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Bill Harris (footballer)

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Bill Harris
Personal information
Full name William Charles Harris
Date of birth 31 October 1928(1928-10-31)
Place of birth    Swansea, Wales
Date of death    1989
Place of death    Middlesbrough, England
Playing position Wing half
Senior career1
Years Club App (Gls)*

1949–1950
1950–1954
1954–1965
1965–1966
Swansea City
Llanelli
Hull City
Middlesbrough
Bradford City
000 0(0)

131 0(?)
378 (72)
009 0(1)   
National team
Wales
Teams managed
1965–1966
1967–1969
Bradford City
Stockton

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

William "Bill" Charles Harris (31 October 1928 – 1989) was a Welsh footballer, who played for his national side and Middlesbrough and later became a manager.

[edit] Career

Bill Harris started his footballing career with local club Swansea City but failed to graduate beyond the third team and so moved to Llanelli in 1949. After just six months at the club he signed for Hull City for £2,000.[1] He played 131 games for Hull before a move to Middlesbrough in March 1954 for £15,000.[1] Harris, a wing half, played 378 games, scoring 72 goals for Middlesbrough and was capped for Wales. He won his first Welsh cap against Austria in May 1955 in Vienna but had to wait three years for his second cap.

In March 1965, he joined Bradford City as their third player-manager following the departure of Bob Brocklebank. He took charge at a struggling club, during its darkest days, and in his first season, the club had finished 19th in Division Four. The following season the club's problems continued and Harris resigned a year after he took over with the club heading towards re-election.

His stay also signalled the end of his playing career, when he was injured during a 7–1 defeat to Crewe Alexandra and was advised to stop playing.[1]

In November 1967, he returned to Teesside as manager-coach of non-league Stockton, before he retired in May 1969. He later worked for an insurance firm in Middlesbrough.[1] He died of lung cancer in Middlesbrough in 1989 leaving his wife Jean, who was later buried with him after her death.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d Frost, Terry (1988). Bradford City A Complete Record 1903-1988. Breedon Books Sport. pp. pp74-75, p106. ISBN 0907969380. 

[edit] External links

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