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Willie Cameron

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Willie Cameron
Personal information
Full name William Smith Cameron[1]
Date of birth 2 December 1883[2]
Place of birth Mossend, Scotland[1]
Date of death 14 October 1958(1958-10-14) (aged 74)[3][4]
Place of death Bolton, England
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)[3]
Position(s) Inside forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Kirkwood Thistle
1902–1903 Burnbank Athletic
1903–1904 Albion Rovers 18 (3)
1904 Renton
1904–1906 Glossop 41 (23)
1906–1908 Bolton Wanderers 26 (5[5])
1908–1913 Blackburn Rovers 69 (18)
1913–1914 Bury 38 (17)
1914–1919 Hull City 47 (10)
1915Clydebank (loan)
1916Hamilton Academical (loan) 6 (4)
1916–1917Vale of Leven (loan)
1917–1918Clyde (loan) 8 (3)
1918–1919Third Lanark (loan) 6 (2)
1919–1920 Bury 2 (0)
Managerial career
1919–1923 Bury
1930–1931 Rochdale
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

William Smith Cameron (2 December 1883 – 14 October 1958) was a Scottish football player and manager whose position was mainly as an inside forward, though he was versatile and also played in the centre, on the wing and at half back during his career.[3]

Playing career

[edit]

Cameron's playing career, during which he acquired the nickname 'Kilty',[2][1][3] was largely characterised by short periods at several clubs in northern England and south-west Scotland.[6] Born at Mossend, Lanarkshire, though much of his early life was spent in Coatbridge where his father worked in the local ironworks,[3] he moved to Bolton Wanderers owing to that town's connections to heavy industry, having initially moved south to play for Glossop.[7]

His longest spell was at Blackburn Rovers, where he spent five seasons and was part of the squad that won the Football League championship in 1911–12, alongside the likes of fellow Scots Walter Aitkenhead, Johnny Orr and Jock Simpson; he was not an undisputed regular in the team at Ewood Park, but his ability to fill in at several positions meant he was often called upon.[1] On paper, he was also contracted to Hull City for five years, but in reality he only played there for 18 months before World War I led to the cancellation of official competitions in English football; he had a number of short loans at clubs in the Greater Glasgow area[6][3] (the Scottish Football League continued) and served in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps during the conflict.[2]

At representative level, he appeared in the Home Scots v Anglo-Scots annual trial match in 1909[8] but did not gain any full caps for Scotland.

Managerial career

[edit]

In 1919, Cameron became player-manager of Second Division Bury and spent four seasons in charge of the Shakers[9] before being issued with a life ban in 1923 following an investigation into an incident three years earlier when Bury were found to have accepted payments from Coventry City officials to deliberately lose their end-of-season fixture and save Coventry from relegation at the expense of Lincoln City (the extent of his involvement in the incident is not clear).[10][11]

Cameron's ban was eventually lifted in 1929[2] and he managed Rochdale for the unsuccessful 1930–31 season when they had to seek re-election to the Third Division North, and the first half of 1931–32 which was equally poor and eventually ended with the same outcome.[3]

Later life

[edit]

Cameron settled with his family in Bolton, where by the outbreak of World War II in 1939 he was working at the de Havilland Propellers factory.[2][1] He was not related to Jock Cameron, another Blackburn Rovers player of the era who also grew up in the Coatbridge area and settled in Lancashire.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Player Archive | William Smith "Kilty" Cameron, BRFCS.com
  2. ^ a b c d e 89 William Cameron, On Cloud Seven
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Cameron, Kilty (1916), Hamilton Academical Memory Bank
  4. ^ William Cameron , Find A Grave
  5. ^ Bolton Wanderers, free-elements.com [record of goal scorers]
  6. ^ a b John Litster (October 2012). "A Record of pre-war Scottish League Players". Scottish Football Historian magazine. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. ^ Liverpool's revival at Glossop, Athletic News, 2 January 1905, via Play Up Liverpool
  8. ^ Football. | Home Scots, 3; Anglo-Scots, 1., The Glasgow Herald, 23 March 1909
  9. ^ William Cameron, League Managers Association
  10. ^ Blast From The Remote Past: On This Day 1920: CCFC Survive In What Became 'The Bury Affair', Coventry City Former Players' Association, 1 May 2019
  11. ^ Coventry Match-Fixing Scandal Relegates Imps, The Stacey West, 17 November 2017