Thursday 5 September 2024

SCOTTISH GOALKEEPER THOMSON AND AN ENGLISH KNEE

"For it's a grand old team to play,  For it's a grand old team to see,  And if you know your history, It's enough to make you sad"....When Celtic supporters sing this portion of "The Celtic Song", the theme the team runs out to at their home stadium, Parkhead, they replace the final word with a heart felt "oh-oh-oh-oh". But the same sentiments are the same, as the song refers to John Thompson, the 22 year old Celtic and Scotland goalkeeper, who was killed following an accidental collision in an "Old Firm" derby at Ibrox in 1931.

In the second half of that fateful match, Rangers forward, Sam English, chased a 50-50 ball with speed, into the Celtic penalty area, towards the advancing goalkeeper Thomson. The keeper went down to smother the ball but met English's knee in a collision, fracturing his skull. Thomson lay prone with one arm up in the air, as players from both sides flocked around, English calling for assistance. Quickly the stretcher arrived, Thomson was carried off with everyone assuming he was concussed and was being taken care of. 

The rest of the match passed without incident. Later that day, in Glasgow's Victoria Infirmary, Thomson passed away. He had won the Scottish FA Cup with Celtic twice in 1927 and 1931 and had been capped for Scotland four times.

Some 40,000 people attended the funeral in Cardenden, including thousands who had travelled through from Glasgow, many walking the 55 miles to the Fife village, and Thomson's coffin was carried by his devastated team-mates.

English, an Irish international, was cleared of any blame and he had the support of Thomson's family and all those on and off the pitch, but further football crowds in Scotland would not let him forget the terrible incident. Traumatised by the experience, Thomson left for Liverpool. scoring 24 goals in 47 games, but crowds would not let him forget and continued to bait him until he eventually retired at the age of 28 years, seven years after Thomson's death.

James Hanley, in his book "The Celtic Story" (1960) wrote: "It is hard for those who did not know him to appreciate the power of the spell he cast on all who watched him regularly in action. 'A man who has not read Homer,' wrote Bagehot, 'is like a man who has not seen the ocean. There is a great object of which he has no idea.'

"In like manner, a generation that did not see John Thomson has missed a touch of greatness in sport, for which he was a brilliant virtuoso, as Gigli was and Menuhin is. One artiste employs the voice as his instrument, another the violin or cello. For Thomson it was a handful of leather. We shall not look upon his like again."


Thomson was brought up in the Fife mining village of Cardenden, and like many of his contemporaries, had started his working life as a teenager down the pits.

He signed for Celtic in 1926 at the age of 17, having been spotted playing for Wellesley Juniors by Celtic scout Steve Callaghan, who had also alerted the club to the talents of a certain Jimmy McGrory. Celtic paid £10 for the young man who would go on to become known as the Prince of Goalkeepers, and by the age of 18 he had already made his first-team debut against Dundee at Dens Park in a 2-1 win for Celtic. During his short time as Celtic goalkeeper, he won two Scottish Cup medals - in 1927 when East Fife were defeated 3-1 and in 1931, when Celtic beat Motherwell 4-2 in a replay, having drawn the first game 2-2. International recognition followed on the back of his impressive displays for Celtic, and Thomson gained four caps for Scotland and four for the Scottish League.

A quiet and unassuming character off the park, once on the field of play Thomson had a natural athleticism aligned to a brave spirit and impressed all who had the privilege to see him play.

In his book, The Story of the Celtic; 1888-1938, Willie Maley, manager of the club at the time of the tragedy, wrote: "Among the galaxy of talented goalkeepers whom Celtic have had, the late lamented John Thomson was the greatest. A Fifeshire friend recommended him to the club. We watched him play. We were impressed so much that we signed him when he was still in his teens. That was in 1926. Next year he became our regular goalkeeper, and was soon regarded as one of the finest goalkeepers in the country.

"But, alas, his career was to be short. In September, 1931, playing against Rangers at Ibrox Park, he met with a fatal accident. Yet he had played long enough to gain the highest honours football had to give. A most likeable lad, modest and unassuming, he was popular wherever he went.

"His merit as a goalkeeper shone superbly in his play. Never was there a keeper who caught and held the fastest shots with such grace and ease. In all he did there was the balance and beauty of movement wonderful to watch. Among the great Celts who have passed over, he has an honoured place." Certainly the death of John Thomson hit the club - the officials, players and the supporters - hard and had an understandably adverse effect on subsequent performances over the next couple of seasons. 

John Thomson's memory has lived on with Celtic supporters and fans still visit his graveside in Fife to pay their own respects. The final thought on the tragic events of September 1931 is to remember the epitaph on John Thomson's gravestone, which reads: "They never die who live in the hearts they leave behind."


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