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Tommy Cheetham

English footballer


Summary

English footballer

FieldValue
nameTommy Cheetham
imageTommy Cheetham (footballer).jpg
fullnameThomas Miles Cheetham
birth_date
birth_placeByker, England
death_date
death_placeMansfield, England
height5 ft 10 in
positionCentre forward
years11929–
clubs1Byker
years2–1935
clubs2Royal Artillery
years31935–1939
clubs3Queens Park Rangers
caps3115
goals381
years41939–
clubs4Brentford
caps419
goals48
years51941–1948
clubs5Lincoln City
caps547
goals529

Thomas Miles Cheetham (11 October 1910 – 23 December 1993) was an English professional footballer. He scored 118 goals from 181 appearances in the Football League playing as a forward for Queens Park Rangers, Brentford and Lincoln City.

Football career

Cheetham was born in Byker, Newcastle upon Tyne. A late entrant to the professional game, he played local football before joining the Army and played for his regiment while serving in the Royal Artillery. In August 1935, aged nearly 25, he signed for London club Queens Park Rangers, then playing in the Football League Third Division South. He made his debut on 4 September 1935 in a 1–1 draw away to Brighton & Hove Albion. Although he did not score in that first game, his next two games brought six goals, a six-game spell running up to Christmas produced 11 and from the 35 games he played in his first League season as a professional footballer, Cheetham scored 36 times. He set a new club record by scoring in 9 consecutive games at QPR's home ground, Loftus Road.

His performances earned him an invitation to play for the Possibles against the Probables in March 1936 in a trial match for selection for the England national team. The quality of the Probables' defence, with Alf Young outstanding, meant Cheetham had little chance to shine – ''The Times''' correspondent reported that "Cheetham did not receive a pass for nearly half an hour", but "considering the brilliance of Young, the play of Cheetham could hardly be considered unsatisfactory". Though his next two seasons were less productive, in 1938–39 he scored 22 league goals from the 26 games before he left the club on 7 February 1939 to join First Division club Brentford for a fee of £5,000.

Brentford brought in Cheetham and inside forward Les Boulter to help their fight against relegation, though The Times suggested that their weakness lay less in attack than in defence. Cheetham made his debut in the top division in a 4–2 home defeat to Aston Villa, but he went on to score twice as Brentford beat fellow relegation strugglers Chelsea 3–1 and created both goals in a 2–0 defeat of Leicester City in early April, by which time his club had achieved a mid-table position. He finished the 1938–39 season with eight goals.

The outbreak of the Second World War in September 1939 put a stop to the Football League for the duration and caused a major interruption to Cheetham's career. During the war, he joined Lincoln City from Brentford for a £500 transfer fee. He played for them in wartime competitions, and also turned out for West Ham United. Then in the 1946–47 Football League season, the first full season after the war, Cheetham resumed his prolific goalscoring; 30 goals from 41 games in League and FA Cup made him Lincoln City's leading scorer. He played only infrequently in 1947–48. His last game came on 6 April 1948 against Rochdale and he retired from professional football at the age of 37. He then scouted for Lincoln City in the London area.

Personal life

Cheetham was a member of the Territorial Army during the Second World War and was injured at Dunkirk. Later he was posted to the Indian theatre where he scored 417 Goals in exhibition matches. After his retirement as a player he worked for a Croydon-based building contractors firm in the mid-1950s and lived in North London. Cheetham died in 1993, aged 83.

References

References

  1. (23 August 1936). "Queen's Park Rangers. Relying on old team". Sunday Dispatch Football Guide.
  2. {{Hugman. 3420
  3. Joyce, Michael. (2012). "Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939". Tony Brown.
  4. "Tommy Cheetham". Lincoln City F.C.
  5. "Cheetham Tommy Image 1 Brentford 1939".
  6. Westerberg, Kenneth. "Queen's Park Rangers 1935–36". Ron Norris.
  7. "A Potted History of QPR (1882–2010)". Queens Park Rangers F.C.
  8. (26 March 1936). "Association Football. International Trial Match". The Times.
  9. http://qprnet.com/misc/seasonalstats/excels/QPR1936.xls {{Dead link. (February 2022)
  10. http://www.qprnet.com/misc/seasonalstats/excels/QPR1937.xls {{Dead link. (February 2022)
  11. http://www.qprnet.com/misc/seasonalstats/excels/QPR1938.xls {{Dead link. (February 2022)
  12. Westerberg, Kenneth. "Queen's Park Rangers 1938–39". Ron Norris.
  13. (2006). "Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006". Yore Publications.
  14. (11 February 1939). "The F.A. Cup. To-Day's Fifth Round Ties". The Times.
  15. (9 February 1939). "Association Football. Brentford Lose At Home". The Times.
  16. (27 February 1939). "Brentford's Good Win. Chelsea Outplayed". The Times.
  17. (3 April 1939). "League Notes. Low-Scoring and Drawn Matches". The Times.
  18. Marsh, Steve. "WW2 Guest Players".
  19. "Tom [ww 2] Cheetham".
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