Patrick O'Connell (Irish footballer)
Personal information | |||
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Full name | Patrick Joseph O'Connell | ||
Date of birth | 8 March 1887 | ||
Place of birth | County Westmeath, Ireland | ||
Date of death | 27 February 1959 71) | (aged||
Place of death | St Pancras, London, England | ||
Playing position | Wing half | ||
Youth career | |||
Frankfort | |||
Stranville Rovers | |||
Liffey Wanderers | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps† | (Gls)† |
?–1909 | Belfast Celtic | ||
1909–1912 | Sheffield Wednesday | 18 | (0) |
1912–1914 | Hull City | 58 | (1) |
1914–1919 | Manchester United | 34 | (2) |
1915 | → Clapton Orient (guest) | ||
1918–1919 | → Rochdale (guest) | ||
? | → Chesterfield (guest) | ||
1919–1920 | Dumbarton | 31 | (0) |
1920–1922 | Ashington | 19 | (1) |
National team | |||
1912–1919 | Ireland | 6 | (0) |
Teams managed | |||
1921–1922 | Ashington | ||
1922–1929 | Racing Santander | ||
1929–1931 | Real Oviedo | ||
1932–1935 | Real Betis | ||
1935–1940 | Barcelona | ||
1940–1942 | Real Betis | ||
1942–1945 | Sevilla | ||
1947–1949 | Racing Santander | ||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Patrick Joseph O'Connell (8 March 1887 – 27 February 1959), also known as Paddy O'Connell or Patricio O'Connell, was an Irish footballer and manager. He played as a defender, most notably, for Belfast Celtic, Sheffield Wednesday, Hull City and Manchester United. He has the distinction of being the first player from what is now the Republic of Ireland to play for Manchester United.[1]
As an international, he captained Ireland and was a member of the team that won the 1914 British Home Championship. However, O'Connell is probably best remembered for managing several clubs in La Liga. In 1935 he led Real Betis to their first La Liga title and during the Spanish Civil War he took FC Barcelona on a tour of North America. Despite these successes, he died destitute in London in 1959.
Club career
Early years
O'Connell was born in County Westmeath in 1887. However the O'Connell family moved to Dublin and young Patrick lived in Mabel Street, Drumcondra, not far from the modern site of Croke Park. From age 14 he worked at Boland's Mill. He also played junior football with several local Dublin clubs, including Frankfort, Stranville Rovers and Liffey Wanderers, before joining Belfast Celtic.[2] In March 1909, together with left-back Peter Warren, he was transferred from Celtic to Sheffield Wednesday for a combined fee of £50.[3]
Sheffield Wednesday
A terrific performer in the heart of the defence, O'Connell made his English First Division debut for Sheffield Wednesday against Bury on the last day of the 1908–09 season. However, in subsequent seasons he was unable to establish himself as a regular in the Wednesday first team due to competition from English McConnell, Jimmy Spoors and Bob McSkimming. As a result, he made just 21 senior appearances, 18 in the league and 3 in the FA Cup. However while with Wednesday, O'Connell made two of his six international appearances for Ireland.[3]
Hull City
O'Connell left Sheffield Wednesday for Hull City in March 1912 and subsequently made 58 Second Division appearances for City during the 1912–13 and 1913–14 seasons. While with City he also made a further three appearances for Ireland.[3]
Manchester United
O'Connell's impressive performances with Ireland attracted the attention of Manchester United who he signed for in May 1914 for a fee of £1,000.[2] During the 1914–15 season he served as United team captain, made 34 First Division appearances and scored twice. He also played one further game for the club in the FA Cup. He made his league debut and scored his first goal for the club on 2 September 1914 in a 3–1 home defeat against Oldham Athletic. He scored his second goal on 10 April 1915 in a 2–2 home draw with Middlesbrough and made his final English League appearance for the club on 26 April in a 1–0 home win against Aston Villa.[4] [5]
O'Connell's time at United saw the club finish third from bottom in the First Division, narrowly avoiding relegation by a single point. He also became embroiled in the infamous 1915 British football betting scandal. On 2 April 1915 relegation threatened United defeated mid-table Liverpool 2–0 in a home league game. It subsequently emerged that the game was fixed by a small group of players from both sides. David Goldblatt[6] argues that the players concern was not who went up or down the league, but due to the First World War, that there would be no league at all the following season. Believing they would soon be unemployed, the players arranged a betting pool and backed United to win 2–0. This was the score when O'Connell took a penalty which went well wide[7] O'Connell escaped punishment but three of his team mates – Sandy Turnbull, Arthur Whalley and Enoch West – and four Liverpool players later received lifetime suspensions from The Football Association.[8] During the war, O'Connell remained a United player and also guested for Clapton Orient, Rochdale and Chesterfield.[2]
Dumbarton
In August 1919 O'Connell moved to Dumbarton and during the 1919–20 season made 31 league appearances and played twice in the Scottish Cup. He made his Scottish League debut as a right-half in a 1–1 draw with Ayr United on 16 August 1919, the opening day of the season. His first three appearances for Dumbarton were at right-half while all the rest were at centre-half, with the exception of the home game against Hamilton Academical on 27 September 1919 when he again played at right-half. He made his final appearance for Dumbarton in a 4–3 away defeat against Aberdeen on 24 April 1920.[9]
Ashington
O'Connell finished his playing career with Ashington. During his first season with the club, 1920–21, they played in the North Eastern League and finished ninth out of twenty teams. The 1921–22 season saw O'Connell appointed player-coach and Ashington playing in the English Division Three North. O'Connell saw massive changes at Ashington with the club's league status having changed. Their home ground was upgraded from a typical non-league venue containing no more than a simple seated and covered stand to a stadium designed for 20,000. O'Connell played in the club's first ever English League fixture, a 1–0 win against Grimsby Town in front of 9,000 supporters. Ashington eventually finished the season in a respectable tenth position with O'Connell making his last appearance for the club in a 2–2 home draw against Southport.[10] In January 1921, while with Ashington, O'Connell also represented the North Eastern League against the Central League.[3]
Ireland international
Between 1912 and 1919 O'Connell played 6 times for Ireland. He made his international debut on 10 February, 1912 in a 6–1 defeat against England at Dalymount Park. His team mates on the day included, among others, Billy Scott, Val Harris and Bill Lacey. On 16 March 1912 he also played in the 4-1 defeat against Scotland at Windsor Park. In 1914 together with Harris, Lacey, Louis Bookman and Billy Gillespie, he was a member of the Irish team that won the 1914 British Home Championship. After beating Wales 2–1 away on 19 January, Ireland then beat England 3–0 at Ayresome Park on 14 February. O'Connell then captained the team, while playing with a broken arm, as a ten-man Ireland clinched the title with a 1–1 draw against Scotland at Windsor Park on 14 March. He made his last appearance for Ireland in a 1919 Victory international against Scotland.[2][11][12][13]
La Liga spanish, manager
Racing de Santander
In 1922 O'Connell succeeded Fred Pentland as the manager of Racing de Santander. He subsequently guided the team to five regional titles and in 1928 they became founding members of La Liga. He would later return to Racing for a second spell as manager between 1948 and 1949.[14][15]
Real Oviedo
From September 1929 until May 1931 O'Connell managed Real Oviedo in the Segunda División.[16]
Real Betis
Between 1931 and 1935 O'Connell managed Real Betis, at the time known as Betis Balompie. After leading them to the Segunda División title in 1932 he then guided Betis, with a team that included Lecue, to their one and only La Liga title in 1935. Betis won the title on 28 April 1935 with a 5–0 win against O'Connell's former team Racing de Santander. The night before the game, which was played in Santander, O'Connell visited the Racing squad at a hotel where they were staying and allegedly tried to persuade them to lose the game. Betis had to beat Racing to overtake their rivals Real Madrid.[15]
FC Barcelona
O'Connell's success with Real Betis attracted the interest of FC Barcelona who appointed him as successor to Franz Platko for the 1935–36 season.[17] With a squad that included Josep Escolà, Domènec Balmanya, Joan Josep Nogués and Enrique Fernández, O'Connell guided Barça to the Campionat de Catalunya and the Copa de España final. In the final they played Real Madrid and with Real leading 2–1, Escolà was denied a late equaliser after a spectacular save by Ricardo Zamora.
During the 1936–37 season La Liga was suspended because of the Spanish Civil War. However clubs in the Republican area of Spain competed in the Mediterranean League. In early 1937, FC Barcelona received an offer from a businessman, Manuel Mas Serrano, via one of their players, Josep Iborra. Serrano proposed that the club travel to play a series of exhibition matches in Mexico and the United States. According to the offer, the club would be paid $15,000 with all costs covered. An FC Barcelona party of 20 – 16 players plus O'Connell, Ángel Mur, Rossend Calvet, the club secretary and Modest Amorós, the club doctor. In Mexico they played against, among others, Club América, Atlante F.C., Necaxa and a Mexican XI. In the United States, they played against Brooklyn Hispano, Brooklyn St. Mary's Celtic and an American Soccer League XI. They finished the tour with a game against a Hebrew XI.[18][19]
Due to the financial success of this tour, FC Barcelona cleared their debts and saved the club, however O'Connell returned to Spain with only four players after the others chose to go into exile in Mexico and France. By the 1937–38 season the Republican area was reduced in size and a second Mediterranean League was impossible to organise. However a Lliga Catalana, featuring just Catalan teams, was organised. Despite a depleted squad, O'Connell and FC Barcelona won both the Lliga Catalana and the Campionat de Catalunya.[20][21]
Sevilla FC
O'Connell went onto manage Sevilla FC between 1942 and 1945. During his first season in charge, 1942–43, he guided the club to second place in La Liga.[14][22]
Honours
Player
Ireland
Manager
Racing Santander
- Cantabrian Champions
- Winners 1923–24, 1924–25, 1925–26, 1926–27, 1928–29: 5
Real Betis
- La Liga
- Winners 1934–35: 1
- Segunda División
- Winners 1931–32: 1
FC Barcelona
- Mediterranean League
- Winners 1937: 1
- Lliga Catalana
- Winners 1937–38: 1
- Campionat de Catalunya
- Winners 1935–36, 1937–38: 2
References
- ↑
- 1 2 3 4 Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats
- 1 2 3 4 The Men Who Made Sheffield Wednesday Football Club (2007) Tony Matthews
- ↑ Manchester United fansite Archived 21 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine.
- ↑ Manchester United – The Complete Record (2007) Andrew Endlar
- ↑ The Ball Is Round (2007) David Goldblatt
- ↑ Don Patricio O'Connell: An Irishman and the Politics of Spanish Football (2008) Jimmy Burns pg. 1
- ↑ The Man Utd Miscellany (2007) Andy Mitten
- ↑ www.scottishleague.net
- ↑ www.ashingtonafc.com
- ↑ Scotland results
- ↑ England results
- ↑ Don Patricio O'Connell: An Irishman and the Politics of Spanish Football (2008) Jimmy Burns pg. 1
- 1 2 La Liga stats
- 1 2 Don Patricio O'Connell: An Irishman and the Politics of Spanish Football (2008) Jimmy Burns pg. 3
- ↑ Real Oviedo managers
- ↑ www.fcbarcelona.cat
- ↑ www.rsssf.com
- ↑ The Year in American Soccer – 1937
- ↑ Don Patricio O'Connell: An Irishman and the Politics of Spanish Football (2008) Jimmy Burns pg. 4
- ↑ Barça: A People's Passion (1998), Jimmy Burns
- ↑ www.sevillafc.es
External links
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by George Hunter |
Manchester United captain 1915–1917 |
Succeeded by George Anderson |
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