1939 British Home Championship

The 1939 British Home Championship was a football tournament played between the British Home Nations during the 1938–39 seasons and was the last edition of the tournament to be completed before the outbreak of the Second World War in August 1939 suspended all professional sporting competitions. As a result, this was the final opportunity for many spectators to see their sporting heroes in an international setting, as players such as Wales's Dai Astley or Scotland's Tommy Walker would no longer be young enough to play for their country by the time professional football began again in 1946.

The opening matches saw an immediate advantage for Wales and Scotland who beat England and Northern Ireland respectively. Scotland then followed by beating the Welsh in their second match during a close contest whilst England succeeded in victory over the Irish by a seven goal margin to bring them into joint second place behind the Scots. During the match, Willie Hall scored five goals, an English record that has been equalled but never broken as of 2007. In the final games, Wales beat the Irish resulting in a whitewash of three defeats for Ireland and joint first place for the Welsh. England joined Wales and Scotland on four points with a 2–1 victory over Scotland in Glasgow to share the title between the three nations, as goal difference was not at this stage used to determine position. The win was sealed by a goal from Tommy Lawton, who scored in all of England's matches

Table

Team Pts Pld W D L GF GA GD
 England 4 3 2 0 1 11 5 +6
 Wales 4 3 2 0 1 9 6 +3
 Scotland 4 3 2 0 1 6 4 +2
 Ireland 0 3 0 0 3 1 12 −11

The points system worked as follows:

Results

8 October 1938
Ireland  0 – 2  Scotland Windsor Park, Belfast
  Jimmy Delaney, Tommy Walker

22 October 1938
Wales  4 – 2  England Ninian Park, Cardiff
Dai Astley 2, Barrie Jones, Idris Hopkins Stanley Matthews, Tommy Lawton (P)

9 November 1938
Scotland  3 – 2  Wales Tynecastle Park, Edinburgh
Tommy Walker 2, Jimmy Delaney Dai Astley, Leslie Jones

16 November 1938
England  7 – 0  Ireland Manchester
Willie Hall 5, Stanley Matthews, Tommy Lawton  

15 March 1939
Wales  3 – 1  Ireland Racecourse Ground, Wrexham
Horace Cumner, Pat Glover, Les Boulter Dudley Milligan

15 April 1939
Scotland  1 – 2  England Hampden Park, Glasgow
James Dougall Albert Beasley, Tommy Lawton

References