| While Bill Nicholson took the Spurs team
of the late 50’s and early 60’s to great notoriety, the side which
subsequently went on to be successful all over again in the 1970’s was
not only Bill Nick’s, but owed a debt to another Spurs stalwart of the
50’s.
When Bill Nicholson played in the “Push
and Run” side that won the Second Division championship in 1950 and
then the First in 1951, players who were all skilled at their particular
position in the team surrounded him. However, there was one who
epitomised the ethos of Arthur Rowe and became his right hand man in
charge of the team’s training when he took over as manager. That man
was Eddie Baily.
Coming from the East End, Baily had to
fight for what he wanted, but he also had a great sense of humour that
made him one of the characters of the Spurs side and earned him the
nickname of “The Cheeky Chappie”. He was first spotted paying for
Hackney Schools in a match against Edmonton and although his side were
comprehensively beaten and Baily himself was wearing glasses, the Spurs
scout, Jim Joyce, who was watching, had seen clearly that here was one
for the future. He turned up at the Baily household on the Monday and
asked if Eddie was interested in playing for Spurs. He was only 13, but
agreed and travelled to training on a homemade bike, with his gas mask
hanging from his neck, as this was wartime and no chances could be
taken. Now, Baily had always played as an inside forward and was
naturally athletic. So much so that he played cricket to a high level
and spent some of his summers on the ground staff at Essex Count Cricket
Club. He trained under the Sergeant Major like Frank Hardy and played
for the Junior side, sometimes through air-raids and other times having
to leave the field while the planes flew overhead to come back and
resume later.
These were not the glamorous days for
footballers as they are now. At 14, he left school and followed in his
family’s footsteps by going into the printing business and then he was
loaned out to Finchley by the club to gain experience. By now, he was
also looking to increase his income, so moved employment to the Stock
Exchange, although I bet he never imagined then that Spurs shares would
one day be traded at that very institution. His debut at the non-league
club was very successful, with a win and a hat trick for the Spurs
youngster. He even made it to Wembley in the Middlesex Red Cross Cup,
where Finchley beat Southall 1-0, but it wasn’t as exciting as it
sounded. Only 2,000 attended on a wartime midweek afternoon. But when he
reached 17, he was offered amateur terms by Spurs. This came at just the
wrong time, as soon after he left to undertake his national service,
which took him to Belgium, Holland and Germany in the Scots Guards of
all regiments. When the war ended, he stayed on the Rhine and played for
their popular team. He drew much attention by nature of his displays and
when a teammate who played for Chelsea asked if he was sorted out at
home, he said no. When he returned to England, he trained at Stamford
Bridge and impressed the manager enough to be offered an amateur
contract with the Blues with a game that Saturday.
This is where fate took a hand. Walking
down Tottenham High Road, he bumped into Jimmy Anderson from the club.
Anderson asked if he wanted to play on Saturday for Spurs, but Baily
explained that Chelsea had signed him. Anderson phoned the Chelsea boss
and he understood that Baily was still on amateur forms with Spurs, so
tore up his contract with the West London side. The young man was signed
up on professional terms there and then. The £10 signing on fee was a
factor, but he always wanted to play for Spurs so the decision for which
one to play for between the two sides was an easy one. He made his debut
against WBA on 14th January 1947, after only four reserve
matches following his demob from the Army. He signed professional forms
in October of that year and went on to establish himself in the side Joe
Hulme was trying to take out of the Second Division. After a couple of
seasons just outside the top four, Baily was to be the inside forward
that characterised the team that the new manager, Arthur Rowe, was
building.
Eddie was already noted for his accurate
passing ability and his excellent first touch, especially on the
quagmire pitches they played on in those times. He had the skill to
create chances for colleagues, but also had dribbling skills that got
him into positions to score with a fierce shot himself. When Rowe
started to drill his side to move the ball quickly and move around to
receive it again, Baily was his most devout advocate. In training he
used to chant Rowe’s doctrines and developed a great understanding
with Les Medley down the left hand side, which they eventually
transferred to the England side. The Spurs side moved the ball around
and took the Second Division by storm. They swept through the division
taking the title and then did the same in the First Division, on a wave
of fast, flowing football. Baily was at the heart of a lot of it and
certainly played his part off the pitch, by maintaining a happy
atmosphere in the dressing room. The player’s fondest memories were of
three matches at White Hart Lane in a rain soaked period that saw them
put six past Stoke City, five past Champions for the previous two
seasons Portsmouth, and seven against Newcastle United. All in the space
of four weeks !! Eddie got his only hat-trick for Spurs in the match
against Portsmouth and it was the culmination of all they had worked
for.
There is one incident that will always be
brought up when people are talking about Eddie Baily and that is the
Huddersfield “goal”. In a home game in the 1951-52 season, Spurs
were awarded a corner, which Baily took. His kick was heading for the
centre, when it struck the referee on the back and knocked him flat on
his face. The ball rebounded to Eddie, who lobbed it back into the
middle and onto Len Duquemin’s head to score the only goal of the
game. The Huddersfield Town players went mad, as the player taking the
corner had touched the ball twice and therefore, a free kick to the
Terriers should have been awarded. As the ref had not been in a position
to see who had crossed it, he gave a goal. The Huddersfield chairman
rushed down at the end of the game to push reporters away from the ref
because he “wanted him first” !! The FA called an inquiry and
despite all the protests, the goal and the result was allowed to stand.
It was a bitter pill for Huddersfield to swallow, as it meant they were
relegated at the end of that season, but Baily’s quick thinking had
won Spurs the day, albeit illegally.
After the Championship had come to
Tottenham for the first time, there was no European football like there
is today, but Spurs were to meet FC Austria four times in two years in
friendlies. Well, friendly might not be the right term, as these games
were considered to be the “Championship of Europe” as they were
being played between the Champs of England and the Champs of the
Continent. Of the games, Spurs won two and drew one against the side
containing the best players that Europe could offer at the time. Cecil
Poynton, the Spurs trainer, described the game played by the two teams
in Brussels in 1952, as the finest display he had ever seen. But the
team that took Tottenham to those heights was growing old together. By
1955, Baily was on his way to a six-month stay at Port Vale before
joining Nottingham Forest, who he helped to promotion from the Second
Division. When his playing career ended, he found his way back to the
East End and became a coach at Orient, who again he helped to the First
Division.
His England career spanned 9 matches and
he was part of the 1950 World Cup squad that travelled home from Brazil
in shame after losing to USA 0-1. He linked up with Les Medley in a
partnership that has never been transferred to international level
again. He also made an appearance for the Rest of the UK against Wales
and five times for the Football League representative side. He was
unlucky to be shown the door so soon, as he was still considered able
enough to play for the national side against Young England in 1957.

Bill and Eddie at
Cheshunt.
Two heads were
better than now.
As the Double side that Bill Nicholson
had built was reaching the same stage as the “Push and Run” side
when Baily left, he called on Eddie to return to Tottenham as coach and
assistant manager. He loved this role and while the players regarded him
as somewhat of a Sergeant Major, he was always willing to have a laugh
with them. One thing constantly bemused him though in the modern game.
Having had to work hard for everything in his life, he found it amazing
that some of the players coming through the team at Spurs were so
laissez faire. He was frustrated at Graeme Souness, who he could not
understand and he loathed Martin Chivers, the player who was moody and
Baily could not get through to. However, after the first leg of the 1972
UEFA Cup final, he acclaimed Chivers, who’s two goals had given Spurs
a great advantage, by saying he could “walk all over him” !! This
time in Spurs history is chronicled in Hunter Davies’ “The Glory
Game” and makes Baily out to be a dour, moaning authority figure,
whereas he wasn’t like that most of the time. His success with
Nicholson went on for 10 years, until, when Bill was sacked, he did not
get the job and was out when Terry Neill came in. Disillusioned with
Spurs, he went to West Ham on their scouting team and didn’t step foot
back inside the Spurs ground until he played in a match prior to Bill
Nicholson’s Testimonial.
It was fitting perhaps that Eddie was
granted a testimonial in 1992 against Enfield, but it was at their
Southbury Road stadium. It also came on the day that Spurs dispensed of
the services of Terry Venables, just when the team seemed on the verge
of going some way towards making a decent challenge for the
Championship. Typical Tottenham – making two gaffes on the same day.
But Tottenham were always Eddie’s club. He got married at 1 pm on 20th
December 1952 and two hours later was playing for Spurs against WBA !!
Not many would show such devotion nowadays. The Clapton born boy served
Tottenham well through the years. Unfortunately, they, like they had
done with so many others, did not treat him the same.
EAST STAN |