Matt Tees slots home another goal |
AS Matt Tees was on the last stage of a rail journey from his home near Glasgow to Grimsby to become a full-time professional footballer, he had an encounter with a fellow rail-passenger.
With the train rattling along on its way from Doncaster through flat, featureless
countryside, he got into conversation with the man who shook his head
at the 22-year and gave him a look of deepest pity.
"You're
going to the back of beyond,"he warned. "It will be like falling off
the edge of the world."
Matt
was on his way to Blundell Park to meet up with Mariners manager Tom Johnston who had been
impressed by his achievements as part-time professional with the
Scottish First Division side Airdrie.
But
those casually-uttered remarks in the rail carriage sowed the seeds of
doubt. "I wondered what I was letting myself in for," Matt recalled
later."I began to have doubts about the whole idea."
As it
happened that fateful trip not only changed his life for ever, but it also
opened an extraordinary couple of chapters in the story of Grimsby Town FC.
Whatever
their age, every Grimsby Town fan is aware of Matt's momentous goal-scoring
feats in two spells with the Mariners - 1963-67 and 1970-73 - and those
lucky enough to have seen him play will have their own special individual
memories.
Now in
his 70s, his first match was a pre-season friendly against Leicester City - he scored after just 20
seconds.
Some
years later, there was an epic away quarter-final League Cup replay in
1966 against a West Ham side containing Bobby Moore, Geoff Hurst and Martin
Peters when Town went down to a single late goal.
Linesman overruled
"We
were robbed," says Matt. "It came from a move when their winger was
offside. The linesman flagged, but he was overruled by the referee.
"But
that's football. It was great match and, though we lost, I think we were the
better team on the day."
Matt
had other disappointments, not least as a teenager when he was a high-scoring
wing-forward for non-league Cambuslang Rangers in the season in which they
reached no fewer than three finals - including the Scottish Junior Cup
played at Glasgow's Hampden Park.
"We
lost all three,"he says." It was heartbreaking."
But
far from harbouring any regrets, Matt looks back with nothing but joy,
recognising that downs as well as ups are all part of the tapestry of a
career playing football - one to which many aspire but few attain.
He
picked up a few bookings along the way but was only once sent off - in a match
for the Mariners against Bury when he gave as good as he got after being
elbowed in the face.
He
and the opponent were both sent off - but even that incident had a silver
lining.
Nursing
a bruised jaw and concerned that he might have let the side down, he was
cheered up afterwards by his teammates who teased him the incident
had probably cost Bury their best player on the pitch!
Rewinding
to Matt's childhood in Johnstone, west of Glasgow, his dad worked for an
engineering firm and he has two older brothers, Alec and Hugh, were also useful
footballers.
But
Matt never played for his school team - because it did not have one!
Laying
down jackets as goalposts, he and his relatives and schoolmates used to play on
a bare patch of ground - with the start of play invariably delayed by the need
to pump up the bladder and tighten the laces of the battered leather ball.
When
a cousin went on to formed a side to play in the local league, Matt was
not even selected! He was deemed to small and frail.
Lunch break highlights
He
left school at 15 and went to work in a carpet factory - the highlights
being the lunch breaks when the 50-strong workforce swallowed down a quick bite
to eat, then got on with a kickabout.
"It
was great," he says. " It was 25-a-side, but it was lot of fun. We
were all colleagues and pals."
Matt
did eventually find his way into organised football with a club called Penilee
Athletic who put him on the left wing "out of danger of the midfield rough
and tumble" as he puts it.
.
But
he performed well enough to be spotted by Cambuslang - a move which proved
the springboard first for his transfer to Airdrie, where he spent three
years, then to the Mariners in time for the start of the 1963-64 season.
Despite
scoring both in the Leicester friendly and in his first match in the Football League - a
1-1 draw at Swansea - his early times in Cleethorpes and Grimsby were not the most
enjoyable.
Not
only was he unable to hold down a regular first-team place, but he
was lodging in Queen Mary Avenue with a couple and their
daughter but no one of the same age.
"I
was homesick to begin with,"he says. "I am sure it must have crossed
my mind to pack my bags and go back home.
But I
had been given the opportunity to play full-time professional - I didn't want
to let it slip."
Life
perked up when he moved to new lodgings in Neville Street where not only was he sharing
with another Town player, fellow-Scot George McLean, but he also had a
perfect landlady.
"Inga
McDonald was lovely,"he says. "She was a Germany lady who had moved
here after marrying a local man. She was like a second mum."
After
scoring only five goals in his first season, Matt was so concerned
that Town might decide to offload him that he wrote to a friend, Douglas
Wright, formerly of Partick Thistle but now playing in Sydney, who agreed to help him
find a club in the Australian League.
Contract renewed
However,
much to his relief and delight, Jimmy McGuigan, who by now had taken over as
Mariners manager, had confidence in Matt, and his contract was
renewed - he would be staying Town.
McGuigan's
faith was not full restored until Matt's third season when, alongside
strongly-built Rod Green - a signing from Gillingham - Matt more
than fulfilled his potential, scoring no fewer than 37 league and cup
goals.
The
duo were so lethal that interest was generated from other clubs, including
South London club Charlton Athletic whose manager Bob Stokoe - to
the grief of Town fans - snapped the pair up for a total outlay of £23,000.
The
transfer came as a bolt for the blue, not just for Town fans but also for the
lady in Matt's life, fellow-Scot May Wright - an accountant at a solicitor's
office and wife of former Town goalkeeper Charlie Wright who had been
transferred to Charlton the previous season.
When
the bid came, the couple were busy preparing not just for their
marriage but also to make an offer on a house in Fillingham Crescent.
The
wedding went ahead - in Scotland in June, 1967 - but the
proposed house purchase had to go out of the window.
"The
chance of a move to the South London club was too good to refuse,"says
May. "It was a chance for Matt to further his playing career. He had to
take it."
The
move to a Charlton club house near Blackheath proved popular not just
with the couple, who settled well, but also with family and friends who
were eager to come to "Tees Hotel" to see the sights of the
capital and to catch a West End show.
May
found a job in the CIty, but when the opportunity arose, she and Matt also
enjoyed the nightlife - for instance shows at the Palladium, seeing Sammy
Davis Jnr and chart-topping crooner Englebert Humperdinck in
pantomime.
But
with Charlton strapped for cash and at risk of folding, the couple were soon on
their travels again - this time when Matt was signed for Luton Town by Alec Stock, a gifted
old-school manager who also enjoyed success with a number of other clubs,
including QPR and Fulham.
Despite
their happy times down south, both Matt and May both missed the Cleethorpes
area. They had made many friends here - both inside and outside football.
It
was thus almost a dream come true when Town's player-manager Bobby Kennedy
brought Matt back to Blundell Park in 1970.
"I
couldn't wait to get back into the black-and-white strip,"says Matt." I had always loved playing
for Town. It was a great atmosphere - the fans were always fantastic."
Fantastic fans
It
proved to be a glorious return - one that prevailed into the following season
when, now with Lawrie McMenemy as manager, Matt scored 27 goals as the
Mariners powered to the Division Four title.
But
the world of football is often harsh. Though full of admiration for Matt's
achievements, McMenemy reckoned that he had reached and passed his peak and
decided to release him before age and injuries took their toll.
"I
was disappointed,"says Matt. "But I understood the decision. The
manager has to put the interests of the club first."
Matt
then joined Boston United where he enjoyed another illustrious season,
helping the Pilgrims to win the North Premier League title and playing
in a memorable 3rd Round FA Cup match against Derby County, at that time one of the top
sides in the land.
Matt
recalls having a drink after the match - a 0-0 draw - with Dave Mackay,
another football legend, then County's manager.
After
hanging up his boots, Matt worked for shipping company DFDS before retirement.
When
they moved back to the area, he and May raised their two boys Neil and Andrew.at
a house in Chichester Road but they now live in a
bungalow in a leafy crescent off Taylors Avenue in the resort.
They
are very family-orientated, regularly seeing their folks back home in Scotland, their own two boys plus the
wives, Lisa and Karen, and grandchildren, Alex, Lucy, Joe and Matthew.
They
also keep in regular contact with May's brother, Charlie Wight, a former
goalkeeper at Grimsby and Charlton, who later had spells in
football management with Bolton Wanderers and York City after his playing days were
over.
In
retirement, the Tees couple have enjoyed some superb holidays, including a six-week
tour of Australia.
Most
importantly, they have enjoyed being in Cleethorpes.
"Not
at all is it the back of beyond,"insists Matt. "It's a lovely area
and the people are great."
The article above is an updated version
of one that appeared in the Cleethorpes Chronicle newspaper in August
2008.
Copies of
Matt Tees on Football (which contains many
fascinating insights and superb action photographs) are available from the
Grimsby Town club shop and also (brand new) on ebay buy-it now.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Matt-Tees-striker-who-played-at-Airdrie-Grimsby-Charlton-Luton-and-Boston-/151499527424?pt=Non_Fiction&hash=item2346135500
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Matt-Tees-striker-who-played-at-Airdrie-Grimsby-Charlton-Luton-and-Boston-/151499527424?pt=Non_Fiction&hash=item2346135500
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