George Taylor (footballer, born 1909)

George Dick (footballer). Download this page on PDF George Dick. Personal information. Full name. George White Dick. Date of birth. 1921. Boldklubben 1909. * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. George White Dick (1921â“1960) was a Scottish Guardsman, B.A.O.R. cruiserweight boxing champion, and professional football player and manager. After leaving the army, while making up his mind whether to take a letter of recommendation to a London club, Dick worked as a waiter in Blackpool. He asked Joe Smith, Blackpool F.C. manager, for a trial in August 1946, and within ten minutes was signed on.[citation needed] He played in the 1948 FA Cup Final for Blackpool against Manchester United. For the former England U21 and Gillingham manager, see Peter Taylor (footballer, born 1953). For other people named Peter Taylor, see Peter Taylor (disambiguation). Peter Taylor. Peter Thomas Taylor (2 July 1928 â“ 4 October 1990) was an English football player and manager. A goalkeeper with a modest playing career, he went on to work in management alongside Brian Clough at County and Forest, winning the Football League with both clubs and the European Cup twice with Nottingham Forest. He began his playing career at Nottingham Forest during World War II, before joining Coventry City in July 1945. He spent the 1953â“54 season as Coventry's first choice goalkeeper, but was otherwise mostly used a reserve player. Henry George Taylor (1892 â“ 1960) was an English footballer. Harry Taylor. Personal information. Full name. Henry George Taylor. Date of birth. 1892. Taylor played for local Staffordshire teams Chell Heath and Fegg Hayes.[1] He then had spells with Newcastle United and Fulham before joining Stoke. He signed with Huddersfield Town in 1911 and played fifteen league games, scoring five goals.[2] He joined Port Vale for £30 in May 1912, but was reported to have been sold on to Manchester City for £300 the following month without having taken to the field for the "Valiants".[1]. George Hector Taylor (3 June 1900 â“ September 1982) was an English professional football outside right who played in the Football League for Brentford and Millwall. An outside forward, Taylor joined hometown Division Three South side Brentford for the club's debut season in the Football League in 1920â“21. He broke into the team in November 1920 and took over the outside right position from George Smith. Taylor held onto his place until the end of the season, making 23 appearances, before being George Taylor. Biography. Picture gallery. List(s). The basics. About. Occupation. Australian-rules footballer. Date of birth. George Taylor (16 September 1876 â“ 20 May 1953) was an Australian rules footballer who played with South Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL). The contents of this page are sourced from a Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license. comment(s) so far. Leave a comment. Add a word. What's the good word on George Taylor? George Taylor was an English professional football left half who made 220 appearances in the Football League for Bolton Wanderers.[1] [2] [3] [4] After his retirement, he served the club as a coach.[5]. Notes and References. Book: Joyce, Michael. Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Tony Brown. 2012. 190589161X. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "George Taylor (footballer, born 1909)". Except where otherwise indicated, Everything.Explained.Today is © Copyright 2009- 2018, A B Cryer, All Rights Reserved. Cookie policy. Charles James Taylor (born 18 September 1993) is an English footballer who plays for Leeds United at left back. He is a current England under-19 international. Contents. ┠Personal information Full name Charles Frederick George Date of birth 10 October 1950 ( ⦠Wikipedia. Charlie Gaudion â” Personal information Birth 14 April 1904 Recruited from North Melbourne Juniors Height and weight 180 cm / 87 kg Playing career¹ Team(s) Footscray (1926 29) 63 games, 7 goals North Melbourne â¦