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Jack Reynolds (footballer born 1869)

Jack Reynolds
Jack Reynolds.jpg
Personal information
Full name John Reynolds
Date of birth (1869-02-21)21 February 1869
Place of birth Blackburn, England
Date of death 12 March 1917(1917-03-12) (aged 48)
Place of death Sheffield, England
Height 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m)
Playing position Midfielder/Forward
Youth career
Witton
1884–1885 Blackburn Rovers
1886 Blackburn Park Road
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1886–1889 East Lancashire Regiment
1888–1890 Distillery
1890–1891 Ulster
1891–1892 West Bromwich Albion 17 (2)
1892 Droitwich Town
1892–1893 West Bromwich Albion 20 (1)
1893–1897 Aston Villa 96 (17)
1897 Celtic 4 (1)
1898 Southampton 2 (0)
1898–1899 Bristol St George
1899–1902 Royston F.C. (Yorkshire)
1902–1903 Grafton F.C. (New Zealand)
1903 1 (0)
1904–1905 Willesden Town
National team
1890–1891 Ireland 5 (1)
1892–1897 England 8 (3)
189x–189x English League XI 4
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

John Reynolds (21 February 1869 – 12 March 1917) was a footballer who played for, among others, West Bromwich Albion, Aston Villa and Celtic. As an international he played five times for Ireland before it emerged that he was actually English and he subsequently played eight times for England. He is the only player, barring own goals, to score for and against England and is the only player to play for both Ireland and England. He won the FA Cup with West Bromwich Albion in 1892 and was a prominent member of the successful Aston Villa team of the 1890s, winning three English League titles and two FA Cups, including a double in 1897.

Reynolds was noted as a highly competitive player with some remarkable ball skills and exceptionally brilliant footwork. He was regarded as one of the great footballers of the 1890s and was one of the highest paid players of his generation. However, he also gained a reputation for drinking and womanising and as result much of the money he earned disappeared. He fathered at least one illegitimate child and in 1899 he appeared in court for non-payment of child maintenance. His heavy drinking blighted his latter career and after brief spells at Celtic and then Southampton, he became a semi-professional journeyman. Towards the end of his life he worked as a miner in Sheffield and he died alone in a boarding house at the age of 48. Reynolds and his career have been the subject of several lectures, including one entitled How to play football, win friends and die young: The life of John Reynolds, given by Dr. Neal Garnham at the University of Ulster.

Although born in Blackburn, Lancashire, Reynolds grew up in Ahoghill in County Antrim, Ireland and attended schools in Portglenone and Ballymena. By the age of 15 he was back in Blackburn playing with, among others Blackburn Rovers reserves. In December 1886 he joined the British Army and was posted back to Ireland with the East Lancashire Regiment. While in Ireland he also played for the regimental team. In 1888 he also began playing for Distillery where his teammates included Olphert Stanfield and Billy Crone. He also played for Distillery in an FA Cup tie against one of his former clubs Blackburn Park Road F.C.. He missed the 1888–89 season due to suspension but despite this Distillery brought him out of the army in time for the 1889–90 season and Reynolds helped the club reach the final of the County Antrim Shield. In June 1890 he joined Ulster F.C., a now defunct Belfast team. In 1891 Reynolds helped this team finish runners-up to Linfield in both the Irish Cup and the very first Irish Football League.


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