Bob Holmes
1889 sketch of Holmes
Personal information
Full name Robert Holmes
Date of birth (1867-06-23)23 June 1867
Place of birth Preston, Lancashire, England
Date of death 17 November 1955(1955-11-17) (aged 88)
Position(s) Left back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1888–1902 Preston North End 300 (1)
International career
1892–1895 England 7 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Robert Holmes, (23 June 1867 – 17 November 1955) was a professional footballer, who played for Preston North End.[1]

Career

Holmes was the longest–serving survivor of the Preston North End team known as the 'Invincibles' when he died aged 88 in November 1955. His first club was Preston Olympic from 1883. There is no clear record of when he signed for Preston North End. Season 1887–88 was when he came to prominence. He played wing–half in the 1888 FA Cup Final played on 24 March 1888 at Kennington Oval against West Bromwich Albion. Preston North End lost 2–1. In the following month, Holmes made his international debut for England, on 7 April 1888 against Ireland. England won 5–1 at the Ulster Cricket Ground.[2][3]

Holmes made his League debut on 8 September 1888 at full-back for Preston North End against Burnley at Preston North End's Deepdale ground. Preston won 5–2. When he played as a full–back against Burnley on 8 September 1888 he was 21 years 77 days old; which made him, on the first weekend of League football, Preston North End's youngest player. Holmes played all of Preston's 22 League Championship matches and played in a defence-line that achieved 13 clean-sheets and restricted the opposition to one–League–goal–in–a–match on three separate occasions. He appeared in all five FA Cup ties of season 1888–89 and even scored in an earlier round. He played left–back in the 1889 FA Cup Final which Preston North End won 3–0, defeating Wolverhampton Wanderers thereby achieving the first–ever League and FA Cup double in the first season it could be won. Holmes won League Championship and FA Cup winners medals.[4]

Holmes made seven appearances for England, all at left–back, and was never on the losing side for England. He was made England captain for the match against Wales on 13 March 1894 and he led his team to a 6–0 victory. He later became President of the Football Players' Union, retired at the end of the 1899–1900 season but was retained on the club's books as an amateur. He actually played the last of his 300 games on Boxing Day 1902, when North End lost 2–0 to Manchester City. He scored just one League goal, in 1895. On hanging up his boots he took up refereeing but in December 1903 he resigned his position after securing a business in Preston town centre. In April 1908 he was appointed trainer to the England amateur international team to play in Belgium and Germany over Easter of that year.[2]

After retirement from playing, Holmes became a football trainer, and was the trainer/manager when Blackburn Rovers won their first league title in 1912.[5]

Holmes went on to become known as the "last of the Invincibles" when he was the only surviving member of the 1889 FA Cup final team by the time Preston reached the 1954 final.[6][7]

Professional Baseball

Holmes played baseball professionally as a pitcher, for Preston North End Baseball Club in the 1890 National League of Baseball of Great Britain.[8]

References

  1. Joyce, Michael (2004). Football League Players' Records 1888 to 1939. Soccer Data. p. 128. ISBN 1-899468-67-6.
  2. 1 2 Hayes, Dean (2006). The Who's Who of Preston North End. Breedon Books. pp. 119–120. ISBN 1-85983-516-3.
  3. "England Stats". Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  4. "English National Football Archive". Retrieved 17 March 2018. (registration & fee required)
  5. "Bob Holmes : Biography on Spartacus Educational". Archived from the original on 3 September 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  6. 1954 FA Cup Final programme
  7. Jack Edwards, who made four league appearances in 1888-89 but did not feature in the Cup final, was also still alive in 1954, and went on to outlive Holmes by six years.
  8. "The Spalding Amateur Baseball Cup". Lancashire Evening Post. 30 September 1890. p. 4.
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