Liverpool is crowned Premier League champions
This isn’t the first time Liverpool have won the
league while watching on from the sidelines. In 1947, they beat fellow
challengers Wolves in their final game of a weather-hit season. They were top,
but had to wait a fortnight for Stoke City to finish their campaign.
If Stoke won at Sheffield United, they’d be
champions. But they’d preposterously sold star man Stanley Matthews during the
run-in (!) and lost, so the title was Liverpool’s. They were told the news
midway through a local-cup kickabout with Everton.
Here we remember Albert Stubbins, goalscorer and Sgt
Pepper cover star, whose winner against Wolves secured the prize.
On the sleeve of the Beatles' Sergeant Pepper's
Lonely Hearts Club Band, is the image of a footballer: Albert Stubbins in his
Liverpool heyday, red shirt, red hair. He was a hero to thousands of Liverpool
fans and, intriguingly, to fans of his original club, Newcastle United. Indeed,
it might be said that Stubbins's fame has actually increased on Tyneside since
his retirement, long ago.
Stubbins, who has died aged 82, was a Geordie, born
at Wallsend. His parents took him to the United States for two years just after
his birth. They went back there at the beginning of the depression and Stubbins
spent a number of years in the US.
At the start of his sports career he signed amateur
forms for Sunderland, but on the peculiar understanding that if Newcastle
United showed an interest in making him a professional, he could leave. This
happened in April 1937. Trained as a draughtsman, he scored prolifically for
Newcastle during the war, when official competitions were suspended.
Powerfully built, standing 5 foot 11 inches tall and
weighing 12 stone 10 pounds, he was his era's complete centre-forward: fast,
strong, technically competent, adept, as they used to say, at holding his line
together, formidable in the air. In keeping with his genial character, he never
went selfishly in search of goals, though in those war years he was the
country's top scorer. In the 1945-46 transitional season, before League
football was restarted, he scored no fewer than 39 goals in the Northern League
for Newcastle. Always robust, but never unfair.
The second-highest Newcastle scorer was a young
outside-right called Jackie Milburn, with just 14 goals. Milburn, moving to
centre-forward, would, as "Wor Jackie", become a greater icon on
Tyneside than Stubbins, but many fans and journalists believe that Stubbins was
a still better centre-forward. Despite all Stubbins's goals, Newcastle finished
only in sixth position in the Northern League that season.
It was also the season in which Stubbins made his
only appearance for the English international team. It came in an ill-starred
game on October 20 1945, against Wales at West Bromwich. The Welsh, famous for
being able to rise above themselves, won 1-0. Stubbins never had another
England chance and since this was a so-called "victory
international", he did not ever win a full cap.
In September 1946, Newcastle transferred him to Liverpool
for a then huge fee of £13,000. Playing alongside a shrewd inside-right in the
form of Jack Balmer, he finished as joint top scorer in the league; they got 24
goals each.
Liverpool narrowly won the championship, although
probably would not have done so had the season not been prolonged by appalling
winter weather. Wolverhampton Wanderers seemed to be running away with the
championship, but in their and Liverpool's last game at Molineux, the
Merseysiders won 2-1, Stubbins scoring their second goal. The title, however,
was still to be secured, and if Stoke City won their final game, the following
fortnight, it was theirs on goal average. But though they had gone 11 league
games undefeated, Stoke lost 2-1 at Sheffield United.
Stubbins continued to flourish in the 1947-48
season. I remember him side-footing two goals against the eventual league
champions, Arsenal, on Boxing Day 1947, exploiting passes from the right wing
by Billy Liddell, the Scottish winger with whom he combined so successfully.
Liverpool won 2-1; I watched it as an Arsenal fan. "Sorry I spoiled your
Boxing Day!" was the message Stubbins sent me, 50 years later.
Liverpool were unquestionably lucky to get him. He
had asked Newcastle for a transfer, and at least 18 clubs had made inquiries.
Liverpool, using a recognised centre-half, Bill Jones, at centre-forward, had
just been thrashed by Manchester United in an early 1946-47 league game when
they beat all opposition to Stubbins's transfer.
After his 24 goals in 36 games when the league was
won, he added another 26 in 40 matches the next season. Then something seemed
to go wrong. He became unhappy at Anfield, and asked for, but did not get, a
transfer. He played five more seasons for Liverpool, yet scored only 27 more
goals in the First Division.
He did help the club to reach the 1950 FA Cup Final
against Arsenal, when at Wembley he led the attack, though not fully recovered
from an injury. The last of his first-team appearances was at Stoke on January
3 1953. In 1960, he briefly became manager of the semi-professional New York
Americans. He then returned to the north-east, where he became a popular sports
writer. In the late 1990s, the local branch of the Football Writers'
Association gave him a gala dinner.




