George Summerbee
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George Summerbee | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | George Michael Summerbee | |
Date of birth | October 22, 1914 | |
Place of birth | Winchester, England | |
Date of death | April 19, 1955 (aged 40) | |
Place of death | Cirencester, England | |
Playing position | Wing half | |
Youth clubs | ||
c.1932–1934 | Basingstone Town | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1934–1935 1935–1946 1946–1947 1947–1950 1950–1952 |
Aldershot Preston North End → Portsmouth (guest) Chester Barrow Cheltenham Town |
3 (0) 9 (0) 122 (0) |
19 (0)
Teams managed | ||
1950–1952 | Cheltenham Town | |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
George Summerbee (born 22 October 1914, Winchester; died 19 April 1955, Cirencester) was an English professional footballer who played in The Football League for four clubs. He was father of Mike Summerbee and grandfather of Nicky Summerbee, who both played for Manchester City.
[edit] Playing and Managerial Career
Summerbee began his professional career with Aldershot, who he joined from non-league side Basingstoke Town in May 1934. While at Aldershot he played alongside his brother Gordon [1]. In January 1935 George joined Football League First Division side Preston North End for £650 [2]. In 11 years at Deepdale, Summerbee made just three Football League appearances. During this spell he also spent several years during the Second World War guesting for Portsmouth, where he made 149 competitive appearances while working at a nearby aircraft factory [3].
He joined Football League Division Three North side Chester in May 1946 for £600 [4], where he was to again struggle to earn a regular first-team place and he moved to Barrow. He made more than 100 league appearances in three years at Holker Street, with his final Football League outing being against Lincoln City in May 1950.
Summerbee then joined non-league side Cheltenham Town as player-manager, but he left in 1952 after his contract was not renewed [5]. He died just three years later from Addison’s disease, after a spell scouting for Bristol City [6].
His life story is featured alongside the other footballing members of his family in ‘Fathers, Sons and Football’ (Colin Shindler (2001), Headline Book Publishing).
[edit] External Links
[edit] References
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.13-16. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.18. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.61-65. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.81. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.111-112. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.
- ^ Colin Shindler (2001). Fathers, Sons and Football, p.117-123. ISBN 1-7472-3218-0.