Carol Thomas
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Carol Thomas | ||
Date of birth | 5 June 1955 | ||
Place of birth | Hull, England | ||
Playing position | Defender | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1966- | BOCM Ladies | ||
– | Reckitts Ladies | ||
– | Hull Brewery Ladies | ||
– | Tottenham Hotspur Ladies | ||
– | Preston Ladies (Lancashire) | ||
– | CP Doncaster Ladies | ||
-1985 | Rowntree Ladies | ||
1993-2002 | AFC Preston (East Riding of Yorkshire) | ||
2004-2009 | Brandsburton Ladies | ||
1970-1985 | Hull and District Ladies Representative Team | ||
1974-1985 | Northern Region | ||
1995-2002 | East Riding County FA Representative Team | ||
National team | |||
1974–1985 | England | 56 | |
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Carol Thomas (née McCune; born 5 June 1955) is an English former footballer and was the second captain of England, taking over from Sheila Parker in 1976. She is the most successful captain of the England women's national team in terms of tournament successes and recognised as one the genuine but unsung pioneers of the modern women's game.[1][2] Thomas became captain at the age of 21 and held that position until her retirement with a then record 56 caps in 1985. She remained the longest, continuous serving captain for a period of 26 years before being overtaken by Faye White in 2011.
Thomas was a sturdy right-sided defender, who refused offers of professionalism from Italy and New Zealand in order to maintain the strict amateur status which was enforced by the Women's Football Association at that time. She was a leading women's footballing figure in the north of England and in particular her home area of Yorkshire, appearing in and on local and national media and, when on tours, the foreign media.
Club career
Thomas's first competitive game was at the age of 11 in September 1966, having being inspired by the World Cup success of that year, for BOCM Ladies as a traditional right winger.[3] She was also encouraged by watching her father Percy, who had been a keen amateur footballer and a founder member of a local team called Air Street United.[4] Her talents were quickly recognised and she was snapped up by Reckitts Ladies, then under the tutelage of Flo Bilton.[5] A move to local rivals Hull Brewery Ladies followed, gaining recognition with the Hull and District Representative team, the North of England squad and an eventual England call up.
At club level she made occasional guest appearances for Tottenham Hotspur Ladies, and for a season played for Preston Rangers, Lancashire. Several seasons at CP Doncaster Ladies followed before finishing her England representative career with Rowntrees Ladies.
International career
Thomas was first called up to the England squad by England manager Tommy Tranter in November 1974 for a 2–0 win over France at Plough Lane.[6] She made two substitute appearances before becoming the first choice right back. Thomas retained her place under Tranter's successor Martin Reagan and, aside from one game, became an ever present until September 1985. On 31 October 1978, Thomas became the first captain to lead out an England side to play on a Football League First Division ground at The Dell, home of Southampton F.C.. In front of a then record crowd of 5,471, England beat Belgium 3-0 with Thomas providing the cross for Elaine Badrock to open the scoring for the home nation.[7] In 1981 she became the first captain to lead an England team outside of Europe, when they took part in that year's Mundialito tournament in Japan.[8] Altogether, she led England in seven consecutive tournaments, playing all 29 games, winning 20 and only losing only 5, two of which were on penalty shoot-outs, and conceding less than a goal a game on average. During that period she led the England team to two tournament victories in the 1976 Pony Home Championship[6] and the 1985 Mundialito[9] and to a runners up position in the 1984 UEFA Womens Championship.[10]
International tournaments
# | Date | Tournament | Hosts | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1976 | Pony Home Internationals | England | Winners |
2 | 1979 | Unofficial European Cup | Italy | 4th place |
3 | 1981 | Mundialito | Japan | 3rd place |
4 | 1982-84 | UEFA Women’s Championship | No hosts | Runners up |
5 | 1984 | Mundialito | Italy | 3rd place |
6 | 1985 | Mundialito | Italy | Winners |
7 | 1985-87 | UEFA Women’s Championship | Norway | 4th place * |
- * Played in the first three winning group games before retiring.
Her commitment and dedication to her England captaincy ensured that following her marriage to husband Alan in July 1979,[11] two days later she flew out to Italy with the rest of the England squad[12] to take part in that year's unofficial European Cup.[13] In total, Thomas won 56 caps in an 11 year England career, (51 as captain). In March 1985 England beat Scotland 4–0 at Deepdale in Preston, Lancashire and Thomas was presented with her 50th cap by Tom Finney after the game.[14] Later in 1985, following the success of that year's Mundialito[9] and having successfully led her England team to three straight victories in the 1984-87 UEFA Cup, at the age of 30, Thomas retired from the international scene and football to have her first child.[3][15] Sue Law took over as England's right back while Debbie Bampton inherited the captaincy.
International record
Type | Played | Won | Drawn | Lost | Goals For | Goals Against |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Friendlies | 27 | 12 | 5 | 10 | 60 | 36 |
Tournaments | 29 | 20 | 4 | 5 | 76 | 20 |
Total | 56 | 32 | 9 | 15 | 136 | 56 |
Recognition and achievements
In 1974 she was invited to the first all-women coaching course held at the then national footballing centre, Lilleshall. Thomas, along with Jane Talbot and Pauline Dickie, gained her FA Preliminary Badge, becoming one of only three who passed the course, thereby becoming the first qualified women coaches in England. Her performances on the course resulted in her call up to the England squad that November when she made her first international appearance.[6]
By the late 1970s her achievements were being acknowledged outside the game. In 1978 and 1979 she was invited by the BBC to star in the popular sports show, 'Superstars', to promote the women’s game.[16][17][18][19] As an ambassador for the women's game, in 1983 she received the Vaux Breweries North Sportswoman of the Year Silver Star Award. In 1984 she became the first woman player to be interviewed on national breakfast television appearing opposite Frank Bough and Selina Scott following the defeat against Sweden in the 1984 European Championship Final. In 1985 she was awarded the Sports Council Sports Award.[20]
Post retirement, in 1986, she became the first woman footballer to have an entry in the Guinness Book of Records having become the first English woman to gain 50 caps,[9][21] with entries to follow in subsequent years.
Return to grassroots football
In 1993, after the birth of her second child, Thomas came out of retirement to help establish local club AFC Preston with playing and coaching.[22] She also set up a soccer club (which still runs to this day) for youngsters aged five to 10 years from her village and the surrounding rural area. She also helped her husband coach their sons from the under 7 age group to under 18 level.
When the East Riding County FA created its first women’s representative team in 1995, Thomas was asked to work with the coaching staff and captain the side.[23] She remained playing at this level until 2002. In 2004 she made her final move to Bransburton Ladies.
Retirement
In 2009 after 43 years in football Thomas retired. She now spreads her time between her family (which includes two footballing grandsons) and long distance trekking.
A keen walker, by 2015 she had completed all 214 ‘Wainwrights’,[24] undertaken the National Three Peaks Challenge in 24 hours and completed the Coast to Coast Walk.[25] She has trekked at high altitude, including the Andes, Himalaya and Atlas Mountains, having already climbed several mountains and traversed numerous high passes in Nepal, Peru, Morocco and India many at heights in excess of 18,000 ft.
References
- ↑ Grinstead, Paul (15 October 1984). "Carol – the unsung heroine of football". Hull Daily Mail.
- ↑ Richardson, Malcolm (6 October 2007). "Carol was women's Football's England pioneer". Hull Daily Mail.
- 1 2 "Pure joy as Carol fulfils a true 'goal'". Hull Daily Mail. 31 May 1986.
- ↑ Richardson, Malcolm (28 April 1977). "Hull game a stepping stone for soccer girls". Hull Daily Mail. p. 9.
- ↑ "Administrator: Flo Bilton". womensfootballarchive.com. 8 July 2014.
- 1 2 3 Owen, Wendy (2005). Kicking Against Tradition. Stroud: Tempus Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0752434276.
- ↑ "MEMORABLE MATCH – RECORD CROWD SEE ENGLAND BEAT BELGIUM 3 – 0". Women’s Football (5). Women's Football Association. February 1979. p. 3.
- ↑ Richardson, Malcolm (28 August 1981). "CAROL LEADS ENGLAND INTO THE UNKNOWN". Hull Daily Mail.
- 1 2 3 "Leading by example". Hull Daily Mail. 3 September 1979.
- ↑ "ENGLAND OVERCAME HOT FAVORITES DENMARK IN SEMI-FINALS TO REACH THE FIRST EVER U.E.F.A. CUP FINAL". WFA News (9). Women's Football Association. July 1984.
- ↑ "They're just married … till sport them do part". London: The Daily Mail. 14 July 1979.
- ↑ "OH, CAROL. Football … 1 Honeymoon 0". Hull Daily Mail. 13 July 1979.
- ↑ "Five players NOT in the English Football Hall of Fame". 25 April 2015.
- ↑ Gibb, Cathy (June 1985). "Uefa Competition Qualifying Match - England 4, Scotland 0". WFA News (12). Women's Football Association. p. 1.
- ↑ "It's baby rules OK". Leeds: The Yorkshire Post. 14 July 1979.
- ↑ "1979 U.K. WOMEN'S SUPERSTARS".
- ↑ "1980 U.K. WOMEN'S SUPERSTARS".
- ↑ "Carol Thomas (McCune)".
- ↑ "SUPERSTAR?". Women’s Football (6). Women's Football Association. October 1979. p. 2.
- ↑ "Half-century of caps". Leeds: The Yorkshire Post. 27 May 1985.
- ↑ Superlatives, Guinness (1985). Guinness Book of Records - 1986. Guinness Superlatives Ltd. ISBN 085112433X.
- ↑ Bond, David (10 February 1994). "No doubting Thomas has the staying power". Hull Daily Mail.
- ↑ "Thomas to lead side". Hull Daily Mail. 30 Jan 1997.
- ↑ "214 Completers Register". The Wainwright Society.
- ↑ "Coast to Coast Completers Register". The Wainwright Society.