Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Place of birth | Scotland | ||
Position(s) | Forward | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
Chicago Bricklayers | |||
Chicago Manhattan Beer | |||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Clem Cuthbert was a Scottish-American soccer player who spent his career in the Chicago leagues.
Cuthbert may have played in Clyde before moving to the United States and settling in Chicago. By 1924, he was playing for Chicago Bricklayers. In 1928, Cuthbert scored the lone Bricklayers goal as they fell to the New York Nationals in the final of the 1928 National Challenge Cup. Three years later, he again scored as Bricklayers finished runner up to the Fall River F.C. in the 1931 National Challenge Cup final. [1] On June 15, 1930, Cuthbert played on loan to Chicago Sparta during an exhibition game against Rangers F.C. [2] In 1934, the Bricklayers became the Wiebold Wonderbolts. Cuthbert continued to play for them into the late 1930s. At some point, he moved to Chicago Manhattan Beer. During the 1938–1939 season, Manhattan Beer competed in the St. Louis Soccer League. [3] In 1939, Cuthbert again experienced disappointment when Manhattan Beer fell to Brooklyn St. Mary's Celtic in the final of the 1939 National Challenge Cup.
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Fall River F.C. was an American soccer club based in Fall River, Massachusetts. During the 1920s and early 1930s they were one of the most successful soccer clubs in the United States, winning the American Soccer League on six occasions. They also won the National Challenge Cup four times. In 1924 they won the first ASL / Challenge Cup double and were subsequently the American soccer champions three times in succession. Between 1928 and 1930 they won a further three titles in a row. In 1930 they completed a treble, winning the ASL title, the Challenge Cup and the Lewis Cup. The same year they also toured Central Europe.
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William Stewart Lang was a Scottish-born American soccer player. A dominant player through the 1930s and a member of the U.S. national team at the 1934 FIFA World Cup, McLean disappeared without a trace in 1938. His disappearance remained a mystery until June 2022, when an investigation by The Athletic's Pablo Maurer and Matt Pentz uncovered the details behind that disappearance; McLean had suffered a nervous breakdown after multiple head injuries and lived out the last 40 years of his life in a series of public mental health facilities.
James Harry Chatton, was an Irish footballer who played for several clubs in the Scottish League, the American Soccer League and the League of Ireland. Chatton was a dual internationalist and played for both Ireland teams – the IFA XI and the FAI XI.
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John Anthony Reder was a Polish-American sportsman who, during the 1930s, played soccer with Fall River F.C. and the New Bedford Whalers and baseball for the Boston Red Sox. In soccer, he played as a goalkeeper and won three American Soccer League titles and two National Challenge Cup titles. In baseball, he played as a first baseman for the Boston Red Sox, and was voted Most Valuable Player of the New York–Penn League while playing for the Williamsport Grays. Together with Moe Drabowsky, Nap Kloza and Henry Peploski, Reder is one of only four Major League Baseball players to be born in Poland.
Ernő Schwarz or Schwarcz was a Hungarian American soccer player, coach and promoter who served as head coach of the United States men's national soccer team. He played professionally in Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Austria and the United States, earning two caps, scoring two goals, with the Hungarian national team in 1922. Schwarz founded, owned, managed and played for the New York Americans in the first and second American Soccer Leagues. He was also the ASL and International Soccer League vice president. His daughter was married to United States national team player Ben Zinn.
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