Tom Finney

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Tom Finney
Personal information
Full name Sir Thomas Finney
Date of birth April 5, 1922 (age 84)
Place of birth    Preston, England
Nickname The Preston Plumber
Playing position Striker, Outside Right
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1946-1960 Preston North End 433 (187)   
National team
1946-1958 England 076 0(30)

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

Sir Thomas Finney, OBE (born 5 April 1922, Preston) is a former English footballer, famous for his loyalty to his league club, Preston North End, and for his performances in the English national side.

Contents

Finney was born at home in Preston on a street next to the Deepdale stadium. He was frail and somewhat sickly in his youth and stood only 4 ft 9 in (1.45 m) at the age of fourteen. When he was offered the opportunity to sign for Preston North End (PNE), his father insisted that he complete his apprenticeship in the family's plumbing business before signing as a professional.

Soon after he signed, however, World War II began and normal football was suspended, though Finney started to achieve some recognition during war-time tournaments. Called up to the Royal Armoured Corps in 1942, he fought in Montgomery's Eighth Army in Egypt. Local leave in North Africa allowed him to play in army teams against local opposition and on one occasion he played against the future actor Omar Sharif. [1]

Once normal competition was restored, he made his debut for the club in August 1946 and soon established himself as an agile forward. Post-war demand for plumbers ensured that he had a second income to supplement the GBP14 he received under football's maximum wage regulations, and he became famous as the "Preston plumber". One month after his first appearance for Preston, Finney made his England debut, going on to win 76 caps and score 30 goals.

He retired from Preston North End in 1960, only when forced out with a persistent groin injury. He had played his entire career for his local club, appearing 433 times and scoring 187 goals. The balance of Preston's team hardly matched Finney's brilliance, the young Bill Shankly notwithstanding, and he never won a major trophy. His loyalty is remarkable, even extending to rejecting a 1952 offer from Italian club Palermo that included a £10,000 personal signing-on fee and high pay and perquisites.

Splash: the statue of Tom Finney which stands outside Deepdale stadium
Splash: the statue of Tom Finney which stands outside Deepdale stadium

On 31 July 2004, Sir Tom unveiled the water feature sculpture "The Splash" which stands outside The National Football Museum. The sculpture was inspired by the 1956 Sports Photograph of the Year which features Tom Finney beating two defenders at a waterlogged Stamford Bridge.[1]

As of 2007, Sir Tom maintains his links with Preston North End as the club's president. 2006 marked 60 years since his first league debut for PNE. To mark this occasion the National Football Museum, an organisation which he has championed and has close links with, invited football fans to sign a specially commissioned flag which was presented to Sir Tom at the beginning of the 2006-07 season to mark his 60 years with PNE.[2]

He also writes a regular PNE column for the University of Central Lancashire's students' union newspaper, Pluto. [2]

His total mastery of all the techniques triumphed over the lack of medals. He was versatile, playing in all the orthodox five forward positions of the day for Preston and appearing for England at right-wing, left-wing and centre-forward. He was a genuine two-footed player, packing an explosive shot in either his right or his left. He had speed, balance, was a pin-point passer and, for a man of no great height, could head with awesome power.

  • "Tom Finney would have been great in any team, in any match and in any age ... even if he had been wearing an overcoat." (Bill Shankly)
  • "Tom Finney should claim income tax relief ... for his 10 dependents." (Satirical observation on the weakness of the Preston team in his absence)
  • "If all the brains in the game sat in committee to design the perfect player, they would come up with a reincarnation of Tom Finney." (Anonymous newspaper feature)


Club Season League FA Cup Total
Apps Goals Apps Goals Apps Goals
Preston North End 1946-47 32 7 3 2 35 9
1947-48 33 13 4 1 37 14
1948-49 24 7 2 2 26 9
1949-50 37 10 1 1 38 11
1950-51 34 13 2 0 36 13
1951-52 33 13 0 0 33 13
1952-53 34 17 3 2 37 19
1953-54 23 11 8 3 31 14
1954-55 30 7 3 2 33 9
1955-56 32 17 1 1 33 18
1956-57 34 23 6 5 40 28
1957-58 34 26 1 0 35 26
1958-59 16 6 0 0 16 6
1959-60 37 17 6 4 43 21
Career totals 433 187 40 23 473 210

  • Finney, T. (2004) Tom Finney Autobiography ISBN 0-7553-1106-X
  • Finney, T. (1982) Tom Finney's Preston North End Scrapbook ISBN 0-285-62554-3
  • Finney, T. (1958) Finney on Football ISBN B0000CK63X
  • Finney, T. (1955) Instructions to Young Footballers ISBN B0000CJABP
  • Finney, T. (1953) Football Round the world ISBN B0000CIMPY
  • Agnew, P. (2002) Tom Finney: A Football Legend ISBN 0-9530847-9-5
  • Booth, J. (ed.) (1998) Tom Finney: A Pictorial Tribute ISBN 1-901966-00-3

Preceded by
Nat Lofthouse
Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year
1954
Succeeded by
Don Revie
Preceded by
Bert Trautmann
Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year
1957
Succeeded by
Danny Blanchflower
Persondata
NAME Finney, Tom
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Footballer
DATE OF BIRTH 5 April 1922
PLACE OF BIRTH Preston
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH
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