Anthony John Brown (born 3 October 1945 in Oldham) is an English former footballer who played as a wing half and an inside forward. He joined West Bromwich Albion as a youth in 1961 and turned professional in 1963. In the late 1960s and early 1970s Brown was part of an Albion team that built a reputation as a successful cup side, winning the 1966 Football League Cup Final and the 1968 FA Cup Final and finishing as runners-up in the League Cup in 1967 and 1970. He was the top scorer in Division One in 1970–71 and received his only England cap at the end of that season.
After relegation in 1973, he helped Albion to win promotion back to Division One in 1976. He scored 279 goals in 720 competitive games for Albion, both club records. Brown finished his playing career playing for the New England Tea Men, Torquay United and non-league Stafford Rangers. Since retiring from playing he has worked as a coach and a commentator. He is often referred to by his nickname "Bomber".
Early life
One of three siblings, Brown moved at an early age from his birthplace Oldham to
Wythenshawe,
Manchester. He was a keen
Manchester United supporter as a boy, but his football idol was
Manchester City striker
Denis Law. Brown represented the South Manchester Boys team, before progressing to play for Manchester Boys and then the
Lancashire County team. He suffered from
asthma from three months old until the age of fourteen, but nonetheless had ambitions to play football. As he later said, "I'd always wanted to be a professional footballer; that's all I'd ever dreamed of doing. As a 15-year-old, he had agreed to sign for Manchester City when
West Bromwich Albion's Manchester-based scout John Shaw persuaded Brown to take a trial at Albion. Brown responded by scoring a
hat-trick in a practice match and some years later reflected:
The very first time I stepped foot inside the Hawthorns as a 15-year-old schoolboy, I knew this was the club for me. At the time I was on the verge of signing for Manchester City, who were my local club, but I felt so instantly at home with Albion that I decided to sign for them instead. It was the best decision I've ever made in my life.
West Bromwich Albion
First team breakthrough
Brown joined West Bromwich Albion as an apprentice professional on 13 April 1961, earning a wage of £6 a week. After two seasons playing youth football, he made his reserve team debut in the final
Central League game of 1962–63, scoring in a 3–2 defeat to
Manchester United reserves. He turned professional on 27 September 1963 and was immediately called up to the first team squad for the away match at
Ipswich Town the following day.
Eddie Readfern was unable to participate in the game due to illness, which meant that Brown was given his league debut, just a few days before his 18th birthday; his equalising goal helped Albion to a 2–1 away win. Readfern was recalled for the next game however, meaning that Brown immediately returned to the reserves, although Brown did return to the first team in mid-October, when he scored on his home debut against
Aston Villa. He was selected sporadically by Albion manager
Jimmy Hagan during the remainder of
1963–64 and finished the campaign on five goals in thirteen appearances. In the latter part of the season he missed four league games when he was called up to the England Youth squad for the
UEFA European Youth Tournament in the
Netherlands. England won the competition but Brown was not selected for any of the games. Brown became a regular first team player during the early part of the
1964–65 campaign, appearing in Albion's first 12 league games of the season. During this period he scored six goals, including his first professional
hat-trick, which came in a 4–1 win against
Sunderland. However he lost his place shortly after the signing of
Jeff Astle and played just five more games that season. A desire to play first team football led him to submit a transfer request, which Jimmy Hagan turned down, but Brown continued his scoring run in the reserve team, hitting 22 goals in 20 games.
Cup successes and England call-up
At the start of the
1965–66 season, Brown was still playing in the reserves, but an injury to
Clive Clark in September 1965 gave him the opportunity to reclaim his first team place. Brown scored against
Everton on his return and remained a regular in the side for the rest of the season, scoring 17 goals in 35 league games. His tally in the league was just short of team mates
John Kaye and
Jeff Astle, who each scored 18 times, but Brown finished as the club's top scorer overall—with 27 goals—due to his goals in the
Football League Cup. Albion were taking part in the competition for the first time, after
the FA offered the winners a place in the
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. Brown became the first player to score in every round of the League Cup, including a hat-trick in the semi-final, second leg against
Peterborough United. In the
final, Brown's goal helped his team to a 4–1 second leg victory over
West Ham United. Albion won 5–3
on aggregate to take the trophy and secure Brown his first major honour. He has since said of the game:
I've always said that the second leg of the League Cup Final against West Ham was the best performance I've seen from an Albion side. That was the best team performance that I ever played in as well... We went out and from the first second we absolutely destroyed them.
Brown missed two months of the following season due to a back injury. He made his return in the second leg of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup against DOS Utrecht, when he took—and scored—his first penalty kick in senior football; he went on to become Albion's regular penalty taker, scoring 51 of 61 spot-kicks during his time at the club. He scored twice more in the Utrecht match and as of September 2008 remains the only Albion player to have scored a hat-trick in a European competition. Albion again reached the League Cup Final, which was played at Wembley for the first time. This time however, Brown was on the losing side as Albion lost 3–2 to Third Division Queens Park Rangers, having led 2–0 at half-time. In May 1968 he won an FA Cup winners medal as Albion beat Everton 1–0 after extra time. Brown played for the young England side in April 1969 against the full England side and in July 1969 he married Irene, with whom he had two children: Paul was born in 1977 and Adam in 1981. Brown's best man was his Albion team-mate Jeff Astle. He played in the 1970 League Cup Final, where he picked up his second runners-up tankard as Albion lost 2–1 to Manchester City. In 1970–71 Brown was the leading scorer in Division One with 28 goals, and was rewarded with his only full England cap on 19 May 1971, playing in a goalless draw against Wales at Wembley.
Relegation and promotion
He remained at Albion after their relegation to Division Two at the end of
1972–73. A
testimonial match was staged for Brown at the Hawthorns on 6 May 1974, an Albion /
Aston Villa side taking on a
Wolves /
Birmingham side. He played a major role in Albion's return to the top flight in 1976, scoring the goal that clinched promotion in a 1–0 win away at his home town club
Oldham Athletic. In
1977–78, he played in the
FA Cup semi-final against
Ipswich at
Highbury. He scored a penalty but Albion lost the match 3–1 and Brown called it "the worst day of my life".
Later career and retirement
Brown remained at the Hawthorns until the summer of 1980 when he moved to the United States to join the
New England Tea Men. In a seventeen year career at the Hawthorns, Brown had broken both the appearance and goalscoring records for the Baggies, scoring 218 goals in 574 league games. He returned to the UK after the 1981
NASL season, playing once for the West Bromwich Albion reserve side in September 1981. The following month, on 8 October 1981, the
Torquay United managerial team of
Frank O'Farrell and
Bruce Rioch persuaded Brown to join Torquay, with a second testimonial staged in his honour on 7 December 1981 when Torquay faced
Manchester United at
Plainmoor. Brown lived up to his reputation with 11 goals in 45 league appearances for Torquay before moving to non-league
Stafford Rangers. He later coached at
Birmingham City (in the 1987-88 season he was assistant to
Garry Pendrey) and West Bromwich Albion.
Brown is currently a football commentator for BRMB and Capital Gold Birmingham, mainly commentating from The Hawthorns when West Bromwich Albion play at home. Brown was named as one of West Bromwich Albion's 16 greatest players in a poll organised as part of the club's 125th anniversary celebrations in 2004. In July 2007 he was voted into the PFA Centenary Hall of Fame.
Honours
West Bromwich Albion
Individual honours
- Midlands Footballer of the Year
- Winner (3): 1969, 1971, 1979
Footnotes
- A. This does not include the first round of the competition: Albion, as a First Division team, entered at the second round stage.
References
General
- Brown, Tony; John Homer, Glenn Willmore (1998). Bomber Brown: The Tony Brown Story. Perspective Publishing.
- McOwan, Gavin (2002). The Essential History of West Bromwich Albion. Headline.
- Matthews, Tony (2007). West Bromwich Albion: The Complete Record. Breedon Books.
- Wright, Simon (2006). West Brom's Cult Heroes. Know the Score. Specific
External links