Piczo

Log in!
Stay Signed In
Do you want to access your site more quickly on this computer? Check this box, and your username and password will be remembered for two weeks. Click logout to turn this off.

Stay Safe
Do not check this box if you are using a public computer. You don't want anyone seeing your personal info or messing with your site.
Ok, I got it
Back To Home Page
Brown,Eddie


Full name Edwin Brown
Date of birth 28 February 1926 (1926-02-28) (age 82)
Place of birth     Preston, England
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Playing position Centre forward
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
Preston North End
Southampton
Coventry City
Birmingham City
Leyton Orient
Scarborough
League career
Teams managed
1961-1964 Scarborough
1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Edwin "Eddy" Brown (born 28 February 1926) is a former English footballer who played as a centre forward. He played professionally for a number of clubs, but the peak of his career was spent with Birmingham City during their most successful period in the 1950s. Over a professional career of nearly 400 Football League appearances he scored at a rate of very nearly one goal every two games. He was a pioneer of the goal celebration.




Early life
Brown was born in Jutland Street, Preston, Lancashire and attended St Ignatius primary school in the town. He was a religious boy, and at the age of twelve began to attend the De La Salle Catholic college on Guernsey with a view to taking Holy Orders. He studied at the college for eight years, during which time the boys were evacuated to the mainland when the Germans invaded, a disruption which did not prevent Brown achieving four A levels (in English, French, Latin and History) and laying the foundations for his lifelong love of Shakespeare.


Football career

Preston North End
However, after the war he returned to Preston and in August 1948 was persuaded to defer his calling in order to make use of his gift for football instead. He presented himself at Deepdale and said "I am a centre forward." Preston took him at his word and he scored a hat-trick on his debut for the "A" team which secured him a professional contract.

He joined Preston at a time when Bill Shankly was nearing the end of his Preston playing career; Brown believes his success in the game owed much to the lessons learned from Shankly in that first year:

"He said football was all about the soul, enjoying your life, but always keep striving for that bit extra. He could be crude, rude and outspoken, but it would be football for breakfast, dinner and tea. He was an astonishing and genuine man and football was his obsession. Bill was a preacher, but he always preached with a smile on his face. If I hadn't started at Preston and not met Bill Shankly, who was so kind to me, I don't think I'd have made a living out of football."

Southampton
In 1950 Preston paid Second Division Southampton £10,000 plus the services of Brown to bring goalscorer Charlie Wayman, whose family had been unable to settle in the south, back nearer home in the north of England.

When Brown joined Southampton, he found it difficult to replace Wayman who had become a cult-hero with The Dell crowds. After his retirement, Brown admitted that "strolling around (Southampton) soon after his transfer, he wondered what he had done as everywhere he turned there were reminders of just how popular Wayman had become."

Nonetheless, Brown was able to overcome this difficult start and, helped by his pace and deadly right foot, he came close to emulating his predecessor's scoring achievements. In the 1950-51 season he scored 20 goals in 36 league games, but Southampton's defence leaked too many goals and they finished in mid-table. The following season started in similar vein, and Brown maintained his scoring ratio with 12 goals in 21 games, until injury meant his season - and his Saints career - came to an end in January 1952.

Brown had failed to settle at Southampton, despite scored 34 goals in 59 starts while at the club, and in March 1952 he was granted a transfer to Coventry City of the Third Division (South), where he continued to score goals at an impressive rate.


Birmingham City
In October 1954, following a run of five games without a win, Coventry sold him to Birmingham City of the Second Division for £9,000, a decision which provoked the resignation of Coventry's manager Jack Fairbrother.

Brown's career at Birmingham coincided with probably the best period in the club's history. He arrived in mid-October 1954, and in that first part-season scored 14 goals in 28 League games, including a hat-trick in a 9–1 demolition of Liverpool which remains their record defeat.His goals helped Birmingham to the 1954–55 Second Division championship. The following season, 1955–56, they achieved their highest ever finishing position, sixth in the First Division; Brown, playing alongside Peter "Spud" Murphy and Welsh international Noel Kinsey and with Alex Govan and England international Gordon Astall on the wings, finished top scorer with 21 League goals. He scored another seven in the run which took the club to their second ever FA Cup Final, only to lose 3–1 to a Manchester City side inspired by Don Revie. This was the match best remembered for Manchester City's goalkeeper Bert Trautmann breaking a bone in his neck and still finishing the game.

In 1956–57 Brown scored 20 goals in all competitions and played in the semifinal of the FA Cup, losing to Manchester United's Busby Babes. He was also a pioneer of European competition, as part of the Birmingham side which reached the semifinal of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup 1955-58, where he scored two goals in the 4–3 home leg win over Barcelona before Birmingham eventually lost out in a replay.His last full season at Birmingham, 1957–58, produced another 15 League goals.


Later career
He moved on to Second Division Leyton Orient in December 1958, where despite arriving half way through the season he still finished joint leading scorer. In 1961–62, Brown moved to Scarborough, then in the Northern Counties League, as player-manager; aged 36, he again was his club's top scorer. The next season he led the club to the championship of the re-formed North Eastern League, the North Eastern League Cup, and the first round proper of the FA Cup, where they only lost by the odd goal in a replay against Crewe Alexandra. The following season, still as player-manager, he led them to runners-up spot in the Midland League.


Style and personality
The strengths of Brown's game were his pace and movement and a good right-foot finish, in his own words:

"I knocked in 237 league and cup goals during 16 years in the game. I didn't pass the ball, I had no left foot at all, so out of those 237 about 234 went in with the right foot! I was no good in the air because at 5' 9" I wasn't big enough — centre-halves in those days were about 6' 9"! "
He describes himself as eccentric.He was noted for his goal celebrations, many years before they became commonplace; his trademark celebration was to shake hands with the corner flag,though he was also known to cuddle a policeman behind the goalor to remove a press photographer's hat and throw it into the crowd. The Times report of a match in which he scored a hat-trick describes him thus:

"But out of it all there stood one very real personality — Brown. He underlined Birmingham's authority. The world seems to be his friend. His enthusiasm is infectious and embraces all, from the policeman on the perimeter to the referee and enemy in the middle. He enjoyed himself as much as a shiny faced youth tobogganing down some slope on a tin tray."
He was fond of quoting Shakespeare, whether at press conferences or in the dressing-room, and while at Birmingham wrote (without a ghostwriter) a weekly column in the local paper, the Birmingham Evening Mail.After a reunion of the 1956 Cup Final squad, Brown was described as "the star of the show ... who could surely have made it as a stand-up comedian as well as a superb footballer".
Later life
After leaving professional football, Brown returned home to Preston and worked in the family carpet firm as a sales representative.[3] While a Birmingham player, he had worked as a part-time teacher of games and French at a private school in nearby Wolverhampton. His ambition was to become a teacher once his playing days were over.[18] He went on to teach games at Preston Catholic College; one of his pupils was Mark Lawrenson, future Irish international footballer and European Cup-winner with Liverpool. When it became obligatory for teachers to be qualified, Brown enrolled at Durham University at the age of 54 where he acquired his teaching certificate, armed with which he taught French until his retirement.

In his spare time he became involved with a local amateur football club, Broughton Amateurs, where he was appointed first team manager in the 1978–79 season. Two years later he managed the club to a "double" of the Lancashire Amateur League Premier Division, which they won for the first time, and the Lancashire Amateur Cup, the first time Broughton had even reached the final. His humour, extrovert nature and managerial ability came out in his pre-Cup Final team talk:

Eddie Brown would address the squad and, as only he can, would relax, motivate and inspire us. This evening he surpassed even himself with his own performance. As in his own style he went through the team player-by-player in such an entertaining manner we forgot there was a match to play, but his brilliant style was such that, although, humorous, the point always hit home.

His influence extended throughout the club, from acting as "front man" for club functions to looking after the pitches. At the age of 70 he was running the club's third team,and, as of November 2008, was still on the committee.

Brown is married, with four children and several grandchildren.


Eddie Brown was one of footballs greatest characters. He liked to quote Shakespeare and would shake hands with a corner flag after scoring.




A fast all-action centre-forward, Brown scored over 200 goals in 450 games for his five clubs.

Born in Preston in 1926 he first intended to take Holy Orders but opted for a career in football instead.

He began at Deepdale, signing professional forms for PNE in August 1948.

In September 1950 he was exchanged for Southampton's Charlie Wayman and in March 1952 switched to Coventry after failing to settle at The Dell although he managed 32 goals in 57 games for the Saints!

Blues secured his services in October 1954 and in his first season at St. Andrew's he scored some vital goals to help the club regain their place in Division One.

Brown played in the 1956 FA Cup Final against Manchester City and in the semi-final against Man Utd the following year.

He played a total of 185 games for Blues scoring 90 goals before leaving for Leyton Orient in January 1959, later playing for Scarborough, Bedworth Town (player-manager), and Wigan Athletic before retiring in 1964-5.

Eddie, an intelligent and articulate man, went into teaching after leaving football. At 52 years of age he gained a degree in French, from Newcastle Polytechnic, and taught the language until his retirement. Previously he had taught Physical Education at the local Catholic college and assisted Preston Grasshoppers Rugby League team with their fitness programme.

Eddie still stays in touch with some of his team mates from all those years ago and last year visited Birmingham for a re-union of the 1956 Cup Final side.

Now retired and living in his native Preston, he admits he still loves the game just as much as he ever did: "I won't have a bad word said against it.

"It is still, and always will be, the greatest game in the world," Eddie believes.


Honours
As player with Birmingham City
Football League Second Division champions 1955.
FA Cup finalist 1956.
As player-manager with Scarborough
North Eastern League champions 1963.
North Eastern League Cup winners 1963.
Midland League runners-up 1964.
As manager with Broughton Amateurs
Lancashire Amateur League Premier Division champions 1981, 1983.
Lancashire Amateur League Cup winners 1981.