Thomas Holford (22 February 1878 – 6 April 1964) was an English footballer who played for Stoke, Manchester City, Port Vale and the England national team. His primary position was wing-half. Still, he played in many different positions throughout his career.[2] He later managed Port Vale on two separate occasions, serving throughout World War I, before three years from 1932 to 1935. He also served the club for many years as a trainer and a scout. In 1924, he turned out for the Vale at 46 years and 68 days, making him one of the oldest players in the English Football League.
Early and personal life
Thomas Holford was born on 22 February 1878 in Hanley, Staffordshire.[3] He was the fifth of six children to Thomas Henry and Anna Davis (née Edwards), a potter's manager and potter's sponger respectively.[3] He worked in the pottery industry from at least 1891 to 1921.[3] He married Sarah Jane Platt in 1903, and the couple had two daughters, Lily and Annie.[3]
Club career
Stoke
Holford started his career with Granville's Night School and Cobridge before he moved on to one of the two local league clubs; Stoke in 1899.[3] He "did not put a foot wrong" in his first seasons at the club before establishing himself as the centre of Stoke's half-back line between James Bradley and George Baddeley following Alf Wood's departure in March 1901.[4] For the next ten seasons Holford was a near ever-present in the Stoke team, racking up 105 consecutive appearances from March 1903 to March 1906.[4] His good performances won him an England cap in 1903 and he is considered the smallest centre-back ever to play for England at just 5 ft 5.[4] During Holford's time at the club he played the game in a fiery style, although he was never sent off.[4] He succeeded George Baddeley as captain in 1905.[4] Holford's managerHorace Austerberry described him as "an excellent passer of the ball and one who played every match as if it was his last". In 1908, Stoke went bust and dropped out of the English Football League and played in the Birmingham League. Holford was too good to be lost to non-League football, so he had to leave his hometown club, for which he played nearly 270 games.[5]
Manchester City
In April 1908, he signed for First DivisionManchester City, making his debut on 21 April against Bristol City, a match which finished goalless. In his first full season at the club he made 27 appearances and was the club's second-highest goalscorer with 15 goals, which included three hat-tricks.[6] However, Manchester City finished second-bottom in the First Division, and Holford again suffered relegation. Holford won a Second Division championship medal in the 1909–10 season as his club immediately returned to the top flight. Though he had been an ever-present in 1912–13,[7] Holford lost his place in the first-team in the 1913–14 season, making all but three of his 15 appearances in the first ten weeks of the season. He made his last appearance for Manchester City on 13 April 1914 against Newcastle United,[8] giving him a final total of 183 appearances and 38 goals for the club.[2]
Port Vale
Upon leaving Manchester, he joined Port Vale back in the Potteries as player-manager. He led the side to a North Staffordshire Infirmary Cup victory in 1915. Still, two years later, he was conscripted into the army to serve as a gunner in the Royal Garrison Artillery.[9] After playing his part in World War I, as well as guesting for Nottingham Forest and Newcastle United,[9] he returned to Vale in the summer of 1919. Regaining his place, he helped the club to win the Staffordshire Senior Cup and share the North Staffordshire Infirmary Cup in 1920. Due to his age, he hardly played after October 1920, but played his part in the club's 1922 North Staffordshire Infirmary Cup achievement.[10]
He retired as a player at the end of the 1922–23 season. Over his full career Holford played 474 league games, an exceptionally large number for the period, he had played everywhere except in goal. Upon his retirement, he became a trainer for Port Vale, only to make his final appearance on 5 April 1924 at a club record age of 46 years and 68 days.[10] At the time, this also made him the second-oldest to play in the Football League, after Billy Meredith, and as of 2008, he is the sixth oldest Football League player of all time.[11]
^ abcdefghijklKent, Jeff (1990). "From Glory to Despair (1929–1939)". The Valiants' Years: The Story Of Port Vale. Witan Books. pp. 124–150. ISBN978-0-9508981-4-8.
^ abTom Holford at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
^"Holford, Tom". National Football Teams. Benjamin Strack-Zimmermann. Retrieved 4 March 2018.