Percy Melmoth Walters

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Percy Melmoth Walters
Personal information
Full name Percy Melmoth Walters
Date of birth 30 September 1863(1863-09-30)
Place of birth    Ewell, England
Date of death    6 October 1936 (aged 73)
Place of death    Ashtead, Surrey, England
Playing position Right back, Left back
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1885
1885–1892
1885–1895(?)
Oxford University
Corinthian
Old Carthusians


   
National team
1885–1890 England 013 0(0)

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

Percy Melmoth Walters (September 30, 1863October 6, 1936) was an English amateur footballer who played as a defender for the Old Carthusians and the Corinthians in the late nineteenth century as well as making thirteen appearances for England, five as captain.

He and his younger brother, Arthur Melmoth Walters, were known as "morning" and "afternoon" in allusion to their initials.[1] The brothers were generally regarded as the finest fullbacks in England for a number of years; according to Philip Gibbons in his "History of the Game from 1863 to 1900" this was due mainly to their own defensive system based on the combination game used by the Royal Engineers during the early 1870s.[2]

Contents

[edit] Education

Percy was born in Ewell, Surrey, the son of a solicitor, and attended Charterhouse School, although he did not play for the school football team. He went up to Oxford University, where he won a blue in 1885, when his brother was in the Cambridge team.

[edit] Football career

[edit] Corinthian

In his final year at Oxford, Walters followed his younger brother and joined the Corinthian club which had been established three years earlier with a view to giving amateur players the opportunity to play together on a regular basis in order to improve the quality and strength of the England team.

Percy joined the Easter tour in which five games were played in six days, playing in all five games, including the opening fixture against Preston North End on 6 April 1885, when he played at right-back with his brother Arthur alongside him on the left.

This match was the first of many over the next six years in which the two brothers played alongside each other as the two full backs. Amongst the more significant matches were a 6–0 defeat of the FA Cup holders, Blackburn Rovers, in December 1885 and a 7–0 victory over Notts County in March 1886, when fellow Old Carthusian William Cobbold scored four goals.

The brothers' final match together for Corinthian was on 8 November 1890 in an eight goal victory over Sheffield in which younger brother H.M. Walters (who was only playing his second match) scored a hat-trick, with another goal from Percy. The other four goals came from V.G. Manns, who was playing his only match for Corinthian. Shortly after this match, the younger brother died from a football injury inflicted during a match and, in deference to their parents' wishes, both brothers retired from football to concentrate on their legal careers.[2]

The withdrawal of the Walters brothers from the Corinthian team had a significant effect on the team's performances as they were "extremely hard to replace, and Corinthian were destined to win only six of their next nineteen games".[3]

Despite the promise made to their parents, the brothers made a return to the Corinthians for a multi-sport tournament against the Barbarians rugby club in April 1892, although Percy did not play in the soccer match which Corinthian won 6–0, with Tinsley Lindley scoring a hat-trick. The clubs also played a rugby match, which Corinthian won 16–13, although the match was not a very serious encounter and was described by The Times newspaper as "a very amusing game".[4] The rugby match was followed by an athletics meeting in which C. B. Fry was prominent, winning both the long jump and high jump. Finally, the two clubs met a few weeks later in a cricket match in which Percy played alongside several other prominent Corinthians, including Fry, Lindley and Charles Wreford-Brown.

During his time with the Corinthians, Walters made 54 appearances, scoring once.

[edit] Old Carthusians

After graduating in 1885, Walters joined the old-boys' team for his former school, the Old Carthusians. His major success came late in his time with the club, reaching the FA Amateur Cup final in 1895.

[edit] England

Percy and Arthur made their England debuts together on 28 February 1885 in a 4–0 victory over Ireland, with Percy at left back and Arthur on the right.[5]

He first captained the England team, in only his third appearance, against Ireland on 13 March 1886, in the absence of the regular captain, Norman Coles Bailey. England "totally dominated the Irish"[6] to record a 6–1 victory, with four goals from Benjamin Spilsbury.[7]

In the next match against Scotland on 27 March 1886, nine of the eleven players selected were members of the Corinthian club, although all had their primary affiliation with other clubs. The match ended in a 1–1 draw, with England's being scored by fellow Corinthian Tinsley Lindley.[8]

On 17 March 1888, Percy played at left-back (alongside Bob Howarth of Preston North End) when England achieved their first victory over Scotland since 1879. In "a brilliant display of attacking football"[9] England were 5–0 winners, including two goals from Fred Dewhurst, thus securing their first victory on Scottish soil.[10]

Percy made a total of thirteen appearances for England, five as captain, with his final match being against Scotland in the 1890 British Home Championship. The match ended 1–1[11], and as a result England and Scotland shared the championship. Of the thirteen matches played for England, eight were won, three drawn (all against Scotland) and two were lost (also against Scotland).

[edit] Life away from football

During his football career, Walters also played for East Sheen and Epsom, and represented Surrey. He was a member of the F.A. committee in 1886, and a vice-president from 1891 to 1892.

Whilst at Oxford University, Walters made one appearance for the University cricket team in a match against the M.C.C. in May 1885, when he was the wicket-keeper. In his one innings, he scored nine runs in a drawn match.[12]

Walters spent some time as a volunteer in the army, and in June 1886, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in the 3rd Surrey Rifles.[13]

Walters qualified as a barrister and was called to the bar in 1888.

He died on October 6, 1936 at Ashtead, Surrey (aged 73 years).

[edit] Sporting honours

Old Carthusians

[edit] References

  1. ^ Graham Betts (2006). England: Player by player. Green Umbrella Publishing, pp. 251-252. ISBN 1-905009-63-1. 
  2. ^ a b Gibbons, Philip (2001). Association Football in Victorian England - A History of the Game from 1863 to 1900. Upfront Publishing, pp.79-80. ISBN 1-84426-035-6. 
  3. ^ Rob Cavallini (2007). Play Up Corinth - A History of the Corinthian Football Club. Tempus Publishing, p.28. ISBN 0-752444-79-6. 
  4. ^ Quoted in Cavallini. Play Up Corinth - A History of the Corinthian Football Club, p.32-33. 
  5. ^ England 4 - Ireland 0; 28 February 1885 (Match summary)
  6. ^ Philip Gibbons. Association Football in Victorian England, pp.85-86. 
  7. ^ Ireland 1 - England 6; 13 March 1886 (Match summary)
  8. ^ Scotland 1 - England 1; 27 March 1886 (Match summary)
  9. ^ Philip Gibbons. Association Football in Victorian England, p. 99. 
  10. ^ Scotland 0 - England 5; 17 March 1888 (Match summary)
  11. ^ Scotland 1 - England 1; 5 April 1890 (Match summary)
  12. ^ Oxford University v Marylebone Cricket Club; May 1885 (Match scorecard)
  13. ^ London Gazette: no. 25594, page 2695, 4 June 1886. Retrieved on 2008-05-09.

[edit] External links