Global Information Lookup Global Information

Len Shackleton information


Len Shackleton
Personal information
Full name Leonard Francis Shackleton
Date of birth (1922-05-03)3 May 1922
Place of birth Bradford, England
Date of death 28 November 2000(2000-11-28) (aged 78)
Place of death Grange-over-Sands, England
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)[1]
Position(s) Inside forward, outside forward
Youth career
1936–1938 Bradford Park Avenue
1936–1938 → Kippax United (loan)
1938–1939 Arsenal
1938–1939 → Enfield (loan)
1939 London Paper Mills
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1940–1946 Bradford Park Avenue 7 (4)
1946–1948 Newcastle United 57 (26)
1948–1957 Sunderland 320 (97)
Total 384 (127)
International career
1935–1936 England Schoolboys 3 (2)
1948–1954 England 5 (1)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Leonard Francis Shackleton (3 May 1922 – 28 November 2000) was an English footballer. Known as the "Clown Prince of Football", he is generally regarded as one of English football's finest ever entertainers.[2] He also played cricket in the Minor Counties for Northumberland.

Able to play at inside forward or outside forward, he scored 134 goals in 427 league and cup appearances in just over 11 seasons in the Football League, and before that scored 171 goals in 209 league and cup appearances during wartime football. His ball control skills made him one of the most talented players in the country, but his individualism and outspoken nature limited him to only five England caps in a six-year international career. He also never won a trophy or league title.

Born in Bradford, he spent his teenage years before World War II with Bradford Park Avenue, Kippax United, Arsenal, Enfield, and London Paper Mills, before he turned professional at Bradford Park Avenue in 1940. He spent the war assembling aircraft radios and playing for Bradford PA, and was sold on to Second Division rivals Newcastle United for a £13,000 fee in October 1946. He scored six goals on his Newcastle debut, but fell out with the club's directors, and was sold on to Sunderland for a British transfer record fee of £20,050 in February 1948. He scored 97 goals in 320 First Division matches for the club, with the closest he came to a trophy being the 1949–50 season when Sunderland finished third in the league, and when they reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup in 1955 and in 1956. He retired due to an ankle injury in 1957, and became a sports journalist.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference page 19 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "BBC SPORT | FOOTBALL | Len Shackleton: Clown Prince". BBC News. 29 November 2000. Retrieved 31 August 2010.

and 13 Related for: Len Shackleton information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8621 seconds.)

Len Shackleton

Last Update:

"Song To Len Shackleton" (released 2002 on their "Readymades" CD) Source: Specific Malam 2004, p. 19 "BBC SPORT | FOOTBALL | Len Shackleton: Clown Prince"...

Word Count : 2574

Karen Gillan

Last Update:

his daughter into the movie business with film about football star Len Shackleton". dailyrecord. Archived from the original on 18 August 2016. Retrieved...

Word Count : 5357

Gary Rowell

Last Update:

all competitions, surpassing the previous record post-war goalscorer, Len Shackleton, who had scored 101 goals. Rowell's record stood until it in turn was...

Word Count : 526

Trevor Ford

Last Update:

Sunderland, Ford formed a strike partnership with England international Len Shackleton, known as the "clown prince of football". However the relationship between...

Word Count : 3614

Bank of England club

Last Update:

along with record-breaking transfer fees to secure the services of Len Shackleton and the Welsh international Trevor Ford, resulted in the club being...

Word Count : 887

Progression of the British football transfer fee record

Last Update:

Independent. Retrieved 5 January 2012. Brian Glanville (29 November 2000). "Len Shackleton". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 January 2012. Louise Taylor (18 February...

Word Count : 1546

English Football Hall of Fame

Last Update:

"Frank McLintock". Doing the 92. "LEN SHACKLETON". National Football Museum. Retrieved 7 November 2018. "Len Shackleton". Doing the 92. "TEDDY SHERINGHAM"...

Word Count : 4311

Bobby Robson

Last Update:

requiring a 34-mile round trip. Robson described Jackie Milburn and Len Shackleton as his childhood heroes. Both played for Newcastle in the inside-forward...

Word Count : 10505

Northumberland

Last Update:

Prince of Football" by Len Shackleton. The author played for Newcastle United and Northumberland County Cricket Club. Shackleton's book was controversial...

Word Count : 6397

List of people from Sunderland

Last Update:

Archbishop of Canterbury, was briefly Rector of Houghton-le-Spring Len Shackleton, footballer Michael Short, engineer and Professor Peter Smith, computer...

Word Count : 1539

May 3

Last Update:

(d. 2001) 1921 – Sugar Ray Robinson, American boxer (d. 1989) 1922 – Len Shackleton, English footballer and journalist (d. 2000) 1923 – Ralph Hall, American...

Word Count : 4982

Living wage

Last Update:

Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 29 February 2012. Len Shackleton (11 September 2012). "Living Wage likely to destroy jobs and increase...

Word Count : 7661

Football League 100 Legends

Last Update:

North End 1946–1960 Alf Ramsey Southampton, Tottenham Hotspur 1946–1955 Len Shackleton Bradford (Park Avenue), Newcastle United, Sunderland 1946–1958 Jimmy...

Word Count : 378

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net