Joe Hulme

Joe Hulme

Infobox Football biography
playername = Joe Hulme


fullname = Joseph Harold Anthony Hulme
dateofbirth = August 26, 1904
cityofbirth = Stafford, Staffordshire
countryofbirth = England
dateofdeath = death date and age|1991|9|27|1904|8|26
cityofdeath = Winchmore Hill
countryofdeath = England
height =
position = Right-winger
youthyears =
youthclubs = Stafford YMCA
years = 1922–1924 1924–1926 1926–1938 1938–1939
clubs = York City Blackburn Rovers Arsenal Huddersfield Town
caps(goals) = 031 00(3) 074 00(6) 333 (107) 008 00(0)
nationalyears = 1927-1933
nationalteam = England
nationalcaps(goals) = 009 0(4)
manageryears = 1945-1949
managerclubs = Tottenham Hotspur

Joseph Harold Anthony "Joe" Hulme (August 26, 1904September 27, 1991) was an English footballer and cricketer.

Career

Born in Stafford, Hulme usually played as a right-winger. Hulme started his career at then non-league York City in 1923, before moving to Blackburn Rovers in February 1924. He spent two years at Ewood Park and made 74 league appearances, scoring six goals. He moved to Arsenal in 1926, becoming one of Herbert Chapman's first major signings; known for his pace and ball control, Hulme spent twelve years at Arsenal and became part of the great Arsenal side of the 1930s.

Hulme made his Arsenal debut on February 6 1926 away to Leeds United, and remained a regular for the rest of that season. That led him to be picked for the Football League XI that season, and the following season, 1926–27, he made his full England debut, against Scotland at Hampden Park on April 2 1927. In all he would win nine caps for England, between 1927 and 1933. That same season he also played in his first FA Cup final, against Cardiff City, which Arsenal lost 1–0 after an error by goalkeeper Dan Lewis.

Hulme remained first choice on the right-wing at Arsenal up until the 1932–33 season, combining with Cliff Bastin (who joined Arsenal in 1929) to form a pair of highly-paced wingers supported passes from an attacking central midfielder, in the shape of Alex James. Hulme and Bastin were both prolific scorers for Arsenal, with Hulme hitting 18 goals in 1931–32 and 20 (including hat-tricks against Sunderland and Middlesbrough) the season after that. In the meantime Hulme and Arsenal had started winning trophies, taking the FA Cup in 1929–30, and followed it up with a pair of First Division titles in 1930–31 and 1932–33.

Injuries robbed Hulme of another title-winning medal, as he only made eight appearances (but still scored five times) in Arsenal's 1933–34 title-winning season. He returned to the Arsenal side the following season, 1934–35, and won his third league winners' medal with 16 appearances, although by now injury and losses of form meant he was not an automatic first choice, sharing duties with Pat Beasley and Alf Kirchen. In 1935–36 Hulme played 28 times in league and cup won his final honour with Arsenal, a second FA Cup medal after Arsenal beat Sheffield United 1–0 in the final, making him the only player to have played in all of Arsenal's first four cup finals.

Hulme spent his final two seasons at Arsenal (1936–37 and 1937–38) as a bit-part player, making just ten appearances in one-and-a-half years. His final appearance came against Liverpool on December 18 1937. In all he scored 125 goals in 374 appearances for the Gunners, making him the club's eighth-top scorer of all time. Hulme left Arsenal for Huddersfield in January 1938, where he saw out the rest of his career, picking up an FA Cup runners-up medal in the 1937–38 season before retiring from football at the end of that season.

An all-round sportsman, Hulme was also a keen cricketer, and played 225 times for Middlesex between 1929 and 1939 as a middle-order batsman and medium bowler.

After World War II, which he spent working as a policeman, Hulme became manager of Arsenal's fiercest rivals, Tottenham Hotspur from 1945 to 1949. He achieved little actual success at the time, but he did lay the foundations for their championship-winning side of 1950–51. After that, Hulme left football altogether, to become a successful journalist. He died at the age of 87, in 1991.

Honours

As a player

;Arsenal

* Football League Division 1 winner - 1930/31, 1932/33, 1933/34, 1934/35
*FA Cup winner - 1930, 1936
*FA Cup finalist - 1927, 1932

;Huddersfield Town
*FA Cup finalist - 1938

References

*cite book
author=Harris, Jeff & Hogg, Tony (ed.)
title=Arsenal Who's Who
publisher=Independent UK Sports
year=1995
id=ISBN 1-899429-03-4

External links

*soccerbase|id=3709|name=Joe Hulme
* [http://jkarlsson.netfirms.com/players/h/hulme_jha/ Profile on Gunnermania]
* [http://www.middlesexccc.com/hof-profile.asp?HOFPlayerID=51 Profile at Middlesex CCC Hall of Fame]
*cricinfo|ref=15033


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Joe Hulme —  Joe Hulme Spielerinformationen Voller Name Joseph Harold Anthony Hulme Geburtstag 26. August 1904 Geburtsort Stafford, England Sterbedatum 27. Sep …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Joe Hulme — Joseph Harold Anthony Hulme était un ancien footballeur et joueur de cricket anglais né le 26 août 1904 à Stafford, décédé le 26 septembre 1991. Carrière ? 1924 : York City  Angleterre 1924 1926 : Blackburn Rovers …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Hulme (disambiguation) — Hulme is a district and electoral ward of the City of Manchester, in North West England.Hulme may also refer to:People with the given name Hulme:* James Hulme Canfield (1847 1909), fourth President of The Ohio State University * William Hulme… …   Wikipedia

  • Hulme, Keri — ▪ New Zealander author Keri originally  spelled Kerry   born March 9, 1947, Christchurch, N.Z.       New Zealand novelist, poet, and short story writer, chiefly known for her first novel, The Bone People (1983), which won the Booker Prize in 1985 …   Universalium

  • Joseph Hulme — Joseph Harold Anthony „Joe“ Hulme (* 26. August 1904 in Stafford, England; † 27. September 1991) war ein englischer Fußball und Cricketspieler. Der in Stafford geborene Joe Hulme spielte normalerweise auf der Position eines rechten Flügelspielers …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • David Hulme (rugby league) — David Hulme Personal information Born 6 February 1964 (1964 02 06) (age 47) Playing information Position Stand off/Five eighth, Scrum half/Halfback …   Wikipedia

  • Arsenal F.C. — FC Arsenal Voller Name Arsenal Football Club Gegründet 1886 als Dial Square Stadion Emirates Stadium …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Arsenal F. C. — FC Arsenal Voller Name Arsenal Football Club Gegründet 1886 als Dial Square Stadion Emirates Stadium …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Arsenal FC — FC Arsenal Voller Name Arsenal Football Club Gegründet 1886 als Dial Square Stadion Emirates Stadium …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Arsenal FC First Team Squad — FC Arsenal Voller Name Arsenal Football Club Gegründet 1886 als Dial Square Stadion Emirates Stadium …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”