Roy Finch (footballer)

Roy Finch (7 April 1922 – 14 August 2007) was a Welsh professional footballer who scored 57 goals from 290 appearances in the Football League playing for West Bromwich Albion and Lincoln City.[2]

Roy Finch
Personal information
Full name Roy Finch[1]
Date of birth (1922-04-07)7 April 1922[1]
Place of birth Barry, Wales
Date of death 14 August 2007(2007-08-14) (aged 85)[1]
Playing position(s) Outside forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1939–1944 Swansea Town 0 (0)
1946–1949 West Bromwich Albion 15 (1)
1949–1958 Lincoln City 275 (56)
Total 290 (57)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Life and career

Finch was born in Barry, Vale of Glamorgan, Wales,[1] one of five children. He attended Gladstone School in the town,[3] and played for the Barry Schools football team.[1] He signed for Swansea Town just before the Second World War.[2] During the war, he made guest appearances for clubs including Luton Town[1] while serving as an aircraft fitter in the Royal Air Force.[3] After the war, he spent two-and-a-half years with West Bromwich Albion, but played infrequently, so in February 1949, he joined Second Division club Lincoln City for a £3,000 fee.[1]

The circumstances of the move made the front page of the newspapers. The transfer was agreed while Finch was at his family home in Wales, which had no telephone. Because Lincoln needed him to play in a match the next day, they chartered a plane to fly him from Cardiff Airport to Southampton for the match, and asked the local police to visit Finch's home to give him the news. Lincoln lost 4–0.[1][4]

Finch played at outside right for his first few seasons with Lincoln, and was ever-present in both 1950–51 and 1951–52, when he contributed to the club's Third Division North title.[1] That season's forward line Harry Troops, Johnny Garvie, Andy Graver, Ernie Whittle and Finch – scored more goals than any other league club's forwards.[5] In the later part of his career he played at full back. He played his last game for the club in 1958, having scored 58 goals from 291 games in all senior competitions,[1] a total which at the time placed him seventh in Lincoln's all-time appearances list.[6]

Finch ran a newsagent's shop in Lincoln after his retirement from professional football, and later worked as a van driver for a bakery. Away from work, he enjoyed painting and golf. He was twice married, and had three sons with his first wife.[3] Finch died in 2007 at the age of 85.[3]

gollark: Anyway, while you can pretty easily verify that "person/address X agreed to transfer money to person/address Y" - just have them sign some sort of transaction object thingy saying so - it's much harder to actually establish a canonical list and ordering of transactions, decide who has coins, etc.
gollark: I believe there are ways to resolve it, somehow.
gollark: Sometimes the chain forks a bit.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: On proof of stake currencies.

References

  1. "Roy Finch". The Lincoln City FC Archive. Lincoln City F.C. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  2. "Roy Finch". UK A–Z Transfers. Neil Brown. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  3. "Roy Finch: Obituary". ThisIsAnnouncements.co.uk. 14 August 2007. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  4. "Footballer transferred by plane". Daily Express. 12 February 1949. p. 1. A policeman called last night at the home of Roy Finch, West Bromwich Albion footballer, and told him: 'You've been transferred to Lincoln City. A plane is going to fly you to Southampton in the morning for Lincoln's match against Southampton.' The transfer was fixed a few hours earlier. But Finch had gone to his home at Barry, South Wales. Lincoln chartered a plane to the Midlands, where an official got Finch's address. Then the official phoned Barry police, and asked them to give Finch the news. The plane flies on to Cardiff this morning to collect Finch.
  5. Humphreys, Joe (12 August 1952). "Beware of this attack!". Daily Mirror. p. 11.
  6. "Most appearances in all competitions for LCFC". The Lincoln City FC Archive. Lincoln City F.C. Archived from the original on 5 May 2012. Retrieved 21 March 2013. Note that the source includes appearances in wartime football.
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