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Len Shackleton

Leonard Francis Shackleton (3 May 1922 – 28 November 2000) was an English footballer. Known as the "Clown Prince of Football", he is generally regarded as one of English football's finest ever entertainers.[2] He also played cricket in the Minor Counties for Northumberland.

Len Shackleton
Personal information
Full name Leonard Francis Shackleton
Date of birth (1922-05-03)3 May 1922
Place of birth Bradford, England
Date of death 28 November 2000(2000-11-28) (aged 78)
Place of death Grange-over-Sands, England
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)[1]
Position(s) Inside forward / Outside forward
Youth career
1936–1938 Bradford Park Avenue
1936–1938 → Kippax United (loan)
1938–1939 Arsenal
1938–1939Enfield (loan)
1939 London Paper Mills
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1940–1946 Bradford Park Avenue 7 (4)
1946–1948 Newcastle United 57 (26)
1948–1957 Sunderland 320 (97)
Total 384 (127)
International career
1935–1936 England Schoolboys 3 (2)
1948–1954 England 5 (1)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Able to play at inside forward or outside forward, he scored 134 goals in 427 league and cup appearances in just over 11 seasons in the Football League, and before that scored 171 goals in 209 league and cup appearances during wartime football. His ball control skills made him one of the most talented players in the country, but his individualism and outspoken nature limited him to only five England caps in a six-year international career. He also never won a trophy or league title.

Born in Bradford, he spent his teenage years before World War II with Bradford Park Avenue, Kippax United, Arsenal, Enfield, and London Paper Mills, before he turned professional at Bradford Park Avenue in 1940. He spent the war assembling aircraft radios and playing for Bradford PA, and was sold on to Second Division rivals Newcastle United for a £13,000 fee in October 1946. He scored six goals on his Newcastle debut, but fell out with the club's directors, and was sold on to Sunderland for a British transfer record fee of £20,050 in February 1948. He scored 97 goals in 320 First Division matches for the club, with the closest he came to a trophy being the 1949–50 season when Sunderland finished third in the league, and when they reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1955 and in 1956. He retired due to an ankle injury in 1957, and became a sports journalist.

Club career

Leonard Francis Shackleton was born in Bradford, England on 3 May 1922 to Leonard and Irene Shackleton; his father was a self-employed painter and decorator and his mother was a housewife.[3] He was the elder brother to Irene and John; John went on to sign for Sunderland, though never played a first team game and quit the game to become a chiropodist and tennis coach.[4] Shackleton attended Carlton High Grammar school, and became the first Bradford schoolboy to represent England schoolboys when he scored two goals in a 6–2 victory over Wales schoolboys; also in the team that day was future Sunderland teammate Dickie Davis.[1]

Early career

Despite his family being keen Bradford City supporters, Shackleton signed amateur forms with Bradford Park Avenue after being signed by manager Billy Hardy.[5] Bradford PA permitted him to play for Kippax United in the Leeds League.[5] Arsenal's secretary-manager George Allison heard of Shackleton's talents, and drove to Bradford to sign him to amateur forms in 1938.[6] Arsenal permitted him to play for Enfield in the Athenian League, and he in fact only represented Arsenal twice in reserve team fixtures in the Southern League.[7] He was released by Arsenal in May 1939 and told by Allison that he was too small to succeed as a footballer, and should find other employment.[8] Following this disappointment he took a job at London Paper Mills in Dartford, and turned out for the factory's works team in the Kent League.[9]

Bradford Park Avenue

Shackleton returned to his hometown upon hearing of the outbreak of World War II and took up employment assembling aircraft radios for GEC, at which point he rejoined Bradford Park Avenue as an amateur after being invited to the Park Avenue Stadium by manager David Steele.[10] He turned professional at the club shortly before Christmas 1940 and received a £10 signing-on fee, which the cash-strapped club had to pay in instalments.[10] On Christmas morning he played for Bradford PA, then guested for Huddersfield Town in the afternoon, and scored in both matches.[11] In the wartime leagues he scored a total of 171 goals in league and cup 209 appearances for Bradford PA.[12] He became a Bevin Boy in order to avoid his call-up for national service in 1945 as he did not want to miss the resumption of the Football League, but found the experience of coal mining terrifying and gruelling.[13] He began to avoid his shifts in the pits, and so was called into the Royal Air Force, where he served the remainder of his national service.[14] He scored four goals in seven Second Division matches at the start of the 1946–47 season, but left the club in October 1946 after growing tired of heckling from his own supporters who did not appreciate his individualist style.[15]

Newcastle United

In October 1946, Shackleton was sold to Second Division side Newcastle United for a £13,000 fee.[16] He was sold as a direct replacement for Albert Stubbins, who had been sold from Newcastle to Liverpool for the same fee.[17] He scored six goals on his debut in Newcastle's 13–0 defeat of Newport County at St James' Park on 5 October, with three of his goals coming within the space of just 155 seconds.[18] However his return to Park Avenue in his fourth game for Newcastle was not a happy one, as he had a penalty saved by former teammate Chick Farr in a 2–1 defeat to Bradford PA.[19] The "Magpies" boasted a devastating forward line of Jackie Milburn, Roy Bentley, Charlie Wayman, Shackleton, and Tommy Pearson, and totalled 95 league goals in the 1946–47 season, though their tally of 62 goals conceded and 13 defeats left the club having to settle for fifth place.[20] They did though reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup, where they were beaten 4–0 by Charlton Athletic.[21] After the semi-final game he and club captain Joe Harvey went on strike over housing issues; the club's board eventually relented and granted Shackleton the house they had initially promised him, though to save face told the press that Harvey and Shackleton had been in the wrong and had apologised.[22] He further came into conflict with the club at Christmas 1947, when he and goalkeeper Jack Fairbrother refused to join the squad on a scouting party on opponents Charlton Athletic, who they faced later that season in the third round of the FA Cup.[23] Unhappy with the club, he handed in a transfer request, which was granted.[24]

"...those people upstairs, and whatnot – I never hit it off with... the fans are so brilliant at Newcastle that I feel guilty when I call them (names). But I'm not calling the fans, I'm calling the club... I've no bias against Newcastle – I don't care who beats them!"

— Shackleton liked the Geordie people but felt that Newcastle United was not a well run club.[25]

Sunderland

In February 1948, Shackleton was sold to Newcastle's rivals Sunderland for a British transfer fee record of £20,050.[26] He was one of a number of a squad full of big name players signed by the club for a total outlay of around £250,000 during the post-war era, which earned Sunderland the nickname of the 'Bank of England' club.[27] However Shackleton made his debut in a 5–1 defeat to Derby County at the Baseball Ground, and Sunderland finished just four points above the relegation zone – at that time the club had never been relegated out of the First Division.[28] He later admitted that the players were more a collection of talented individuals than a true team, and that "it takes time to harness and control a team of thoroughbreds. It took time to achieve the blend at Roker Park".[29] Shackleton and centre-forward Trevor Ford would never build any kind of relationship on or off the pitch however, and Ford once threatened to never play in the same Sunderland team as Shackleton until he was forced to back down by manager Bill Murray.[30] Ford was sold on to Cardiff City in November 1953.[31]

Shackleton never won any honours with Sunderland, the closest he came to doing so being a third-place finish in 1949–50, when they finished one point behind champions Portsmouth.[32] Shackleton felt that a surprise home defeat to Manchester City on 15 April was both decisive and galling, as teammate Jack Stelling twice missed a penalty in a 2–1 loss.[33] Sunderland lost fewer games than any other team in the 1954–55 season, but still ended up four points behind champions Chelsea.[34] They also reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1955 and in 1956, losing 1–0 to Manchester City at Villa Park and then 3–0 to Birmingham City at Hillsborough.[34] He injured his ankle on the opening day of the 1957–58 season, and announced his retirement shortly afterwards.[35] This meant he played only 45 minutes for new manager Alan Brown, who had a reputation as a tough taskmaster.[36] The club were reluctant to grant him a benefit match, but relented after Shackleton threatened to tell the FA about illegal payments the club had made.[37]

International career

Shackleton won his first full cap for England in a 0–0 draw with Denmark on 26 September 1948.[37] He was dropped and replaced by Stan Pearson for England's next game, before making a surprise return in a 1–0 win over Wales at Villa Park on 10 November 1948.[37] His third cap came again against Wales, in a 4–1 victory in Cardiff on 15 October 1949.[37] He then had to wait five years for his fourth cap, in which time the England selectors had tried 17 different players at inside-forward, with limited success.[38] Selectors had always viewed the rebellious Shackleton with distrust, and one selector who was challenged over Shackleton's continued absence in the England team told a journalist that "we play at Wembley, not the London Palladium."[39] He made his return again against Wales, in a 3–2 victory at Wembley Stadium.[39] He put in his finest performance however in his final England appearance, scoring with a chipped goal in a 3–1 win over the then World Champions West Germany on 1 December 1954.[40] He later wrote that the goal was "my most memorable scoring effort in a lifetime of soccer... I felt a keen sense of satisfaction – not because the goal made our victory over Germany certain, but because I had decided exactly how to go about scoring it long before the chance presented itself. Anticipation and fulfilment."[41]

Style of play

Journalist Malcolm Hartley, wrote of Shackleton: "Apart from the adhesive ball control and breathtaking body swerve, Shack could hit a ball. His slender legs could crack the ball like a Bofors gun." One of his contemporaries remarked: "Once in possession, and few can match his dexterity at bringing the ball under control, the ball becomes his slave. All the skills of inside forward play – dribbling, feinting, correct positioning and accurate passing are his to command."[42]

A showman who liked to entertain the crowd, he was able to cut the ball with sufficient spin that it would roll towards an opponent only to stop and then return to him as though on a string.[43] He was also adept at back heeling penalty kicks into the goal.[44] He would rarely track back and defend however, and antics were sometimes criticised as "unsportsman-like".[43] On one occasion, 2–1 up against Arsenal with 5 minutes to go, he dribbled the ball into The Gunners' penalty area before putting his foot on it, pretending to comb his hair while looking at his watch. Other examples include mocking opposition full-backs by playing one-twos with the corner flag, literally sitting on the ball to torment defenders who couldn't dispossess him, and teasing a beaten goalkeeper by putting his foot on the ball on the goal line.[2] Sunderland teammate Trevor Ford wrote in his autobiography that: "where did it [Shackleton's antics] get us? Precisely nowhere. The result was that when he did make a move, the opposing defence was in position and the attack broke down. Time and again when I thought Shack was going to slip a goalscoring pass to me he would veer off".[45] However Billy Bingham defended Shackleton by noting that Ford had poor positional skills.[30]

Cricket career

While playing for Sunderland, Shackleton played cricket for Wearmouth Colliery and for Northumberland in the 1948 Minor Counties Championship.[46] His genius and humour was also evident on the cricket field. At Wearmouth, he would entertain the crowd by pretending to miss slip catches, then looking behind him as if the ball had gone to the boundary, before producing the ball from his pocket. While at Sunderland he played for Wearmouth Colliery in the Durham Senior League. He also played cricket for Lidget Green in the Bradford League, and for Northumberland in the Minor Counties League.

Journalism career and later life

Shackleton became a sports journalist after retiring as a footballer. He had been an outspoken critic of the football establishment during his playing career, particularly so of the maximum wage rule.[47] He used his nickname, The Clown Prince of Soccer, for his 1956 autobiography. One chapter of that book was "The Average Director's Knowledge of Football". It consisted of a single blank page.[48] The book proved to be immensely popular, and ran into five editions within three months.[49]

Shackleton, who had also been a barber during his playing career, had three sons with his wife Marjorie. He moved to Grange-over-Sands in Cumbria on retirement and wrote Return of the Clown Prince with his son Roger. He had a heart attack in August 2000 and died on 28 November that year, aged 78.[50]

Only after his death he became known to many and younger people, esp. to foreigners, because his fame was spread around europe by the legendary "anarcho-folk-punk-band" Chumbawamba in their "Song To Len Shackleton" (released 2002 on their "Readymades" CD)

Statistics

Club statistics

Source:[51]

Club Season Division League FA Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Bradford Park Avenue 1945–46 0 0 8 1 8 1
1946–47 Second Division 7 4 0 0 7 4
Total 7 4 8 1 15 5
Newcastle United 1946–47 Second Division 32 19 6 3 38 22
1947–48 Second Division 25 7 1 0 26 7
Total 57 26 7 3 64 29
Sunderland 1947–48 First Division 14 4 0 0 14 4
1948–49 First Division 39 8 2 0 41 8
1949–50 First Division 40 14 2 2 42 16
1950–51 First Division 30 6 4 0 34 6
1951–52 First Division 41 22 2 0 43 22
1952–53 First Division 31 6 3 0 34 6
1953–54 First Division 38 14 1 0 39 14
1954–55 First Division 32 8 6 1 38 9
1955–56 First Division 28 7 6 0 34 7
1956–57 First Division 26 8 2 0 28 8
1957–58 First Division 1 0 0 0 1 0
Total 320 97 28 3 348 100
Career Total 384 127 43 7 427 134

International statistics

England national team
Year Apps Goals
1948 2 0
1949 1 0
1954 2 1
Total[52] 5 1

References

Specific
  1. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 19
  2. ^ a b "BBC SPORT | FOOTBALL | Len Shackleton: Clown Prince". BBC News. 29 November 2000. Retrieved 31 August 2010.
  3. ^ Malam 2004, p. 13
  4. ^ Malam 2004, p. 14
  5. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 21
  6. ^ Malam 2004, p. 22
  7. ^ Malam 2004, p. 27
  8. ^ Malam 2004, p. 28
  9. ^ Malam 2004, p. 31
  10. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 35
  11. ^ Malam 2004, p. 36
  12. ^ Slater, Gary (4 December 2000). "UniBond League: Park Avenue to honour Shackleton with memorial". The Telegraph. Retrieved 31 August 2010.
  13. ^ Malam 2004, p. 49
  14. ^ Malam 2004, p. 50
  15. ^ Malam 2004, p. 51
  16. ^ Malam 2004, p. 52
  17. ^ Malam 2004, p. 60
  18. ^ The Times, 7 October 1946, Association Football Newcastle's 13 Goals
  19. ^ Malam 2004, p. 63
  20. ^ Malam 2004, p. 64
  21. ^ Malam 2004, p. 66
  22. ^ Malam 2004, p. 67
  23. ^ Malam 2004, p. 68
  24. ^ Malam 2004, p. 72
  25. ^ Malam 2004, p. 79
  26. ^ Malam 2004, p. 73
  27. ^ Malam 2004, p. 81
  28. ^ Malam 2004, p. 83
  29. ^ Malam 2004, p. 84
  30. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 87
  31. ^ Malam 2004, p. 88
  32. ^ Malam 2004, p. 90
  33. ^ Malam 2004, p. 91
  34. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 92
  35. ^ Malam 2004, p. 103
  36. ^ Malam 2004, p. 104
  37. ^ a b c d Malam 2004, p. 106
  38. ^ Malam 2004, p. 116
  39. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 119
  40. ^ Malam 2004, p. 121
  41. ^ Malam 2004, p. 122
  42. ^ Dykes, Garth (2000). All the Lads. Great Britain: Sunderland AFC. ISBN 1-899538-15-1.
  43. ^ a b Malam 2004, p. 45
  44. ^ The 50 greatest North strikers The Chronicle, 26 June 2011
  45. ^ Malam 2004, p. 85
  46. ^ "Player profile: Len Shackleton". CricketArchive. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
  47. ^ Malam 2004, p. 78
  48. ^ Malam 2004, p. 134
  49. ^ Malam 2004, p. 135
  50. ^ "Len Shackleton". The Guardian. 29 November 2000. Retrieved 3 May 2022.
  51. ^ Len Shackleton at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
  52. ^ "Len Shackleton". national-football-teams.com. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
General
  • Malam, Colin (2004). Clown Prince of Soccer? The Len Shackleton Story. Highdown. ISBN 1-904317-74X.

shackleton, leonard, francis, shackleton, 1922, november, 2000, english, footballer, known, clown, prince, football, generally, regarded, english, football, finest, ever, entertainers, also, played, cricket, minor, counties, northumberland, personal, informati. Leonard Francis Shackleton 3 May 1922 28 November 2000 was an English footballer Known as the Clown Prince of Football he is generally regarded as one of English football s finest ever entertainers 2 He also played cricket in the Minor Counties for Northumberland Len ShackletonPersonal informationFull nameLeonard Francis ShackletonDate of birth 1922 05 03 3 May 1922Place of birthBradford EnglandDate of death28 November 2000 2000 11 28 aged 78 Place of deathGrange over Sands EnglandHeight5 ft 9 in 1 75 m 1 Position s Inside forward Outside forwardYouth career1936 1938Bradford Park Avenue1936 1938 Kippax United loan 1938 1939Arsenal1938 1939 Enfield loan 1939London Paper MillsSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1940 1946Bradford Park Avenue7 4 1946 1948Newcastle United57 26 1948 1957Sunderland320 97 Total384 127 International career1935 1936England Schoolboys3 2 1948 1954England5 1 Club domestic league appearances and goalsAble to play at inside forward or outside forward he scored 134 goals in 427 league and cup appearances in just over 11 seasons in the Football League and before that scored 171 goals in 209 league and cup appearances during wartime football His ball control skills made him one of the most talented players in the country but his individualism and outspoken nature limited him to only five England caps in a six year international career He also never won a trophy or league title Born in Bradford he spent his teenage years before World War II with Bradford Park Avenue Kippax United Arsenal Enfield and London Paper Mills before he turned professional at Bradford Park Avenue in 1940 He spent the war assembling aircraft radios and playing for Bradford PA and was sold on to Second Division rivals Newcastle United for a 13 000 fee in October 1946 He scored six goals on his Newcastle debut but fell out with the club s directors and was sold on to Sunderland for a British transfer record fee of 20 050 in February 1948 He scored 97 goals in 320 First Division matches for the club with the closest he came to a trophy being the 1949 50 season when Sunderland finished third in the league and when they reached the semi finals of the FA Cup in 1955 and in 1956 He retired due to an ankle injury in 1957 and became a sports journalist Contents 1 Club career 1 1 Early career 1 2 Bradford Park Avenue 1 3 Newcastle United 1 4 Sunderland 2 International career 3 Style of play 4 Cricket career 5 Journalism career and later life 6 Statistics 6 1 Club statistics 6 2 International statistics 7 ReferencesClub career EditLeonard Francis Shackleton was born in Bradford England on 3 May 1922 to Leonard and Irene Shackleton his father was a self employed painter and decorator and his mother was a housewife 3 He was the elder brother to Irene and John John went on to sign for Sunderland though never played a first team game and quit the game to become a chiropodist and tennis coach 4 Shackleton attended Carlton High Grammar school and became the first Bradford schoolboy to represent England schoolboys when he scored two goals in a 6 2 victory over Wales schoolboys also in the team that day was future Sunderland teammate Dickie Davis 1 Early career Edit Despite his family being keen Bradford City supporters Shackleton signed amateur forms with Bradford Park Avenue after being signed by manager Billy Hardy 5 Bradford PA permitted him to play for Kippax United in the Leeds League 5 Arsenal s secretary manager George Allison heard of Shackleton s talents and drove to Bradford to sign him to amateur forms in 1938 6 Arsenal permitted him to play for Enfield in the Athenian League and he in fact only represented Arsenal twice in reserve team fixtures in the Southern League 7 He was released by Arsenal in May 1939 and told by Allison that he was too small to succeed as a footballer and should find other employment 8 Following this disappointment he took a job at London Paper Mills in Dartford and turned out for the factory s works team in the Kent League 9 Bradford Park Avenue Edit Shackleton returned to his hometown upon hearing of the outbreak of World War II and took up employment assembling aircraft radios for GEC at which point he rejoined Bradford Park Avenue as an amateur after being invited to the Park Avenue Stadium by manager David Steele 10 He turned professional at the club shortly before Christmas 1940 and received a 10 signing on fee which the cash strapped club had to pay in instalments 10 On Christmas morning he played for Bradford PA then guested for Huddersfield Town in the afternoon and scored in both matches 11 In the wartime leagues he scored a total of 171 goals in league and cup 209 appearances for Bradford PA 12 He became a Bevin Boy in order to avoid his call up for national service in 1945 as he did not want to miss the resumption of the Football League but found the experience of coal mining terrifying and gruelling 13 He began to avoid his shifts in the pits and so was called into the Royal Air Force where he served the remainder of his national service 14 He scored four goals in seven Second Division matches at the start of the 1946 47 season but left the club in October 1946 after growing tired of heckling from his own supporters who did not appreciate his individualist style 15 Newcastle United Edit In October 1946 Shackleton was sold to Second Division side Newcastle United for a 13 000 fee 16 He was sold as a direct replacement for Albert Stubbins who had been sold from Newcastle to Liverpool for the same fee 17 He scored six goals on his debut in Newcastle s 13 0 defeat of Newport County at St James Park on 5 October with three of his goals coming within the space of just 155 seconds 18 However his return to Park Avenue in his fourth game for Newcastle was not a happy one as he had a penalty saved by former teammate Chick Farr in a 2 1 defeat to Bradford PA 19 The Magpies boasted a devastating forward line of Jackie Milburn Roy Bentley Charlie Wayman Shackleton and Tommy Pearson and totalled 95 league goals in the 1946 47 season though their tally of 62 goals conceded and 13 defeats left the club having to settle for fifth place 20 They did though reach the semi finals of the FA Cup where they were beaten 4 0 by Charlton Athletic 21 After the semi final game he and club captain Joe Harvey went on strike over housing issues the club s board eventually relented and granted Shackleton the house they had initially promised him though to save face told the press that Harvey and Shackleton had been in the wrong and had apologised 22 He further came into conflict with the club at Christmas 1947 when he and goalkeeper Jack Fairbrother refused to join the squad on a scouting party on opponents Charlton Athletic who they faced later that season in the third round of the FA Cup 23 Unhappy with the club he handed in a transfer request which was granted 24 those people upstairs and whatnot I never hit it off with the fans are so brilliant at Newcastle that I feel guilty when I call them names But I m not calling the fans I m calling the club I ve no bias against Newcastle I don t care who beats them Shackleton liked the Geordie people but felt that Newcastle United was not a well run club 25 Sunderland Edit In February 1948 Shackleton was sold to Newcastle s rivals Sunderland for a British transfer fee record of 20 050 26 He was one of a number of a squad full of big name players signed by the club for a total outlay of around 250 000 during the post war era which earned Sunderland the nickname of the Bank of England club 27 However Shackleton made his debut in a 5 1 defeat to Derby County at the Baseball Ground and Sunderland finished just four points above the relegation zone at that time the club had never been relegated out of the First Division 28 He later admitted that the players were more a collection of talented individuals than a true team and that it takes time to harness and control a team of thoroughbreds It took time to achieve the blend at Roker Park 29 Shackleton and centre forward Trevor Ford would never build any kind of relationship on or off the pitch however and Ford once threatened to never play in the same Sunderland team as Shackleton until he was forced to back down by manager Bill Murray 30 Ford was sold on to Cardiff City in November 1953 31 Shackleton never won any honours with Sunderland the closest he came to doing so being a third place finish in 1949 50 when they finished one point behind champions Portsmouth 32 Shackleton felt that a surprise home defeat to Manchester City on 15 April was both decisive and galling as teammate Jack Stelling twice missed a penalty in a 2 1 loss 33 Sunderland lost fewer games than any other team in the 1954 55 season but still ended up four points behind champions Chelsea 34 They also reached the semi finals of the FA Cup in 1955 and in 1956 losing 1 0 to Manchester City at Villa Park and then 3 0 to Birmingham City at Hillsborough 34 He injured his ankle on the opening day of the 1957 58 season and announced his retirement shortly afterwards 35 This meant he played only 45 minutes for new manager Alan Brown who had a reputation as a tough taskmaster 36 The club were reluctant to grant him a benefit match but relented after Shackleton threatened to tell the FA about illegal payments the club had made 37 International career EditShackleton won his first full cap for England in a 0 0 draw with Denmark on 26 September 1948 37 He was dropped and replaced by Stan Pearson for England s next game before making a surprise return in a 1 0 win over Wales at Villa Park on 10 November 1948 37 His third cap came again against Wales in a 4 1 victory in Cardiff on 15 October 1949 37 He then had to wait five years for his fourth cap in which time the England selectors had tried 17 different players at inside forward with limited success 38 Selectors had always viewed the rebellious Shackleton with distrust and one selector who was challenged over Shackleton s continued absence in the England team told a journalist that we play at Wembley not the London Palladium 39 He made his return again against Wales in a 3 2 victory at Wembley Stadium 39 He put in his finest performance however in his final England appearance scoring with a chipped goal in a 3 1 win over the then World Champions West Germany on 1 December 1954 40 He later wrote that the goal was my most memorable scoring effort in a lifetime of soccer I felt a keen sense of satisfaction not because the goal made our victory over Germany certain but because I had decided exactly how to go about scoring it long before the chance presented itself Anticipation and fulfilment 41 Style of play EditJournalist Malcolm Hartley wrote of Shackleton Apart from the adhesive ball control and breathtaking body swerve Shack could hit a ball His slender legs could crack the ball like a Bofors gun One of his contemporaries remarked Once in possession and few can match his dexterity at bringing the ball under control the ball becomes his slave All the skills of inside forward play dribbling feinting correct positioning and accurate passing are his to command 42 A showman who liked to entertain the crowd he was able to cut the ball with sufficient spin that it would roll towards an opponent only to stop and then return to him as though on a string 43 He was also adept at back heeling penalty kicks into the goal 44 He would rarely track back and defend however and antics were sometimes criticised as unsportsman like 43 On one occasion 2 1 up against Arsenal with 5 minutes to go he dribbled the ball into The Gunners penalty area before putting his foot on it pretending to comb his hair while looking at his watch Other examples include mocking opposition full backs by playing one twos with the corner flag literally sitting on the ball to torment defenders who couldn t dispossess him and teasing a beaten goalkeeper by putting his foot on the ball on the goal line 2 Sunderland teammate Trevor Ford wrote in his autobiography that where did it Shackleton s antics get us Precisely nowhere The result was that when he did make a move the opposing defence was in position and the attack broke down Time and again when I thought Shack was going to slip a goalscoring pass to me he would veer off 45 However Billy Bingham defended Shackleton by noting that Ford had poor positional skills 30 Cricket career EditWhile playing for Sunderland Shackleton played cricket for Wearmouth Colliery and for Northumberland in the 1948 Minor Counties Championship 46 His genius and humour was also evident on the cricket field At Wearmouth he would entertain the crowd by pretending to miss slip catches then looking behind him as if the ball had gone to the boundary before producing the ball from his pocket While at Sunderland he played for Wearmouth Colliery in the Durham Senior League He also played cricket for Lidget Green in the Bradford League and for Northumberland in the Minor Counties League Journalism career and later life EditShackleton became a sports journalist after retiring as a footballer He had been an outspoken critic of the football establishment during his playing career particularly so of the maximum wage rule 47 He used his nickname The Clown Prince of Soccer for his 1956 autobiography One chapter of that book was The Average Director s Knowledge of Football It consisted of a single blank page 48 The book proved to be immensely popular and ran into five editions within three months 49 Shackleton who had also been a barber during his playing career had three sons with his wife Marjorie He moved to Grange over Sands in Cumbria on retirement and wrote Return of the Clown Prince with his son Roger He had a heart attack in August 2000 and died on 28 November that year aged 78 50 Only after his death he became known to many and younger people esp to foreigners because his fame was spread around europe by the legendary anarcho folk punk band Chumbawamba in their Song To Len Shackleton released 2002 on their Readymades CD Statistics EditClub statistics Edit Source 51 Club Season Division League FA Cup TotalApps Goals Apps Goals Apps GoalsBradford Park Avenue 1945 46 0 0 8 1 8 11946 47 Second Division 7 4 0 0 7 4Total 7 4 8 1 15 5Newcastle United 1946 47 Second Division 32 19 6 3 38 221947 48 Second Division 25 7 1 0 26 7Total 57 26 7 3 64 29Sunderland 1947 48 First Division 14 4 0 0 14 41948 49 First Division 39 8 2 0 41 81949 50 First Division 40 14 2 2 42 161950 51 First Division 30 6 4 0 34 61951 52 First Division 41 22 2 0 43 221952 53 First Division 31 6 3 0 34 61953 54 First Division 38 14 1 0 39 141954 55 First Division 32 8 6 1 38 91955 56 First Division 28 7 6 0 34 71956 57 First Division 26 8 2 0 28 81957 58 First Division 1 0 0 0 1 0Total 320 97 28 3 348 100Career Total 384 127 43 7 427 134International statistics Edit England national teamYear Apps Goals1948 2 01949 1 01954 2 1Total 52 5 1References EditSpecific a b Malam 2004 p 19 a b BBC SPORT FOOTBALL Len Shackleton Clown Prince BBC News 29 November 2000 Retrieved 31 August 2010 Malam 2004 p 13 Malam 2004 p 14 a b Malam 2004 p 21 Malam 2004 p 22 Malam 2004 p 27 Malam 2004 p 28 Malam 2004 p 31 a b Malam 2004 p 35 Malam 2004 p 36 Slater Gary 4 December 2000 UniBond League Park Avenue to honour Shackleton with memorial The Telegraph Retrieved 31 August 2010 Malam 2004 p 49 Malam 2004 p 50 Malam 2004 p 51 Malam 2004 p 52 Malam 2004 p 60 The Times 7 October 1946 Association Football Newcastle s 13 Goals Malam 2004 p 63 Malam 2004 p 64 Malam 2004 p 66 Malam 2004 p 67 Malam 2004 p 68 Malam 2004 p 72 Malam 2004 p 79 Malam 2004 p 73 Malam 2004 p 81 Malam 2004 p 83 Malam 2004 p 84 a b Malam 2004 p 87 Malam 2004 p 88 Malam 2004 p 90 Malam 2004 p 91 a b Malam 2004 p 92 Malam 2004 p 103 Malam 2004 p 104 a b c d Malam 2004 p 106 Malam 2004 p 116 a b Malam 2004 p 119 Malam 2004 p 121 Malam 2004 p 122 Dykes Garth 2000 All the Lads Great Britain Sunderland AFC ISBN 1 899538 15 1 a b Malam 2004 p 45 The 50 greatest North strikers The Chronicle 26 June 2011 Malam 2004 p 85 Player profile Len Shackleton CricketArchive Retrieved 8 August 2011 Malam 2004 p 78 Malam 2004 p 134 Malam 2004 p 135 Len Shackleton The Guardian 29 November 2000 Retrieved 3 May 2022 Len Shackleton at the English National Football Archive subscription required Len Shackleton national football teams com Retrieved 7 August 2015 GeneralMalam Colin 2004 Clown Prince of Soccer The Len Shackleton Story Highdown ISBN 1 904317 74X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Len Shackleton amp oldid 1148340647, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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