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Arthur Rowe

Ironskull

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Feb 23, 2004
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A lot of people think Spurs' modern traditions started with Billy Nick. He might be the greatest, but the tradition started with Arthur Rowe. I came across this and thought it would be good to share...

REG DRURY


Thursday, 11 November 1993
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Arthur Rowe, footballer and manager: born London 1 September 1906; capped for England 1933; manager, Chelmsford City 1945-49; manager, Tottenham 1949-1955; died 5 November 1993.
THE STORY of Arthur Rowe, who was manager of Tottenham Hotspur for an all too brief spell from 1949 to 1955, is one of triumph and tragedy. Rowe had one of the sharpest soccer brains the English game has ever known. But it was so finely tuned that he suffered a nervous breakdown because of the pressure of trying to keep Spurs where he had put them - on top.
He bounced back in a series of different jobs with Crystal Palace, West Bromwich Albion, Leyton Orient and Millwall in the Sixties and Seventies. Indeed, he managed Palace for two short spells. But it was during his golden years at White Hart Lane that Rowe carved a football niche as the architect of Spurs' successful 'push-and-run' side. He guided the club to their first ever League championship, in 1950-51.
He was Tottenham born and bred, honed his early soccer skills at Parkhouse Road School and playing for London Schoolboys as an outside-right - although he was later to spend his professional career as a centre-half. He left school in 1921, the year a Jimmy Dimmock goal took the FA Cup to White Hart Lane, and he signed amateur forms for Spurs in 1924.
But there was no meteoric rise to fame. Spurs sent him to Cheshunt in the Athenian League for a year and then to the Kent club Northleigh for the next four seasons to learn his trade, before calling him up to join the big boys in the summer of 1929. Even then he had to wait until 1931-32 to make the first of his 182 League appearances for his only professional club. 'I never scored a goal for the first team. They didn't like the centre-half to go too far over the halfway line in those days,' he told me.
Rowe captained Spurs to third place in the old First Division in 1933-34 and won an England cap against France in the process. But it was the following season, when Spurs were relegated, that left a greater mark on his memory.
When injury ended his career in 1939 he went to Budapest to spend two months as the official Hungarian government's instructor to their soccer coaches. He liked Hungary and was preparing to stay longer until Hitler took a hand and Rowe returned home to join the Army.
With his demob in 1945 he took charge of the Southern League outfit Chelmsford. It was there in May 1949 he got the call from Spurs and joined them as manager at pounds 1,500 a year. For three post-war seasons Spurs had got 50,000 people on the terraces and nowhere in the Second Division. Rowe, still burning at the indignity of demotion 14 years earlier, transformed them with a team which included only a solitary newcomer, in the full-back Alf Ramsey.
Push and run, they called it. 'In fact, mate, it's just a case of doing the obvious. Football's a simple game, it's the players who make it difficult,' he told me at the time.
Whatever the reason, Spurs started with a 4-1 victory at Brentford, romped away with the Second Division title, and won the First Division in the same memorable fashion a year later.
Even when poor health led to his resignation, he still left Spurs a legacy of style and one of his last signings - Danny Blanchflower - who was to lead the club to a historic double at the start of the Sixties.
English football could do with a young Arthur Rowe. But then, as he often said, 'All you need to remember is that 50 per cent of the people in the game are bluffers. So a decent manager's halfway there when he starts out.'
 

joey55

Well-Known Member
May 20, 2005
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Arthur Rowe apparently was the main influence behind the guy who introduced the concept of Total Football at Ajax. I can't remember his name, but he was a former Spurs player. I'm not sure if he actually played under Rowe at Spurs, but he took Rowe's ideas to Ajax and hence Total Football was born.
 

sidford

Well-Known Member
Oct 20, 2003
11,418
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he got a very very positive write up in 'Inverting the pyramid' will have another read over wkend and see exactly what the write up says
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
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Interesting that he went to Hungary as the official instructor to their coaches which adds credence to the version that he took his idea of football to them leading to the great Hungarian side of the 50's rather than the other version with him learning from them.
 

SpurSince57

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Jan 20, 2006
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He was only there for a matter of months. Hungary already had a reputation as one of the best teams in Europe, and had reached the World Cup final in 1938, losing to Italy.
 

fieryjack

Well-Known Member
Jan 13, 2006
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For our centenury celebrations the BBC did a documentary type thing with John Motson. They started opposite the Bell and Hare where he said the football club was born. It went through the history and at the end they asked Arthur Rowe what he thought of the club, with a tremble in his voice he said "i like them". You could practically see the emotion. They are the only 2 things i remember about that programme.
 

sherbornespurs

Well-Known Member
Dec 9, 2006
3,779
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For our centenury celebrations the BBC did a documentary type thing with John Motson. They started opposite the Bell and Hare where he said the football club was born. It went through the history and at the end they asked Arthur Rowe what he thought of the club, with a tremble in his voice he said "i like them". You could practically see the emotion. They are the only 2 things i remember about that programme.
It was a fantastic 'Sortsnight' special. The opening shot was of Motty under an old gaslight (since removed) on the High Road opposite the Megastore.

I was working in Germany at the time and picked up coverage on the Forces BFBS TV network.

The bit that got me was at the end when Motty asked Rowe what Spurs meant to him. With trembling hands, a wobbly lip and tears in his eyes all Rowe could say was "I like them, there a great club.......".

I still have the original video recording of it up in my loft somewhere, I haven't watched it for years, but great memories.
 

spursphil

Tottenham To The Bone
Aug 8, 2008
517
98
Arthur Rowe apparently was the main influence behind the guy who introduced the concept of Total Football at Ajax. I can't remember his name, but he was a former Spurs player. I'm not sure if he actually played under Rowe at Spurs, but he took Rowe's ideas to Ajax and hence Total Football was born.
I think that was Rinus Michels.
 

worcestersauce

"I'm no optimist I'm just a prisoner of hope
Jan 23, 2006
26,982
45,285
He was only there for a matter of months. Hungary already had a reputation as one of the best teams in Europe, and had reached the World Cup final in 1938, losing to Italy.

Then why would he be the official instructor to the country's soccer coaches? what wouldhis job be? Still I'll take your word for it.
 

sherbornespurs

Well-Known Member
Dec 9, 2006
3,779
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No, he's Dutch, the guy I'm thinking of was English.

I think the bloke you may be thinking of was a chap called Jack Reynolds. He pre-dates Rowe, had nothing to do with Spurs, but had a big influence on Dutch football and Ajax in particular between the wars. He was an advocate of attacking football which set the trend for future generations of Dutch footballers and coaches.
 

joey55

Well-Known Member
May 20, 2005
9,696
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I think the bloke you may be thinking of was a chap called Jack Reynolds. He pre-dates Rowe, had nothing to do with Spurs, but had a big influence on Dutch football and Ajax in particular between the wars. He was an advocate of attacking football which set the trend for future generations of Dutch footballers and coaches.

Not Jack Reynolds either. The guy I'm talking about definitely played for Spurs around the push and run era. He took this philosophy to Ajax.
 

spursphil

Tottenham To The Bone
Aug 8, 2008
517
98
No, he's Dutch, the guy I'm thinking of was English.
I found the bloke your looking for VIC BUCKINGHAM.

From Wikipedia.



Victor Frederick Buckingham (23 October 191526 January 1995) was an English footballer whose approach as a manager was a precursor of the Total Football philosophy.
Buckingham joined Tottenham Hotspur in 1935 and played 230 games as a defensive midfielder before leaving in 1949. He started his managerial career with amateur team Pegasus F.C. followed by Bradford Park Avenue, then a Football League side, before taking over at West Bromwich Albion in 1953. He became the club's longest serving post-war manager, almost leading them to an elusive 'double' in 1954 when they won the FA Cup and finished second in the league.
During his management of Ajax, he spotted the young Johan Cruijff who was to go on to develop Buckingham's ideas into the mature concept of Total Football. Buckingham's ideas were radically ahead of his time - engendering total football philosophies and youth systems - and earned him a continental reputation (especially in Spain where he was appointed coach of Sevilla FC and then FC Barcelona) that more often than not, overshadowed his talent back home.
However, his reputation in his native country was tarnished by his association with match fixing in the British betting scandal of 1964, revealed shortly after his spell as manager of Sheffield Wednesday. Although the allegations were never proven against him, three of his players at Wednesday – Peter Swan, Tony Kay and David Layne – were accused of taking bribes to fix a match with Ipswich Town on December 1, 1962, and betting on their team to lose.[1]
While Buckingham was one of the first English managers to coach top European sides like Ajax Amsterdam and FC Barcelona, and has Johan Cruyff as one of his biggest fans, he remained largely unremembered in his native England.
He died in Chichester, England in 1995.
 

SpurSince57

Well-Known Member
Jan 20, 2006
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Then why would he be the official instructor to the country's soccer coaches? what wouldhis job be? Still I'll take your word for it.

I have a feeling—I'm sure I've read this somewhere and haven't imagined it—that it was on the physical fitness side. I'll have to check it out properly. It's certainly beyond doubt that Hungary were one of Europe's (and the world's) top sides in the 1930s. England, of course, were far too high and mighty to take part in the World Cup.

I don't think it belittles Rowe's achievement that he had the vision to take on board what he saw in those few months and apply it to such effect nearly 10 years later. The shame was that several of his Spurs team were getting on and had lost the best part of their footballing careers to the war (which is vastly preferable to losing your life or your legs, but all the same…); playing 'push and run', a term which he apparently disliked, also required levels of physical fitness way higher than those of the average footballer of the time, so inevitably results tailed off. Predictably, the English football establishment dismissed it as a failed experiment, continued with WM and the long ball, and then discovered how far they'd fallen behind the rest of the world when Hungary mullered us at Wembley. That game's available on DVD, and probably gives as good an idea of the way Rowe's Spurs played as you're likely to get. Of course we didn't have Puskas, Hideguti et al.

Nicholson took a less purist, more pragmatic line. The ideal was to play like his mentor had taught him, but if we had to mix it up and resort to long-ball tactics if the occasion demanded, we did.

On a side note, it's very sad that Hungarian football has slumped to about the third or fourth rank in Europe. It wasn't so long ago that teams like Ferencvaros were considered formidable opposition for anyone.
 

mackay59

Banned
Jun 23, 2008
613
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He was only there for a matter of months. Hungary already had a reputation as one of the best teams in Europe, and had reached the World Cup final in 1938, losing to Italy.


I wouldnt call it the World Cup.

It was the Jules Rimet Trophy.

Some of the best teams in the World did not compete in the Jules Rimet Trophy.
 

SpurSince57

Well-Known Member
Jan 20, 2006
45,213
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And some of the best—remembering that 70 years ago very few fell into that category—did. Nit-pick over the title if you will, but it was, effectively, the World Cup, and when England finally deigned to take part in 1950 they suffered a major humiliation.

Nearly 60 years on, we're still suffering from the blazer brigade of the time's dismissing Rowe's innovations as a foreign novelty that wouldn't last.
 
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