George Camsell

George Camsell
Personal information
Full name George Henry Camsell
Date of birth (1902-11-27)27 November 1902
Place of birth Framwellgate Moor, England
Date of death 7 March 1966(1966-03-07) (aged 63)
Place of death England
Playing position Striker
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Esh Winning ? (?)
Tow Law Town ? (?)
1924–1925 Durham City 21 (20)
1925–1939 Middlesbrough 418 (325)
National team
1929–1936 England 9 (18)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

† Appearances (goals)

George Henry Camsell (27 November 1902 7 March 1966) was an English football player who scored 325 goals in 419 games for Middlesbrough, and 18 goals in 9 appearances for England. His 63 goals in all competitions in one season (1926-27) for Middlesbrough is a club record, and he also holds the highest goals-to-games ratio for England of anyone who has played more than a single international.

Career

Club career

Born in Framwellgate Moor, Durham City in 1902, Camsell worked as a miner and played for Durham City.[1] He caught the attention of Middlesbrough after scoring 21 goals in 20 games in a season and signed for Middlesbrough on 6 October 1925 for the sum of £500.[1] His début was against Nottingham Forest on 31 October 1925.[1] Between 1925 and 1939, Camsell scored 345 goals in 453 games for Middlesbrough, including 325 league goals, (the fifth-highest English total of all-time).[1]

The Middlesbrough club record of 59 league goals in 37 games and 63 goals in all competitions in one season is held by him.[1] He accomplished this feat in the 1926–27 season.[1] This remains the second-highest number of league goals scored and the equal highest number in all competitions in one English league season, behind Dixie Dean's 60 league and 100 total a year later.[1] His goals included 24 hat-tricks for the club.[1]

He played his last League game for Middlesbrough against Leicester City at Ayresome Park on 10 April 1939, in a 3–2 victory. Camsell scored the opening goal.[1]

International career

Camsell also won nine caps for England, scoring 18 goals. This is the highest goals-to-games ratio of anyone who has played more than a single international.[1] His goals included a hat-trick in a 6–0 win against Wales on 20 November 1929 in the 1930 British Home Championship and four goals in a match against Belgium on 11 May 1929. He scored in every match he played for England; his nine consecutive scoring appearances are second only to Steve Bloomer.[1]

Coaching career

During the Second World War, Camsell worked in local factories.[1] After the War, he worked for Middlesbrough's backroom staff, firstly as a scout, where he discovered a young Brian Clough.[1] He then became a coach and eventually the club's assistant secretary.[1]

Death and legacy

Camsell retired in 1963 and died in 1966, aged 63, shortly before that year's World Cup.[1] A suite at Middlesbrough's Riverside Stadium is named after him and in 2015, calls began for a statue of Camsell to be placed outside the stadium, joining those of George Hardwick and Wilf Mannion.[1] A club spokesman said that such an honour could not be ruled out, adding: "As a club we honour and respect our former heroes and George Camsell is certainly one of those."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Andy Bell; Duncan Leatherdale (19 September 2015). "George Camsell: The best England striker you never heard of". BBC. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
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