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Tom Walley

Welsh footballer and coach (born 1945)


Welsh footballer and coach (born 1945)

FieldValue
nameTom Walley
fullnameJohn Thomas Walley
birth_date
birth_placeCaernarfon, Wales
positionWing half
years11963–1964
clubs1Caernarfon Town
caps118
goals15
years21964
clubs2Wrexham
years31964
clubs3Caernarfon Town
caps315
goals34
years41964–1967
clubs4Arsenal
caps414
goals41
years51967–1971
clubs5Watford
caps5204
goals517
years61971–1976
clubs6Orient
caps6157
goals66
years71976–1978
clubs7Watford
caps713
goals70
nationalteam1Wales under-23
nationalcaps14
nationalyears21971
nationalteam2Wales
nationalcaps21
nationalgoals20

John Thomas Walley (born 27 February 1945) is a Welsh former footballer, who played as a wing half.

Playing career

Walley was born in Caernarfon and educated at Ysgol Segontium, named after the town's Roman fort. At the age of 14, he underwent a neck operation which prevented him playing football for almost three years. In March 1963, he joined Caernarfon Town playing in the Welsh League (North); after only a handful of games, he briefly joined Wrexham in the spring of 1964, but returned to Caernarfon in August, before (on the recommendation of his elder brother Ernie, who was a former Spurs player) joining English side Arsenal in December 1964 for a fee of £1,000. He played for Arsenal 18 times—4 of those appearances as a substitute—and scored once, as well as playing for the Wales under-23 national team, before transferring to Watford in March 1967 for £9,500.

During the first of two periods Walley would spend at Vicarage Road as a player, he earned his sole cap for the Wales national football team; a 3–1 defeat to Czechoslovakia at Vetch Field, Swansea on 21 April 1971. After making over 200 Football League appearances for Watford, he was sold to Orient at the end of 1971 for £22,500. After 157 league games and 6 goals, Orient sold Walley back to Watford for £3,000 at the end of 1975–76. His second period at the club was dogged by injury, and Walley managed only 13 further league games before retiring in 1977.

Coaching career

Upon his retirement from playing, Walley became the youth coach at Watford in August 1977. They again reached the final in 1985. Walley was promoted to first-team coach in 1988 by manager Steve Harrison. When Harrison moved to Millwall in 1990, Walley joined him as a youth coach, and in his first full season Walley lifted the FA Youth Cup for the second time in 1991. Just as he did at Watford, he followed this with a second final three years later. Walley left Millwall to join Arsenal in 1996, serving under Bruce Rioch and Arsène Wenger. In 1996, he was appointed manager of the Wales under-21 team by Bobby Gould.

Personal life

Walley, whose first language is Welsh, was born in the town of Caernarfon, in Gwynedd, north west Wales. His older brother Ernie was also a professional footballer and coach. Ernie briefly managed Crystal Palace in 1980, and coached Watford's reserves while Walley was a first team coach at the club. He now lives in the Nascot area of Watford, Hertfordshire.

References

References

  1. (1991). "Who's Who of Welsh International Soccer Players". Bridge Books.
  2. [http://www.clubwebsite.co.uk/caernarfontown/history.pl CPD Tref Caernarfon Town – History] {{Webarchive. link. (13 March 2009 Retrieved 05:04 10 May 2010)
  3. In his early years, players such as [[Kenny Jackett]] and [[Nigel Callaghan]] progressed to the first team. Under his management, Watford won the [[FA Youth Cup]] in 1982. Players in that side included future [[England national football team. England]] international [[John Barnes (footballer). John Barnes]], future Watford captain, [[Watford F.C. Player of the Season. Player of the Season]] and [[List of one-club men in association football. one-club man]] [[Nigel Gibbs]], and [[1984 FA Cup Final]]ist [[Neil Price (footballer). Neil Price]].Jones p. 287
  4. "Arsenal player database: Tom Walley". [[Arsenal F.C.]].
  5. "Tom Walley career statistics". Neil Brown.
  6. Tommy Staniforth. (8 June 1999). "Kinnear tipped for Wales". [[The Independent]].
  7. Jones, Trefor. (1996). "The Watford Football Club Illustrated Who's Who".
  8. "Managers". Crystal Palace F.C..
  9. Marcel Haisma. (6 March 2008). "European Championship 1972 (details)". [[Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation]].
  10. (19 February 2009). "Where are they now?". Wfc.net.
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