Tommy Hutchison
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Tommy Hutchison | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Thomas Hutchison | |
Date of birth | 22 September 1947 | |
Place of birth | Cardenden, Scotland | |
Playing position | Midfielder (retired) | |
Youth clubs | ||
-1965 | Dundonald Bluebell | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1965-1967 1967-1972 1972-1981 1980 1981-1982 1982-1983 1983-1985 1985-1991 1991-1994 |
Alloa Athletic Blackpool Coventry City Seattle Sounders (loan) Manchester City Bulova Burnley Swansea City Merthyr Tydfil |
165 (10) 314 (24) 25 (3) 46 (4) ? (?) 92 (4) 178 (9) 73 (2) |
68 (4)
National team | ||
1973-1975 | Scotland | 17 (1) |
Teams managed | ||
1985-1986 | Swansea City | |
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Thomas "Tommy" Hutchison (born 22 September 1947 in Cardenden, Fife) is a Scottish former professional footballer.
Beginning his career with Alloa Athletic, he joined Stan Mortensen's Blackpool in February 1968 for just over £10,000. Almost immediately, he took the place of Graham Oates at outside-left, making his debut against Plymouth on March 30.
The Scot was brought in to bolster the Seasiders' flagging promotion drive, and out of the final nine games of the 1967-68 season, they won eight. Promotion was missed on the final day, but 'Hutch' had been impressive throughout.[1]
When Bob Stokoe took over as manager from Mortensen, he worked on Hutchison's crossing ability, believing it to be his only weak spot.
In 1972, Coventry City offered £140,000 cash plus Billy Rafferty for Hutchison's services. He signed for the Midlands club, and remained at Highfield Road for eight years, playing 355 games and scoring 30 goals.
Hutchison joined Manchester City for a fee of £47,000 in 1980. In May 1981, he scored for both sides in the FA Cup Final, as Tottenham Hotspur drew 1-1 with Manchester City. He was not the first to do this — Bert Turner had done so in the 1946 final for Charlton and Derby.
Hutchison later played for Bulova of Hong Kong and Seattle Sounders (US) before returning to the UK, joining Burnley in 1983 and moving to Swansea City in 1985, serving as manager for six months after the club went into liquidation. He is in the record books as the oldest player to have played for Swansea, playing against Southend United in March 1991 at the age of 43 years, five months and 19 days.
He left Swansea near the end of the 1990-91 season, and joined Merthyr Tydfil, where he spent another three years before finally retiring from the game in May 1994, at the age of 46, having played more than a thousand first-team games in his career.
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[edit] International career
Capped 17 times for Scotland, Hutchison appeared at the 1974 World Cup.
He was surprisingly not selected for the 1978 World Cup, at a time when was at the peak of his form playing for top-flight Coventry City. His high-profile team-mate Ian Wallace was also not selected, even though they had proved a formidable strike partnership at the highest level. Many Scotland fans of a certain age have long-rued this decision, as Ally McLeod's team relied almost solely on Kenny Dalglish and Archie Gemmill in forward positions with only limited alternatives on the bench. It is generally considered that both Hutchison and Wallace's selection would have given Scotland a far better chance of progressing to the next round of the competition.
[edit] Retirement
On retiring from league football at the age of 43, he joined non-league Merthyr Tydfil. He still lives in south Wales and now works as a football development officer for Bristol City. A poll by the Coventry Evening Telegraph voted him the most popular Coventry player of the club's First Division era.
[edit] Honours
Blackpool
- Anglo-Italian Cup winner: 1971
[edit] Notes
- ^ Calley, Roy (1992). Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887-1992, p. 98. Breedon Books Sport. ISBN 1-873626-07-X
[edit] References
- Hutchison's profile at Neil Brown's statistics site
- Profile at the Scottish FA's website
- Calley, Roy (1992). Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887-1992. Breedon Books Sport. ISBN 1-873626-07-X.
[edit] External links
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