Bob Wilson (footballer, born 1941)

Last updated

Bob Wilson
OBE
Bob Wilson in 2009 (cropped).jpg
Wilson in 2009
Personal information
Full name Robert Primrose Wilson
Date of birth (1941-10-30) 30 October 1941 (age 82)
Place of birth Chesterfield, England
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1961–1963 Wolverhampton Wanderers [1] 0 (0)
1963–1974 Arsenal 310 (0)
International career
1971 Scotland 2 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Robert Primrose Wilson OBE (born 30 October 1941) is a former Scotland international football goalkeeper and later broadcaster. [2]

Contents

As a player, Wilson spent 11 years at Arsenal, where he made over 300 appearances. He also featured as a youth and senior international for Scotland. After retiring as a player, he turned to coaching and broadcasting, presenting football programmes on television for 28 years until 2002. Wilson also founded the Willow Foundation charity in memory of his daughter. [2]

Early life

Wilson was born on Ashgate Road, in Chesterfield, where his father William was the Borough Engineer and Surveyor, and his mother Catherine Wilson (nee Primrose) was a magistrate. [3] [4] Their Ashgate Road house was named "Threepwood" after the Galston, East Ayrshire farm where William Wilson was born. [4]

He was the youngest child of six and had much older brothers and an elder sister. Two of his brothers were killed in the Second World War, one as a Spitfire pilot and the other as a rear-gunner in a Lancaster. [4] [5] [6]

He spent time with Loughborough College. [7]

Club career

Wilson playing against Ajax Amsterdam (April 1970) Ajax - Arsenal, 1-0. Halve finale Jaarbeursstedenbeker. Peter Storey, Johan Crui, Bestanddeelnr 923-4432.jpg
Wilson playing against Ajax Amsterdam (April 1970)

Wilson started late as a professional player, as his father would not let him sign papers with Manchester United as he thought it was not a reasonable job whilst he was a youth. Wilson then went on to Loughborough College for training as a teacher. He had been playing reserve games for Wolverhampton Wanderers as an amateur between 1961 and 1963 and was the first amateur to have a transfer fee paid (£7,500). [1] He remained an amateur for eight months when he signed for Arsenal in July 1963 until he signed professional forms in March 1964. [8]

Wilson made his debut against Nottingham Forest on 26 October 1963 in a 4–2 win. However, being forced to play understudy to Jim Furnell, it was to be over four years until Wilson became first-choice keeper in 1968, after Furnell made a mistake in an FA Cup tie against Birmingham City in March 1968. Wilson took over and remained in goal for Arsenal for the remainder of the 1967–68 season. [9]

Later, firmly ensconced in the Arsenal side, Wilson was ever-present in the 1968–69 season, which included Arsenal's loss to Swindon Town in the 1969 League Cup Final. Despite sustaining a broken arm the following season, 1969–70, Wilson recovered and won his first trophy with Arsenal, the 1969–70 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup. In 1971, he was Arsenal's player of the year in their Double-winning season, in which he played every first-team match in League and Cup, culminating in the 1971 FA Cup Final win over Liverpool.

Wilson continued to play as Arsenal's keeper through the early 1970s, although an injury late on in the 1972 FA Cup semi-final against Stoke City meant he missed Arsenal's 1972 FA Cup Final loss to Leeds United and much of the 1972–73 season. Understudy Geoff Barnett took his place, but Wilson regained the number one shirt once fully recovered, and was Arsenal's first-choice goalkeeper up until his surprisingly early retirement from playing in May 1974, at the age of 32.

As a student and teacher of goalkeeping, Wilson has identified his own signature technique as diving at his opponents' feet to save goals. This caused him a number of injuries throughout his career.

International career

He became eligible to play for Scotland when the rules were changed in 1970 to allow players to play for their parents' countries of origin, if they had not already played for their own country. Wilson was selected by Scotland manager Tommy Docherty for his first match in charge, against Portugal on 13 October 1971. [10] Wilson was also selected for the match against the Netherlands on 1 December 1971, but Bobby Clark of Aberdeen was preferred after this.

Coaching career

After retiring, Wilson was goalkeeping coach for Arsenal for 28 years, during which Pat Jennings, John Lukic, and David Seaman were goalkeepers. He retired at the end of the 2002–03 season, having helped Arsenal win two more doubles in 1997–98 and 2001–02, as only one of two people to have been involved with all three, with the other being Pat Rice. [2]

Broadcasting career

BBC

Wilson had already appeared as a pundit for the BBC during the 1970 World Cup. He became a television presenter after retiring from football, working for the BBC from 1974 to 1994 as host of Football Focus . During the late 1980s and early 1990s, he also presented Grandstand on a fairly regular basis (he was the presenter on Grandstand during the afternoon of the Hillsborough Disaster in 1989), and also occasionally presented Sportsnight . During the 1980s, he co-presented Match of the Day alongside Jimmy Hill, and also worked extensively on the BBC's World Cup coverage. During Des Lynam's time as the main BBC anchorman, Wilson often covered much of the World Cup while Lynam was concentrating on the Wimbledon Tennis Championships. Wilson also read the sports bulletins on Breakfast News during the early-mid 1990s,

ITV

In late 1994, he moved to ITV, where he presented the station's UEFA Champions League, League Cup and FA Cup coverage. In addition, he presented Carlton Television's midweek highlights programme Carlton Sport. He also fronted ITV's coverage of Euro 96 and the 1998 World Cup, including England's loss to Argentina on penalties in the last 16 stage, which was watched by more than 23 million viewers. Following the arrival of Des Lynam at ITV in 1999, Wilson's role was diminished and he was mostly seen presenting late night highlights programmes on ITV. He also hosted coverage of matches being shown on On Digital's sports channels and he remained with them as it evolved into the ill-fated ITV Sport Channel, presenting the service's coverage of the pay-per-view Premier League matches. By the early 2000s, Gabby Logan had assumed some of Wilson's work, especially on the main ITV channel, and Wilson had a much smaller role with the station at the 2002 World Cup, which was to be his last work for ITV.

He still makes occasional appearances on television, on the BBC's Football Focus and Match of the Day 2 , as well as occasional work on documentary programmes for Sky Sports. Half Man Half Biscuit made reference to Wilson as a broadcaster in the song "Bob Wilson – Anchorman".

He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1998, when he was surprised by Michael Aspel during a training session with Arsenal at their training ground near St Albans.[ citation needed ]

Roy of the Rovers

In the mid-1980s he featured in a comic strip when he spent a season playing for the fictional Melchester Rovers team in Roy of the Rovers , in a team containing another former professional player turned TV presenter, Emlyn Hughes, and Spandau Ballet members Martin Kemp and Steve Norman. The quartet helped lead Rovers to League Cup glory and a record-breaking successive number of clean sheets – a somewhat unrealistic achievement considering Wilson's age and the fact he had not played for more than 10 years. [11]

Personal life

Wilson married Margaret "Megs" Miles on 25 July 1964 at Holy Trinity Church, Chesterfield, [12] and they had three children: John (born 1965), Anna (1966–1998) and Robert (born 1968). John Wilson is a presenter on Front Row , the BBC Radio 4 arts programme. Megs Wilson died in November 2023. [13]

It was announced in April 2014 that Wilson was fighting prostate cancer. [14]

His middle name, Primrose, stems from a Scottish tradition of giving children their mother's maiden name as a middle name. [15]

Wilson's great niece is Gina Coladangelo, a British businesswoman and lobbyist who made headlines in 2021 after exposure of her extramarital affair with Health Secretary Matt Hancock. [16]

Charity work

In February 1994, his daughter Anna was diagnosed with malignant schwannoma, a cancer of the nerve sheath. She died on 1 December 1998, six days before her 32nd birthday. [17] The "Willow Foundation" was set up in her memory in 1999 and operated locally, mainly in Hertfordshire. Wilson relaunched the charity on 4 October 2005 with a national remit. The organisation was established in Anna's memory and now helps some of the estimated 12,500 people in the UK, aged 16–40, who are diagnosed every year with the illness. [18]

In 2007, Wilson was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for his charity work. [19]

Honorary award

In 1989, Wilson received an honorary award of Doctor of Letters from Loughborough University. [20]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupEurope [lower-alpha 1] Total [21]
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Arsenal
1963–64 5000001060
1964–65 0000000000
1965–66 4000000040
1966–67 0000000000
1967–68 130100000140
1968–69 420407000530
1969–70 280202090410
1970–71 420905080640
1971–72 370703060530
1972–73 220600000280
1973–74 410301000450
Career total23403201802403080

Honours

Arsenal [2]

Individual

See also

Notes

  1. Appearances in Fairs Cup and European Cup

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gary Lineker</span> English footballer and television presenter (born 1960)

Gary Winston Lineker is an English sports broadcaster and former professional footballer. Lineker is the only player to have been the top goalscorer in England with three clubs: Leicester City, Everton and Tottenham Hotspur. He also played for Barcelona in Spain, and won 80 caps for England. His media career began with the BBC, where he has presented the flagship football programme Match of the Day since the late 1990s, the longest tenure of any MOTD presenter. Lineker is also the BBC's lead presenter for live football matches, including coverage of international tournaments such as the FIFA World Cup. He has also worked for Al Jazeera Sports, Eredivisie Live, NBC Sports Network, and BT Sport's coverage of the UEFA Champions League.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ian Wright</span> English footballer and pundit

Ian Edward Wright is an English television and radio personality and former professional footballer.

<i>Grandstand</i> (TV programme) British television sports programme (1958–2007)

Grandstand was the former flagship sports programme of the British Broadcasting Corporation which was broadcast on Saturday afternoons on BBC1 between 1958 and 2007, and from 1981 on Sunday afternoons as Sunday Grandstand on BBC2, although until 1998 the Sunday edition aired only during the summer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Des Lynam</span> Television and radio presenter (born 1942)

Desmond Michael Lynam, is an Irish television and radio presenter. In a broadcasting career spanning more than forty years, he has hosted television coverage of many of the world's major sporting events, presenting Grandstand, Match of the Day, Wimbledon, the Grand National, Sportsnight, the World Cup and Olympic Games, as well as presenting non-sporting programmes such as Holiday, How Do They Do That? and Countdown.

Brian Baden Moore was an English football commentator and television presenter who covered nine World Cups and more than twenty FA Cup finals.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emlyn Hughes</span> English footballer (1947–2004)

Emlyn Walter Hughes was an English footballer. He started his career at Blackpool in 1964 before moving to Liverpool in 1967. He made 665 appearances for Liverpool and captained the side to three league titles and an FA Cup victory in the 1970s. Added to these domestic honours were two European Cups, including Liverpool's first in 1977; and two UEFA Cup titles. Hughes won the Football Writers' Player of the Year in 1977. Hughes completed a full set of English football domestic honours by winning the League Cup with Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1980. In addition to Wolves, he later played for Rotherham United, Hull City, Mansfield Town and Swansea City. Hughes earned 62 caps for the England national team, which he also captained.

<i>Match of the Day</i> Television series

Match of the Day is a football highlights programme, typically broadcast on BBC One on Saturday nights, during the Premier League season. The show's current presenter is former England international striker Gary Lineker, with regular analysis from fellow former players Alan Shearer and Ian Wright, and occasional relief analysts such as Micah Richards, Danny Murphy, Jermaine Jenas, Martin Keown, and Dion Dublin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pat Jennings</span> Northern Irish former footballer

Patrick Anthony Jennings is a Northern Irish former professional footballer who played as a goalkeeper. Jennings is widely recognised as one of the greatest goalkeepers in history

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Keys</span> British television sports presenter (born 1957)

Richard Keys is an English sports presenter who has worked for BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Sky, Talksport, Al Jazeera, Fox Sports, ESPN Star Sports, BeIN Sports; and has presented many top-level football matches.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Steve Rider</span> British sports journalist and presenter (born 1950)

Stephen Rider is an English sports presenter. Between 1985 and 2005, Rider presented a variety of BBC Sport programmes including Sportsnight, Rally Report and the flagship show Grandstand. He was the anchorman of ITV's football coverage between 2006 and April 2010, and anchored ITV's Formula One coverage from 2006 to 2008. He was the lead presenter for ITV's coverage of the 2011 Rugby World Cup in New Zealand. He has been ITV's main presenter for the British Touring Car Championship since 2009.

Jonathan Martin Champion is a British sports commentator currently working as an association football commentator for ESPN and NBC Sports. Champion is a well-established and experienced commentator who has also worked for the BBC and ITV over the last 20 years. Champion currently covers the FA Cup for ESPN and the Premier League for NBC Sports.

ITV Sport is a sport producer for ITV. It was formed following the merger between Granada Sport and Central Sport.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alex Scott (footballer, born 1984)</span> English footballer and sports commentator (born 1984)

Alexandra Virina Scott is an English sports presenter, pundit, and former professional footballer who mostly played as a right-back for Arsenal in the FA WSL. She made 140 appearances for the England national team and represented Great Britain at the 2012 Summer Olympics.

Stephen Robert Bower is an English football commentator, one of the main voices for BBC TV's Match of the Day, culminating in being part of the commentary teams for the 2010, 2014, 2018, and 2022 FIFA World Cups. Bower commentated on New Zealand's historic draw with Italy and Argentina's 4–1 win over South Korea amongst others. He can also be heard on TNT Sports covering the Europa League, Serie A, and the Bundesliga, NBCSN covering the Premier League in the US, and ESPN covering international matches. He is the lead presenter on world feed Premier League Productions and presents Premier League football for Amazon Prime Video UK. Previous work includes Setanta Sports, ESPN UK, and MUTV.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geoff Barnett (footballer)</span> English footballer (1946–2021)

Geoffrey Colin Barnett was an English footballer who played as a goalkeeper.

The Big Match was a British football television programme, screened on ITV between 1968 and 1992.

Football on 5 is the principal football programme on Channel 5 in the UK. The show first ran from May 1997 until July 2012. The show returned in August 2015 under the name Football League Tonight. For the 2016–17 Football League season the Football on 5 name was revived with the highlights show now called Football on 5: The Championship and Football on 5: Goal Rush being broadcast from 9pm-10.30pm on a Saturday with a repeat on Sunday morning. The show itself was initially sponsored by Wilkinson Sword, and would eventually be sponsored by Soccernet.com, Peugeot and SEAT, among others.

Matt Smith is a British broadcaster who worked with ITV Sport between 2001 and 2015. He currently presents TNT Sports' coverage of Premier League, FA Cup, Champions League, Europa League, Conference Football and England Under 21 matches.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1998 FA Cup final</span> Association football championship match between Arsenal and Newcastle United, held in 1998

The 1998 FA Cup final was a football match between Arsenal and Newcastle United on 16 May 1998 at the old Wembley Stadium, London. It was the final match of the 1997–98 FA Cup, the 117th season of the world's oldest football knockout competition, the FA Cup. Six-time winners Arsenal were appearing in their thirteenth final, whereas Newcastle United, having also won the competition six times, appeared in their eleventh final. It was the third time both teams faced each other in a FA Cup final; Newcastle won the previous two encounters in 1932 and 1952.

Saint and Greavsie was a British television show in which former footballers Ian St John and Jimmy Greaves discussed current football themes such as the day's matches. It ran on ITV from 1985 to 1992.

References

  1. 1 2 "Bob Wilson OBE And His Molineux Years". wolvesheroes.com.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "Foundation Ambassador - Bob Wilson". Arsenal.com. 17 December 2023.
  3. Mitchell, Kevin (12 May 2002). "Wilson lets go after 39 years - but stays on call for club he loves". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 "Jock & Billy Wilson: A remembrance presented at the OCs 2019 Service" (PDF). oldcestrefeldians.org.uk. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  5. "Casualty Details: Wilson, John Primrose". Commonwealth War Graves Commission . Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  6. "Casualty Details: Wilson, William Primrose". Commonwealth War Graves Commission . Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  7. "Loughborough team photo with Barry Hines is a bit of football history". The Guardian. 29 March 2016 via www.theguardian.com.
  8. "Bob Wilson". 11v11.com.
  9. 1 2 "Greatest 50 Players - 39. Bob Wilson". Arsenal.com. 17 December 2023.
  10. "NOW YOU KNOW: Legend Eusebio played at Hampden in Scots win". Evening Times. Herald & Times Group. 23 January 2014. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
  11. "Quirky Facts". goalkeepersaredifferent.com.
  12. "Bob Wilson – Famous Derbyshire People". Peak District Online. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  13. "Willow Foundation co-founder Megs Wilson dies aged 81". Welwyn Hatfield Times. 29 November 2023. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  14. "Ex-Arsenal goalkeeper Bob Wilson to get cancer treatment". The Guardian. London. 13 April 2014.
  15. Turner, Georgina; Smyth, Rob (2 June 2004). "How many smoking managers are there?". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 August 2014.
  16. Shipman, Tim; Pogrund, Gabriel (26 June 2021). "Matt Hancock: puritan-in-chief who became the (ex) minister for hypocrisy" . The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 4 July 2021. Retrieved 31 October 2021.
  17. "Sports presenter's daughter dies". BBC News. 2 December 1998. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  18. "Popular Broadcaster Bob Wilson Launches National Charity in Memory of His Daughter" (PDF). Willow Foundation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007.
  19. "New Year Honours for sports stars". BBC News. 29 December 2007. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  20. "University Honours archive | Graduation | Loughborough University". www.lboro.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 February 2024.
  21. "Arsenal First Team Line-ups". thearsenalhistory.com.
Sources