Ron Springett

Ronald Deryk George Springett[2] (22 July 1935 – 12 September 2015) was an English professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

Ron Springett
Springett in 1962
Personal information
Full nameRonald Deryk George Springett
Date of birth(1935-07-22)22 July 1935
Place of birthFulham, London, England
Date of death12 September 2015(2015-09-12) (aged 80)
Place of deathKingston upon Thames, England
Height1.78 m (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Position(s)Goalkeeper
Youth career
Victoria United
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1953–1958Queens Park Rangers88(0)
1958–1967Sheffield Wednesday345(0)
1967–1969Queens Park Rangers45(0)
Total478(0)
International career
1959–1966England33(0)
1963England (representative)1(0)
1960–1966The Football League XI9(0)
Medal record
Men's football
Representing  England
FIFA World Cup
Winner1966 England
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He began his career with QPR in 1953 where he made 147 appearances over two spells. He had a nine-year spell with Sheffield Wednesday between 1958 and 1967 and amassed 384 appearances for them before returning to QPR to finish his career.

He earned 33 caps for England between 1959 and 1966 and was part of the squad that won the 1966 FIFA World Cup.

Club career

Springett began his career at QPR in 1953.[3] While at QPR, he was selected to play in the Third Division South representative team in 1957. He moved to Sheffield Wednesday for £10,000 in 1958 and made 384 appearances for Wednesday before returning to QPR in May 1967. As part of that deal, his brother Peter, also a goalkeeper, moved to Wednesday from QPR.

Springett was a member of the Sheffield Wednesday team beaten 3–2 by Everton in the 1966 FA Cup Final at Wembley.[3]

International career

Springett made 33 capped appearances and one uncapped representative appearance* for England (*uncapped match - part of Football Association's centenary celebrations),[3] all while at Sheffield Wednesday and until then the most international appearances by any Sheffield Wednesday player. He held this club record for 26 years until it was broken by Nigel Worthington. He made his England debut against Northern Ireland at Wembley in 1959 saving a Jimmy McIlroy penalty just before half-time to help secure a narrow 2–1 victory.[3] He also saved a penalty in a match against Peru in May 1962.[4] He had been the first choice goalkeeper during the 1962 World Cup in Chile.[3] His final cap was against Norway in 1966 shortly before the World Cup finals. At international level, Springett also made 9 appearances for the Football League (team drawn from players of all Football League teams irrespective of nationality).[5]

England appearances
CapDateHome teamSc.Away team
118 Nov 1959England2-1Northern Ireland
219 April 1960Scotland1-1England
311 May 1960England3-3Yugoslavia
415 May 1960Spain3-0England
522 May 1960Hungary2-0England
68 Oct 1960Northern Ireland2-5England
719 Oct 1960Luxembourg0-9England
826 Oct 1960England4-2Spain
915 April 1961England9-3Scotland
1010 May 1961England8-0Mexico
1121 May 1961Portugal1-1England
1224 May 1961Italy2-3England
1327 May 1961Austria3-1England
1428 Sept 1961England4-1Luxembourg
1514 Oct 1961Wales1-1England
1625 Oct 1961England2-0Portugal
1722 Nov 1961England1-1Northern Ireland
184 April 1962England3-1Austria
1914 April 1962Scotland0-2England
209 May 1962England3-1Switzerland
2120 May 1962Peru0-4England
2231 May 1962Hungary2-1England
232 June 1962England3-1Argentina
247 June 1962Bulgaria0-0England
2510 June 1962Brazil3-1England
263 Oct 1962England1-1France
2720 Oct 1962Northern Ireland1-3England
2821 Nov 1962England4-0Wales
2927 Feb 1963France5-2England
uc24 May 1963England3-3Football League
305 June 1963Switzerland1-8England
312 Oct 1965Wales0-0England
3220 Oct 1965England2-3Austria
3329 June 1966Norway1-6England

He was allocated the No.12 shirt as a member of the England squad that won the 1966 World Cup by beating West Germany by 4 goals to 2.[3] However, only the 11 players on the pitch during that match received winners' medals. Following a Football Association led campaign to persuade FIFA to award medals to all the winners' squad members, it was announced by FIFA, on 26 November 2007, that all non-starting members of World Cup winning squads (1930–1974 competitions) would also receive a winners medal. This list included Ron Springett, and so, on 10 June 2009, Springett was presented with his medal by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at a ceremony at 10 Downing Street.[6]

Testimonial

Sheffield Wednesday held a testimonial for Ronald Springett on 25 September 1967 at Hillsborough Stadium. (A Sheffield United XI beat a Sheffield Wednesday XI 3–2) The game was watched by 23,070 fans.[7] Following his death, Sheffield Wednesday honoured Ron by featuring him on the cover of the matchday programme and observing a minutes applause prior to the home game against Fulham on 19 September 2015. Wednesday won the game 3–2. In a post match interview, Owls head coach Carlos Carvalhal dedicated the win to Springett.

Style of play

Springett has been described by The Independent as a clever, consistent, "brave and agile goalkeeper", with an excellent positional sense. Despite his small stature and lack of physicality, which gave him a slight disadvantage against larger, more physical centre-forwards, he was "adept at choosing the precise moment to smother shots at the feet of attackers, accepting that such plunges would result in occasional injuries. Swift of foot, deftly assured with his hands and adept at judging when to leave his goal-line, he could be a gloriously entertaining performer, though for all his acrobatics, his lack of height occasionally made him vulnerable to sudden long shots." Regarded as one of England's greatest ever goalkeepers, he was known for his determination, athleticism, and the "thoroughness of his preparation, as he kept a notebook in which recorded the preferred spot-kick methods of all his leading opponents".[5]

Personal life

Ron Springett had a daughter Terri Springett who also played professional football.

Death

Springett died on 12 September 2015.[3]

Honours

Sheffield Wednesday[8]

England[8]

References

External links