- John Angus (footballer)
Infobox Football biography
playername = John Angus
fullname = John Angus
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1938|9|2|df=y
cityofbirth =Amble, Northumberland
countryofbirth =England
dateofdeath =
cityofdeath =
countryofdeath =
height =
position = Right back
youthyears =
youthclubs = Amble Boys' Club
years = 1955–1972
clubs = Burnley
caps(goals) = 439 0(4)
nationalyears = 1957–1961
1961
nationalteam = England U-23
England
nationalcaps(goals) = 007 0(0)
001 0(0)John Angus (born
2 September 1938 ) is a retired English footballer who played his entire club career as a right back for Burnley between 1956 and 1972, helping them win theFootball League title in 1960. He also made a single appearance for England in 1961.Career
Angus was born in
Amble, Northumberland and played for the local boys’ club before being signed by Burnley as an amateur in 1954. A year later, he was signed as a professional on his 17th birthday.At first, he struggled to win a place in the reserve team with the quality of players then at
Turf Moor and was less than a week away from his 18th birthday before his reserve team debut. A week after that debut, however, he was called into the first team after the club were hit with a number of injuries and he performed well in a 2-1 victory against Everton on3 September 1956 giving international wingerTommy Eglington a difficult time.Over the next two seasons he made a number of appearances in the first team but in 1958 new manager
Harry Potts made Angus the regular right back, displacing Dave Smith. Angus was a superb defender and became an integral part of the Burnley side which won theFootball League title in 1960, and were runners-up in both the league andFA Cup in 1962.He was capped at youth level in 1957 and went on to win seven caps for the under 23s. His full cap came on
27 May 1961 , when he and Burnley team mate Brian Miller made their England debuts in the same game against Austria in Vienna. Angus was played out of position having to play at left-back, replacing Ray Wilson. England were defeated by three goals to one (fromJimmy Greaves ). [ [http://www.englandstats.com/matchreport.php?mid=350 Austria 3 - England 1; 27 May 1961 (Match summary)] ] Unfortunately for Angus, England already hadJimmy Armfield and thenGeorge Cohen available at right back, and Angus was not selected again.Angus continued his good form for Burnley as the title winning team was dismantled, and he had almost reached the age of 30 before his place was under threat. but the emergence of
Freddie Smith saw him out of the side for spells. In 1971, Burnley were relegated from the First Division; Angus was in the Second Division side for the first two games of the 1971-72 season before a tendon injury forced him out. Although he was hopeful of a recovery, this was not to be and he retired at the end of the season.He had played in a total of 439 league games for Burnley and with cup games totalled 521 appearances. His four goals all came between 1964 and 1966.
Family
His uncle, Jack Angus played for Exeter City from 1930 to 1948. [cite book | author=Graham Betts| title=England: Player by player | publisher=Green Umbrella Publishing | year=2006| pages=p. 13|isbn=1-905009-63-1]
Honours
;Burnley
*Football League champions: 1959-60
*Football League runner-up: 1961-62
*FA Cup finalists: 1962ee also
*
One-club man References
External links
* [http://www.englandfc.com/Profiles/php/PlayerProfileByName.php?id=20 Profile on www.englandfc.com]
* [http://www.englandstats.com/playerreport.php?pid=21 Profile on www.englandstats.com]
* [http://www.claretsmad.co.uk/news/loadsngl.asp?cid=ED95&id=116946 Burnley profile]
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