Tom Barcroft

Thomas A. Barcroft (1870 – 26 September 1946) was the secretary-manager of Blackpool between 1903 and 1909. He was the Seasiders' first recognised manager, but his role was not full-time.

Tom Barcroft
Personal information
Date of birth 1870
Place of birth Wigan, Lancashire
Date of death (aged 75)
Place of death Blackpool, Lancashire
Playing position(s) Goalkeeper
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1902 Blackpool 1 (0)
Teams managed
1903–1909 Blackpool (secretary-manager)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

A 33-year-old Barcroft was in charge for the first game of the 1903–04 season. Under his leadership, Blackpool won eleven and drew five of their 34 League games. They finished fourth from bottom.

The following campaign, 1904–05, saw an identical finishing position.

They finished 14th in 1905–06, 13th in 1906–07, before another 15th-placed finish in 1907–08.

In his final season at the helm, Blackpool finished bottom and had to apply for re-election to the Football League.

Barcroft remained as secretary at Bloomfield Road for the next quarter-century. On 3 July 1934, he received an illuminated manuscript in recognition of his 31 years of service to the club. He had even deputised in goal during the 1901–02 season, after Joe Dorrington missed the train from Blackpool to Leicester.

He died on 26 September 1946 at his home in Blackpool, he was 75.[1]

Managerial stats

Team From To Record
GWDLWin %
Blackpool 1903 1909 229645710827.94
gollark: Ah yes, a "Lightweight Qt5 plain text editor for Linux".
gollark: When osmarks.tk used caddy that had a ton of restrictions on filesystem access and stuff configured, but I think the nginx install I use now is... mostly just isolated by being a random user nobody likes.
gollark: Although they tend to run under lots of privilege limiting these days.
gollark: What about for specific network programs like webservers?
gollark: Much more flexible than just having hardcoded user-annoying programs.

References

  1. "Tom Barcroft Dead". Lancashire Evening Post (18597). 27 September 1946. p. 6. Retrieved 19 February 2019 via British Newspaper Archive.
  • Calley, Roy (1992). Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887-1992. Breedon Books Sport. ISBN 1-873626-07-X.
  • "The History of Blackpool Football Club". Blackpool F.C.'s official website. Retrieved 18 January 2007.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.