Book review; The authorised biography of Bobby Buckle. Spurs founder and first Captain.
Book review; The authorised biography of Bobby Buckle. Spurs founder and first Captain.
This man is close to
my heart. Not just because I am a Spurs supporter, but my dad, his dad (my
grandfather) and his father had all known him. My father only met him once
before the war. My grandad and his dad were more intimate with him.
My grandfather or
his dad had a connection with the early Spurs. I had inherited programmes,
memorabilia and diaries from those early days. Sadly, they no longer exist.
Anyway, this isn't about my family or me, but about the legend that is, Bobby
Buckle.
Reading this book
(by Christopher South and forwarded by Spurs legend Steve Perryman) gave me an
out of life ghostly feeling, it felt like I could touch those times as I made
my way through its pages (they came alive). Buckle's name will live on in the
annuals of Spurs forever. Apart from the words, many beautiful pictures throughout
the book that also gives you that connection to him, his family and life.
Suddenly after so
many years of devotion to his creation (our club), he upped and left. Whether
he went back and glimpsed nobody knows, we can only speculate.
For those who are
unfamiliar with this legend, let me give you a brief résumé.
Bobby Buckle was
born in 1869 (13 years before the creation of his club). He was one of eleven
schoolboys who founded the Hotspur Football Club.
Buckle wasn't just
the founder of our great club but was also designated the very first ever
Captain of the Spurs. This was at its inception, only seven weeks before his 14th
birthday. He was also featured in the club's first-ever known line-up and,
to-boot was Tottenham's first-ever recorded goalscorer. This was on the 20th
Ocotober1883. Granted, he might not have been the very first, however, as
there are no earlier records, then for all intents and purposes, he was our
first goalscorer—what a career, what a record!
During his playing career for us – between 1882 and 1895 – he scored (what is recorded) 25 goals in 53 appearances. No doubt a lot higher if the unrecorded games were known.
He played many roles
within his club, important event-days in the early years. He also served on the
committee from 1884, and in 1890 he was appointed honorary secretary and
treasurer and was eventually elected to the first board of directors in 1898.
This was 16 years after the club's formation.
But two years later,
after becoming a director, he resigned from the board. He had overseen the
adoption of professional football, the formation of a limited company and the
move from Northumberland Park to the old White Hart Lane stadium.
He died in 1959.
I thoroughly
recommend this book to you. Whether you are a Spurs supporter or not, you'll
enjoy reading about how one of the world's greatest clubs came into existence
and the life of its creator and a true Spurs legend.
I think the time has
now come to commemorate him in a statue at the ground. All other clubs have
monuments to their great players, we've got nothing. Not even to any of the
Spurs legends. And if there is then it is out of sight to the ordinary
supporter. Bobby Buckle will live on/ should live on well after the Levy's,
Sugars, Wale's, Scholars etc. of this world have gone, disappeared in a whirl
of smoke. If it wasn't for Bobby Buckle there would be no Daniel Levy, Bill
Nicholson or even White Hart Lane, and certainly no new Tottenham Stadium or
even me. Not that I would be dead, just a lone, sad, wandering figure, moving
with no purpose or focus throughout my life.
Best Regard, Glenn
Comments
Post a Comment