Ted Drake

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Ted Drake
Personal information
Full name Edward Joseph Drake
Date of birth August 16, 1912(1912-08-16)
Place of birth    Southampton, England
Date of death    May 30, 1995 (aged 82)
Place of death    Raynes Park, England
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Playing position Centre forward
Youth clubs
Winchester City
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1931-1934
1934-1945
Southampton
Arsenal
071 0(47)
167 (124)   
National team
1934-1938 England 005 00(6)
Teams managed
1946-1947
1947-1952
1952-1961
Hendon
Reading
Chelsea

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

Edward Joseph "Ted" Drake (August 16, 1912 - May 30, 1995) was an English cricketer and footballer and manager.

Contents

[edit] Cricket career

He made his debut for Hampshire in 1931 and shared a vital stand of 86 with Phil Mead against Glamorgan. He made 45 but never reached this score again in the 15 further matches he played over the next six years, first as an amateur and then as a professional.

[edit] Football playing career

[edit] Southampton

Born in Southampton, Drake started playing at Winchester City, whilst continuing to work as a gas-meter reader. He nearly joined Tottenham Hotspur as a schoolboy, but missed the trial match with an injury. In June 1931, he was persuaded by George Kay to join Southampton, then playing in Division 2. He made his Saints debut on 14 November 1931 at Swansea Town, and signed as a professional in November, becoming first-choice centre-forward by the end of the 1931-32 season.

In the following season he made 33 league appearances, scoring 20 goals. After only one full season, his bravery and skill attracted the attention of Arsenal's Herbert Chapman, who tried to persuade Drake to move to North London. Drake rejected the chance of a move to Highbury and decided to remain at The Dell. He started the 1933-34 season by scoring a hat trick in the opening game against Bradford City, following this with at least one goal in the next four games, thereby amassing eight goals in the opening five games. By early March he had blasted his way to the top of the Football League Division Two goal-scoring table with 22 goals.

Arsenal, with George Allison now in charge, renewed their interest and Ted eventually decided to join the Gunners in March 1934 for a fee of £6,500. Saints had declined several previous offers, but eventually were forced to sell in order to balance their books. Drake made a total of 74 appearances for Southampton, scoring 48 goals.

[edit] Arsenal

Drake moved to Arsenal in March 1934 for £6,500, and scored on his league debut against Wolves on March 24, 1934, in a 3-2 win. Although he joined too late to qualify for a League Championship medal in 1933-34, Drake would win one in 1934-35, scoring 42 goals in 41 league games in the process — this included three hat-tricks and four four-goal hauls. With two more goals in the FA Cup and Charity Shield, Drake scored 44 in all that season, breaking Jack Lambert's club record, one that still holds to this day.

Drake's exploits at club level brought him recognition at international level, and he made his England debut against Italy in the "Battle of Highbury" on November 14, 1934; one of seven Arsenal players in the side, he scored the third goal in a heated 3-2 win. In total he won five caps, scoring six times.

The following season, 1935-36 Drake scored seven in a single match against Aston Villa at Villa Park on December 14, 1935, a club record that also still stands. Drake claimed an eighth goal hit the crossbar and went over the line, but the referee waved away his appeal. Drake would go on to win the FA Cup in 1935-36 (scoring the only goal in the final) and the League again in 1937-38.

Despite being injured regularly (he was a doubt up until the last minute for the 1936 Cup Final), Drake's speed, fierce shooting and brave playing style meant he was Arsenal's first-choice centre forward for the rest of the decade, and he was the club's top scorer for each of the five seasons from 1934-35 to 1938-39. The Second World War curtailed Drake's career, although he served in the Royal Air Force as well as turning out for Arsenal in wartime games. However, Drake's career would not last long into peacetime; a spinal injury incurred in a game against Reading in 1945 forced him to retire from playing. With 139 goals in 184 games, he is the joint-fifth (along with Jimmy Brain) all-time scorer for Arsenal.

[edit] Football management career

[edit] Hendon and Reading

After retiring as a player, Drake managed Hendon in 1946, and then Reading from 1947. He led the club to the runners-up spot in Division Three South in 1951-52, though at the time only the champions were promoted.

[edit] Chelsea

He was appointed manager of First Division Chelsea in 1952. Upon Drake's arrival at Chelsea, he made a series of sweeping changes, doing much to rid the club of its previous amateurish, music hall image. He discarded the club's Chelsea pensioner crest and with it the Pensioners nickname, and insisted a new one be adopted. From these changes came the "Lion Rampant Regardant" crest and the Blues nickname. He introduced scouting reports and a new, tougher, training regime based on ballwork, a rare practice in English football at the time. The club's previous policy of signing unreliable big-name players was abandoned; Drake instead used his knowledge of the lower divisions and the amateur game to recruit little-known, but more reliable, players such as John McNichol, Frank Blunstone, Derek Saunders, Jim Lewis and Peter Sillett.

Within three years, in the 1954-55 season, Drake had led Chelsea to their only First Division championship of the 20th century. In doing so, he became the first person to win the league title both as player and manager. However, Drake never came close to repeating the success. The championship-winning side was gradually broken up, to be replaced by the crop of youngsters emerging from the club's youth team, such as Jimmy Greaves, Peter Brabrook and Bobby Tambling, for whom Drake was an aloof figure. Thereafter performances and results were very erratic, leaving the club stranded in mid-table; an FA Cup loss to Fourth Division side Crewe Alexandra weakened his position at the club and a few months later, Drake was sacked early into the 1961-62 season.

After leaving Chelsea, he became reserve team manager at Fulham (where his son, Bobby, played), later becoming a director and then life president of the Cottagers. Drake died in 1995, at the age of 82.

[edit] Honours

[edit] As a player

Arsenal

[edit] As a manager

Chelsea

[edit] External links

[edit] References

Awards
Preceded by
Jack Bowers
First Division top scorer
1934–35
Succeeded by
Raich Carter, Pat Glover, Bobby Gurney
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