an outline of the effects of the 1925 rule.
  11. "English football team's Australian tour". Manchester Guardian. 6 October 1925. p. 19.
  12. "F.A. Charity Shield". Exeter and Plymouth Gazette. 15 December 1925. p. 2 via British Newspaper Archive.
  13. "Association Football. An Amateur Triumph". The Times. London. 7 October 1926. p. 6.
  14. "1926/27 F.A. Charity Shield". Footballsite. Retrieved 20 November 2013.
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