Willie Layton

William Layton (1875–1944) was an English footballer who played as a full back in the late 1890s and early 1900s. Born in Gornal, Staffordshire, he played for Blackwell Colliery and Chesterfield Town before joining The Wednesday (later known as Sheffield Wednesday) during the 1897–98 season. In almost 12 years with The Wednesday, Layton made more than 300 appearances in The Football League and was part of the team that won the First Division title in 1902–03 and 1903–04. He was also in the team that won the FA Cup in 1906–07 and was once selected to play in a Football League XI. He made his final appearance for the club early in the 1909–10 season and later left to join Whitwell St Lawrence.

Willie Layton
Personal information
Full name William Layton
Date of birth 1875
Place of birth Gornal, Staffordshire
Date of death 1944 (aged 6869)
Playing position(s) Full back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Blackwell Colliery
Chesterfield Town
1898–1909 The Wednesday 331 (4)
Whitwell St Lawrence
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Family

William was the brother of footballer Edward Layton, who played for Sheffield United, Aston Villa and Middlesbrough. In 1912 the brothers left England to travel across Australia, where they played for a number of clubs.[1] Whilst there Edward was 'capped' in a match between New South Wales and Queensland.[2] They returned to England in 1914.

Honours

Club

The Wednesday
gollark: > All open source chip designs qualify, no further strings attached!Obviously we need to somehow convince a hardware designer to design us Krist ASICs.
gollark: Obviously we need to "borrow" some capacity from a silicon fab somewhere somehow and make Krist ASICs.
gollark: I mean, maybe you could actually, but that would only work for cases when it *exactly* matches some input and it might be slow.
gollark: In some cases it just memorizes things, but you can't practically test for this.
gollark: And via something something backpropagation all the inputs it's given during training move it slightly toward better functioning.

References

  1. "Cricket and Football Jottings". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 12 June 1912. p. 5.
  2. "A Footballer's Return". Birmingham Daily Gazette. 4 June 1914. p. 9.
  • Joyce, Michael (2004). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Nottingham: Tony Brown. p. 153. ISBN 1899468676.
  • Profile at The Sheffield Wednesday Archive
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.