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Steve Bloomer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve Bloomer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Steve Bloomer
250PX
Personal information
Full name Stephen Bloomer
Date of birth January 20, 1874(1874-01-20)
Place of birth    Cradley, Worcestershire, England
Date of death    April 16, 1938 (aged 64)
Place of death    Derby, England
Playing position Forward
Youth clubs
188x-1888
1888-1891
1892
St. James' School
Derby Swifts
Tutbury Hawthorn
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1892-1906
1906-1910
1910-1914
Derby County
Middlesbrough
Derby County
375 (238)
125 0(61)
098 0(53)   
National team
1895-1907 England 023 0(28)
Teams managed
1914
1923-1925
1925-xx
Britannia Berlin 92
Real Unión
Derby Reserves

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Steve Bloomer (born January 20, 1874, Cradley, Worcestershire; died April 16, 1938, Derby) was an English footballer and manager who played for Derby County, Middlesbrough and England during the 1890s and 1900s. Bloomer remains a legend at Derby County and the club anthem, Steve Bloomer's Watchin', is played before every home game.

During his career Bloomer was a prolific goalscorer for both club and country. Although possessing only a slight frame, he was a menace to defenders due to his quick thinking. He was also able to shoot powerfully and accurately with either foot and his speciality was the daisy cutter - a low shot, hit with great power, speed and accuracy. In 536 English First Division games he scored 317 goals and, after Jimmy Greaves and Dixie Dean, he is the third highest all-time goalscorer in the division. He also scored 28 goals in 23 appearances for England. In his last international against Scotland in 1907 he scored a stunning goal.

Bloomer also played baseball for Derby County Baseball Club and helped them become British champions three times in the 1890s. He also played cricket at an amateur level. After retiring as a footballer he became a coach and worked with clubs in Germany, The Netherlands and Spain. During the First World War he was interned at Ruhleben, a civilian detention camp. The highlight of his coaching career came in 1924 when he guided Real Unión to victory in the Copa del Rey. After returning to England he served as player-coach with Derby Reserves, worked as a newspaper columnist and as a grounds man at the Baseball Ground. In late 1937, while severely ill, Derby County paid for him to go on a cruise to Australia and New Zealand. He died three weeks after returning home in April 1938. His grave can been seen in Nottingham Road Cemetery, Derby.

Contents

[edit] Family Life

Although Bloomer was born in Worcestershire his parents, Caleb Bloomer and Merab Dunn, moved to Normanton, Derbyshire and then Pear Tree. Bloomer’s brother, Philip also briefly played for Derby County. However he only played one first team game and died of peritonitis in May 1896. The same year saw Steve Bloomer marry Sarah Walker. They subsequently had 4 daughters; two of whom died before they reached the age of 18; one died in 1917 while he was still in Ruhleben. Another married Alf Quantrill, who played for County and England as an outside-left. Bloomer lived with another of his daughters, Doris Richards, toward the end of his life, after the death of his wife in 1936. Mrs Richards' son, Steve Richards, is a political columnist for The Independent newspaper in London. Bloomer's nephew, Ted Measures, signed for Arsenal F.C. in 1932.

[edit] Playing career

[edit] Early Years

As a youth he played football for St. James' School in the Derbyshire Minor Football League and on one occasion scored 14 goals in a single game. He then played for Derby Swifts between 1888 and 1891, before briefly playing for Tutbury Hawthorn in April 1892. However his appearance for this club in a cup competition against Gresley Rovers F.C. was declared illegal as he had already signed professional forms with Derby County.

[edit] Derby County

Bloomer spent the majority of his playing career at Derby County, where together with John Goodall and Archie Goodall, he formed the backbone of a County side that regularly challenged for top honours during the 1890s and early 1900s. Bloomer scored four times on his County debut, against Darley Dale. He made his English First Division debut on September 3, 1892 in a 3-1 away win against Stoke City and scored his first league goal for County on September 24, 1892 in a home game against West Bromwich Albion.

While at Derby he was top scorer in the First Division on five occasions in 1896, 1897, 1899, 1901 and 1904. In 1896, together with John Campbell of Aston Villa, he was also the top goalscorer in any European league. He was also the leading Rams scorer for 14 consecutive seasons and scored 17 hat-tricks in the league. One of his best seasons came in 1896-97 when he scored 31 goals, including five hat-tricks, in 33 League and FA Cup games. Between November 14, 1896 and April 5, 1897 he scored 21 goals in 20 games. He also scored six goals for the club in a game against Sheffield Wednesday in January 1899.

Bloomer’s goals helped Derby finish runners-up in the First Division in 1896 and helped them reach three FA Cup finals in 1898, 1899 and 1903. He scored in the 1898 final, a 3-1 defeat to Nottingham Forest. On September 3, 1900 Bloomer scored the first-ever goal at The Hawthorns, the 1–1 draw against West Bromwich Albion being the first match played at the ground.[1] After four years at Middlesbrough he returned to the Rams in 1910 and helped them win the Second Division title in 1912. He scored his last league goal for Derby against Sheffield United on September 6, 1913 and his last match was against Burnley on January 31, 1914 when he was 40 years and 11 days.

[edit] Middlesbrough

In March 1906 Bloomer joined Middlesbrough for a fee of £750. Among team mates at his new club were Alf Common, the first £1,000 footballer, and Fred Pentland. He was topscorer at Middlesbrough in both the 1906-07 and 1907-08 seasons. He also scored four goals in a game against Woolwich Arsenal on January 5, 1907.

[edit] England international

Between 1895 and 1907, Bloomer also made 23 England appearances. He scored twice on his debut in March 3, 1895 in a 9-0 win against Ireland. He subsequently scored 19 times in his first 10 matches for England and eventually finished his international career with 28 goals. On March 16, 1896 Bloomer scored 5 goals for England against Wales and on March 18, 1901 he scored four goals against the same opposition. Bloomer thus became the first player to score two hat-tricks for England and was also the first to score four goals for England twice. During his international career Bloomer’s team mates included his County team mate John Goodall as well as Frank Becton, Jack Reynolds, Ernest Needham, Fred Spiksley, Samuel Wolstenholme and Vivian Woodward. Bloomer helped England win the British Home Championship eight times.

[edit] Prisoner in Germany

After retiring as a player Bloomer went to Germany in July 1914 to coach Britannia Berlin 92. However within three weeks of arriving the First World War broke out and he found himself interned at Ruhleben, a civilian detention camp in the Spandau district of Berlin. Bloomer was one of several former professional footballers among the detainees. Others included his former England colleagues Fred Spiksley and Samuel Wolstenholme, his former Middlesbrough team mate Fred Pentland, a Scotland international, John Cameron, John Brearley, once of Everton and Tottenham Hotspur and a German international Edwin Dutton who had previously played for Britannia Berlin 92.

The camp contained between 4,000 and 5,500 prisoners. Gradually a mini-society evolved and football became a popular activity. The Ruhleben Football Association was formed and cup and league competitions were organised with as many as 1,000 attending the bigger games. The teams adopted the names of established teams and in November 1914, Bloomer captained a Tottenham Hotspur XI, that also included Dutton, to victory in a cup final against an Oldham Athletic XI. Spiksley also played in the game, refereed by Wolstenholme, although it is uncertain which team he played for. On May 2 1915 an England XI featuring Pentland, Wolstenholme, Brearley and Bloomer played a World XI captained by Cameron. Bloomer also played cricket at the camp and in May 1915 a Rubleben XI, featuring Bloomer and Brearley, played a Varsities XI in the Rubleban Cricket League. In July 1916 a Lancashire XI, featuring Bloomer, beat a Yorkshire XI that included Wolstenholme.

In summer the prisoners turned to cricket on ‘The Oval’, played to packed houses. Bloomer smashed the camp batting record with a cool 204 and once recorded impressive bowling figures of 6 for 15. There was athletics too. Bloomer won the ‘Old Age Handicap’ at the Ruhleben Olympics, sprinting the 75 yards in 9.6 seconds. Everybody in camp knew ‘Steve’. When he finally left Ruhleben in March 1918, a farewell football match was staged in his honour.

[edit] Coaching career

Immediately after the war Bloomer coached briefly in The Netherlands. In 1923 he became coach of Real Unión in Spain and in 1924 he guided them to victory in the Copa del Rey. During the 1920s the Copa was effectively a play-off to decide the Spanish Champions. Teams qualified by winning their regional titles and Real Unión represented Guipuzcoa. Nine other regional champions also qualified and in the first round of the competition Real beat Sevilla FC, the champions of Andalusia, 3-1 on aggregate. In the semi-final they faced the Catalan champions, FC Barcelona, coached by another Englishman, Jack Greenwell. Greenwall’s squad included the likes of Paulino Alcántara, Sagibarbá and Josep Samitier. Despite this Real beat FC Barcelona 6-1 after a replay and went on to beat Real Madrid, the champions of central Spain, 1-0 in the final.

[edit] Video Footage

There is a video of Steve Bloomer boarding a ship in Liverpool to go and coach in Canada. It is on Youtube.

[edit] Career statistics

Season Division (Derby County unless stated) League Apps League Goals FA Cup Apps FA Cup Goals Other Apps Other Goals Total Apps Total Goals
1892–93 First 28 11 0 0 0 0 28 11
1893–94 First 25 18 2 0 0 0 27 18
1894–95 First 29 9 1 0 3* 4* 33 13
1895–96 First 25 22 5 5 2* 6* 32 33
1896–97 First 29 24 4 7 3* 4* 36 35
1897–98 First 23 15 3 5 1 2 27 22
1898–99 First 28 24 5 6 4* 5* 37 35
1899–1900 First 28 19 2 0 2* 3* 32 22
1900–01 First 27 24 1 0 3** 6** 31 30
1901–02 First 28 15 7 3 4* 2* 39 20
1902–03 First 24 12 2 1 0 0 26 13
1903–04 First 29 20 6 5 2* 2* 37 27
1904–05 First 29 13 1 0 4* 2* 34 15
1905–06 First (Middlesbrough) 23 (9) 12 (6) 3 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 0 (0) 35 18
1906–07 First Middlesbrough 34 17 2 2 2 1 38 20
1907–08 First Middlesbrough 34 14 1 0 0 0 35 14
1908–09 First Middlesbrough 28 16 0 0  ?  ? 28 16
1909–10 First Middlesbrough 20 8 2 1 0 0 22 9
1910–11 Second 28 20 4 4 0 0 32 24
1911–12 Second 36 18 2 1 0 0 38 19
1912–13 First 29 13 1 1 0 0 30 14
1913–14 First 5 2 1 0 0 0 6 2
Total Derby County F.C. 473 291 50 38 28 36 551 365
Total Middlesbrough F.C. 125 61 5 3 2 1 132 65
Total First Division 534 314 49 36 30 37 614 387
Total Second Division 64 38 6 5 0 0 70 43
Total 598 352 55 41 30 37 684 430
    • Includes Football League representative matches: [1]; **Includes both FL representative matches and the English professionals v Germany 'international' played in 1901.
    • Italics indicate seasons in which Bloomer was the highest goalscorer in the League.
    • Bold indicates top scorer at club.
    • [Statistics supplied by the Association of Football Statisticians and IFFHS].

[edit] Honours

Football Player

Derby County

England

Football Manager

Real Unión

  • Campeonato de Guipuzcoa: 1
    • 1923-24

Baseball Player

Derby County Baseball Club

[edit] References

  1. ^ Matthews, Tony (2005). The Who's Who of West Bromwich Albion. Breedon Books, p214. ISBN 1-85983-474-4. 

[edit] External links


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