词条 | Don Maddison |
释义 |
|name = Don Maddison |image = |image_size = |caption = |fullname = Donald Maddison[1] |birth_date = {{birth date|1927|2|15|df=y}}[1] |birth_place = Washington,[1] England |death_date = |death_place = |height = |position = Goalkeeper |youthyears1 = |youthclubs1 = Hylton Colliery Welfare |youthyears2 = |youthclubs2 = Sunderland |years1 = 1946–1948 |clubs1 = Bradford Park Avenue |caps1 = 0 |goals1 = 0 |years2 = 1948–1949 |clubs2 = Blackpool |caps2 = 0 |goals2 = 0 |years3 = 1949 |clubs3 = Blackhall Colliery Welfare |years4 = 1949 |clubs4 = Brandon Colliery Welfare |years5 = 1949–19?? |clubs5 = Horden Colliery Welfare |years6 = 1950–1951 |clubs6 = Darlington |caps6 = 1 |goals6 = 0 |years7 = 1951–1953 |clubs7 = Berwick Rangers |caps7 = 23 |goals7 = 0 }} Donald Maddison (born 15 February 1927) is an English former footballer who played as a goalkeeper in the Football League for Darlington and in the Scottish C Division for Berwick Rangers. Life and careerMaddison was born in Washington, County Durham,[1] and began his football career as a youngster with Hylton Colliery Welfare during the Second World War. In April 1942, he played at Roker Park in a match against Sunderland Air Training Corps (ATC) in aid of the Sunderland Echo{{'s}} Comfort for the Forces Fund; according to that newspaper, "both these junior teams can put eleven clever footballers into the field".[1] and later that year kept goal in the Hetton Junior League 1941–42 championship decider against Ryhope Juniors.[2] He signed for Sunderland for the 1943–44 season,[3] and by December 1945, he was playing adult football for Horden Colliery Welfare,[4] He signed amateur forms with Football League Second Division club Bradford Park Avenue in June 1946, but never played league football for them.[5] He joined Blackpool of the First Division in February 1948, and played regularly for the reserve team in the Central League, but again played no part for the first team.[5][11] A year later he was back in the north-east with Blackhall Colliery Welfare,[6] moving on to Brandon Colliery Welfare[7] before returning to Horden Colliery Welfare for the 1949–50 season.[8] After injury to first-choice goalkeeper Jack Washington, Maddison played in the FA Cup tie against Billingham Synthonia, the winner to visit League club Stockport County in the first round proper.[9] Horden lost. Maddison returned to the Football League in 1950 with Darlington of the Third Division North.[5] He finally made his league debut on 26 March 1951, deputising for the long-serving Billy Dunn in the local derby at home to Hartlepools United, played in a snowstorm on a quagmire of a Feethams pitch dotted with pools of standing water. Darlington lost 1–0, and it was Maddison's only first-team appearance.[10][11] At the end of the 1950–51 season, he signed for Berwick Rangers, an English club playing in the Scottish C Division. He made 23 league appearances and another 10 in the various cup competitions in two seasons with the club.[12] While a Berwick player, he was reported to be working "on the administrative staff of a well-known steel manufacturing firm".[13] References1. ^{{cite news |title=Juniors at Roker. Match for Forces' Comforts Fund |newspaper=Sunderland Echo |date=11 April 1942 |page=8}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Maddison, Don}}2. ^{{cite news |title=To-morrow's fixtures |newspaper=Sunderland Echo |date=28 August 1942 |page=7}} 3. ^{{cite news |title=Sunderland players |newspaper=Newcastle Journal |date=11 August 1943 |page=3}} 4. ^{{cite news |title=To-morrow's teams and fixtures |newspaper=Northern Daily Mail |location=West Hartlepool |date=7 December 1945 |page=7}} 5. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 {{Hugman|12962|accessdate=24 November 2017}} 6. ^{{cite news |title='Borough stage N.-E. attraction |newspaper=Northern Daily Mail |location=West Hartlepool |date=11 February 1949 |page=9}} 7. ^{{cite news |title=Northumberland pulled round |newspaper=Morpeth Herald |date=22 April 1949 |page=7}} 8. ^{{cite news |title=Horden ready for off |newspaper=Sunderland Echo |date=6 August 1949 |page=7}} 9. ^{{cite news |title=Stockport trip is big incentive |newspaper=Northern Daily Mail |location=West Hartlepool |date=18 November 1949 |page=12}} 10. ^{{cite news |title=Endurance test at Feethams |newspaper=Northern Daily Mail |location=West Hartlepool |date=26 March 1951 |page=8}} 11. ^{{cite book |first=Frank |last=Tweddle |title=The Definitive Darlington F.C. |publisher=SoccerData |location=Nottingham |date=2000 |pages=47, 102 |isbn=978-1-899468-15-7}} 12. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.berwickrangersfc.co.uk/f-players-a-to-z/players-m.html |title=Borderers A to Z: M |publisher=Berwick Rangers F.C. |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141229020902/http://www.berwickrangersfc.co.uk/f-players-a-to-z/players-m.html |archivedate=29 December 2014}} 13. ^1 {{cite news |title=Rangers will take no chances in Peebles cup-tie |newspaper=Berwick Advertiser |date=24 January 1952 |page=7}} 15 : 1927 births|Living people|People from Washington, Tyne and Wear|English footballers|Association football goalkeepers|Hylton Colliery Welfare F.C. players|Sunderland A.F.C. players|Horden Colliery Welfare A.F.C. players|Bradford (Park Avenue) A.F.C. players|Blackpool F.C. players|Blackhall Colliery Welfare F.C. players|Darlington F.C. players|Berwick Rangers F.C. players|English Football League players|Scottish Football League players |
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