- Johnny Mapson
John (Johnny) Mapson (
May 2 1917 –August 19 1999 ) was an English professional football player.Born in
Birkenhead onMerseyside , Mapson moved toSwindon in his youth and worked in a succession of jobs including grocer's boy, in a bakehouse and as a milk boy before signing forReading F.C. in April 1935. In March 1936 he transferred toSunderland A.F.C. for the sum of £2000, beginning a career that would last withSunderland A.F.C. for nearly twenty years.The tragic death of goalkeeper
Jimmy Thorpe on 5 February 1936 propelled the 18 year old Mapson, with only a couple of Third Division appearances forReading F.C. , into the championship chasingSunderland A.F.C. first team.Sunderland A.F.C. won the Football League Championship in 1936, although Mapson did not make enough appearances to qualify for a medal. The following season Mapson established himself as a first team regular asSunderland A.F.C. won theFA Cup on the day before his twentieth birthday.Mapson was considered positionally astute as a goalkeeper, rarely having to make a last-ditch dive and had a distinctive method of catching the ball (one arm over the other to one side of his body).
Mapson's career was interrupted by
World War Two , during which he worked in an engineering works, assistingReading F.C. in wartime football and helping them to win theLondon War Cup in 1941.After
World War Two Mapson returned as first choice goalkeeper for Sunderland in an increasingly star-studded team during the so-called "Bank of England" era of the early 1950s, so named as the club broke successive transfer records to buy and field a team of established internationals. Although ultimately unsuccessful in winning honours, the Sunderland team at this time was one of the great glamour sides of the era, fielding players of the quality ofLen Shackleton andTrevor Ford .In 1939 Mapson travelled with
the Football Association touring party toSouth Africa , playing against the national side, and in 1941 played for England against Wales in a wartime international.Mapson retired in May 1954 and lived with his daughter in
Washington, Tyne and Wear until his death on19 August 1999 . He was the last surviving member of the Sunderland1937 FA Cup Final winning side.References
*cite book
author=Dykes, Garth & Lamming, Doug
title=All the Lads
publisher=Sunderland AFC
year=2000
id=ISBN 1-899538-15-1
*cite book
author=Graham, Bob
title=The History of Sunderland A.F.C.
publisher=Wearside Publications
year=1995
id=ISBN 0-9527352-10
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