A century ago today Ted Harper of Blackburn Rovers scores against Burnley as he moves to become the first player to top 40 goals in a season
One century ago today Ted Harper scored the sixth goal for
Blackburn Rovers as they thrashed neighbours Burnley 6-3 at Ewood Park.
Harper was on his way to becoming the first player to score
over 40 league goals in a single season and finished with 43, 26 at home and 17
away out of a total of 91 Rovers goals. It is a record that no Blackburn player
has ever come anywhere near emulating.
He was chased to the end by Sunderland’s David Halliday who
would later equal his total in 1928-29. Despite Harper’s heroics his side only
finished in twelfth place.
Born in Sheerness, Kent on 22 August 1901, Ted Harper
arrived at Ewood Park in 1923 from Sheppey United on the strength of his
goalscoring record in the Kent League. Critics said he looked clumsy and had no
ball control, but as a goalscorer there were few better. He was quickly off the
mark with eighteen goals in his first season.
In February 1925, Rovers signed Syd Puddefoot from Falkirk
for £4,000. Despite being aged thirty, the ex-West Ham United favourite was a
gifted playmaker whose vision and passing ability would –
particularly in light of the new rules that reduced the offside trap from three
to two players – carve out the sort of chances Harper
could happily put away.
The result was that in their first full season, Harper was
to become the first player to crash through the barrier of forty goals in a
League season. It remains a record no one at Ewood Park has seriously
threatened since.
Harper’s season hardly started with a bang, but after
failing to be selected for the first three games of it –
all of which Rovers lost, including a 6-2 thrashing at Roker Park – he scored a stunning five goals in his first match, aiding
his side to a 7-1 win at Newcastle United. The home side had beaten Notts
County heavily in the previous game and were in a confident mood before
kick-off.
Few could have predicted how wonderfully the away side would
play as a team, yet by half time they were already three goals up. Long before
the end Harper joined the select band of players who have scored five goals in
a top-flight match. He did it by staying well up the field, constantly seeking
to break through Newcastle’s continued use of the offside trap that a few short
years earlier had been the best in the business, but was now unable to come to
terms with the law changes. With Puddefoot inside him and wingers Joe Hulme and
Arthur Rigby outside, Harper was presented with numerous chances and did his
best to grab as many goals as possible. In the event, five wasn’t too bad.
Back at Ewood, Harper then scored his first of the season
there with a penalty against WBA. Two days later, at Bramall Lane, the Kent lad
got his seventh of the season in a 1-1 draw.
There was a large crowd inside Ewood for the return fixture
with Sunderland. They witnessed some of the qualities that had brought Rovers
success at Newcastle. Puddefoot, given a roving commission, pulled the
Wearsiders’ defence apart and after Rigby opened the scoring, Harper added two
more in the second period in a 3-0 success. Harper’s nine League goals in just
four matches rose to twelve in five in the next game as Cardiff were beaten 6-3
at Ewood Park.
Two more in his next two games meant it was fourteen in
seven. Newcastle arrived much better prepared than in the first game and
shocked the home support by winning 2-1, and also stopped Harper scoring for
the first time in the season. Bolton repeated the feat at Burnden Park, but
Notts County were unable to and his two goals, one a penalty, took Harper’s
record up to sixteen in ten starts.
This rose to nineteen in eleven and as the hat-trick was at
Turf Moor, there was extra joy for the Rovers fans that were able to make the
short journey to Burnley. With the game tied on 60 minutes at 0-0, Harper
pounced when Harold Hill and Jerry Dawson dallied over who should clear the
ball. It was a typical opportunist goal, one of many the Rovers man happily
picked up during his time with the club, and on 80 minutes he was again in just
the right place to accept Puddefoot’s pass and make it 2-0. Just before the
end, he again scored to ensure his side won 3-1. A penalty at home to Leeds the
following weekend made it twenty in twelve games.
At home to Everton on Christmas Day, Harper got another
couple. The first, reported the Liverpool Echo, was ‘a brilliant
equaliser, Harper, after a run of many yards (in which he thrice mastered
efforts by McDonald to stop him) leaving Hardy helpless with a fine shot.’ It was now twenty-five in nineteen games. Three more
followed in his next four matches before a temporary blip in form saw him score
just twice in Rovers next five games. One of these though was the sixth in a
6-3 hammering of Burnley at Ewood Park with eight of the goals coming in the
second period with Rigby scoring three and Puddefoot the once.
Nevertheless, with seven from the next eight games it meant
that prior to kick-off against Manchester United on 10 April, he had notched
thirty-seven League goals and needed just two to overtake Everton’s Bert
Freeman and Bolton’s Joe Smith, whose thirty-eight in 1908/09 and 1920/21
respectively remained a League record.
Furthermore, a hat-trick and Harper would also overtake
David Brown as the top scorer in any league, the Darlington man having scored
thirty-nine in the previous season’s Division Three North.
Despite his successes in front of goal, the Rovers man was
not even assured of finishing as Division One top scorer. Sunderland’s David
Halliday had already scored thirty-eight andwith Harper certain to miss Rovers’
penultimate game of the season to represent his country in his debut match
against Scotland, he really needed to find the net.
He certainly did so, hammering home four goals in a 7-0 win.
Each of his goals was greeted with special cheers, especially the second, which
took him on to thirty-nine for the season.
The first was another piece of opportunism and cheeky skill,
pouncing on the ball after Alf Steward had saved to drill it just inside the
post as he fell backwards. Then, after beating Charlie Moore for pace, he
cleverly placed the ball beyond the ‘keeper. His third was similar, a brilliant
run and a powerful shot, and when he touched home his fourth the crowd roared its
approval. Coming off, he then learned that Halliday had failed to score against
Arsenal, leaving him three ahead of the Sunderland man.
It was the perfect boost prior to his first international,
but with Puddefoot alongside him it was to prove a disappointing afternoon as
Scotland won 1-0 at Old Trafford. Never selected again for his country, it
meant Harper never played at Wembley because when Rovers got to the FA Cup
final in 1928, he had already left the previous year to join Sheffield
Wednesday.
Back home for the final League game of the season, Harper
struck a further two goals against Aston Villa to take his season’s record to a
remarkable forty-three goals in thirty-seven games.
At Sheffield Wednesday Harper scored thirteen goals in
eighteen games and helped the Owls, with five goals in six games, capture the
First Division title in 1928/29. He moved to Spurs in 1929 and scored sixty-two
goals in sixty-three League games before returning to Lancashire with Preston
in 1931. He saw out his career back with the Rovers in November 1933, before
joining the club’s backroom staff until 1948. He broke individual goalscoring records
at Blackburn, Tottenham and Preston during his career.
His Rovers record reads 177 League and FA Cup Apps, 122
goals. Ted died in Blackburn on 22 July 1959.
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