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George Francis (footballer)

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Full name
  
George Edward Francis

Name
  
George Francis

Place of birth
  
Acton, England

Role
  
Football player

Place of death
  
Slough, England

Playing position
  
Forward

1949–1955
  
Brentford


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Date of birth
  
(1934-02-04)4 February 1934

Date of death
  
22 October 2014(2014-10-22) (aged 80)

Died
  
October 22, 2014, Slough, United Kingdom

George Edward Francis (4 February 1934 – 22 October 2014) was an English former professional football centre forward, best remembered for his two spells in the Football League with Brentford. He is a member of the Brentford Hall of Fame and is synonymous with Jim Towers, their close friendship and strike partnership seeing the pair dubbed 'The Terrible Twins'.

Contents

Early years

A centre forward, Francis began his career as a schoolboy with a team fielded by the Odeon cinema in his hometown of Acton. He regularly played against Jim Towers of the local Gaumont cinema team and the pair would later link up as professionals at Brentford. Francis later represented the Acton, Brentford & Chiswick schools' team.

Brentford

Francis signed for the junior team at Division Two side Brentford in 1949, after rejecting an offer from Blackburn Rovers. He progressed to the youth team and signed his first professional contract in January 1953, but had to wait until 1955 to make his first team debut, which came in a Division Three South match versus Walsall on 19 February. Francis had a dream start, scoring a late equaliser in a 2–2 draw. He made two further appearances in what remained of the 1954–55 season, scoring another goal. Francis made a minor breakthrough into the first team during the 1955–56 season, making 18 appearances, scoring eight goals and beginning a strike partnership with friend Jim Towers. He made his full breakthrough in the 1956–57 season, making 44 appearances and scoring 24 goals.

Francis' best season came in 1959–60, scoring 31 goals in 48 games, featuring as an ever-present. A memorable moment in his season was scoring a hattrick in a 4–2 victory at Loftus Road, home of West London rivals Queens Park Rangers. At the end of a lean 1960–61 season (in which Francis scored only 10 goals in 35 appearances), the abolition of the maximum wage rule saw Francis and Towers depart the Bees. Francis scored 121 goals in 243 appearances over the course of six years in the first team at Griffin Park.

Queens Park Rangers

Francis and Towers joined Division Three side Queens Park Rangers in an £8,000 deal in the summer of 1961. Francis failed to last long at Loftus Road, making just three appearances, though scoring three goals, before departing in October 1961.

Return to Brentford

Francis returned to Brentford in October 1961 and immediately won his place back in the team, though his 14 league goals couldn't prevent the Bees from suffering relegation to Division Four. He departed the club at the end of the season, having made 37 appearances and scored 15 goals during his brief return. Across his two spells with Brentford, Francis made 280 appearances and scored 136 goals. He was inducted into the Brentford Hall of Fame in March 2014.

Gillingham

Francis signed for Division Four side Gillingham in August 1962 for a £4,000 fee. He scored 12 goals in 35 league games during the 1962–63 season, but the Gills missed out on promotion with a fifth-place finish. Five months into the season, Francis was joined by his old friend Jim Towers at the club. Though he made only 16 appearances, Francis scored seven goals during the 1963–64 season and scored the winner versus Newport County on the final day, which saw Gillingham clinch the Division Four championship. He departed the club at the end of the campaign, having scored 21 goals in 58 games for the Gills.

Non-league football

After his departure from Gillingham, Francis dropped into non-league football and closed out his career with spells at Southern League sides Hastings United, Hillingdon Borough and Stevenage Town.

Personal life

Francis undertook his National Service together with Jim Towers in the Royal Irish Fusiliers in Germany. After retiring from football, he became a black cab driver and held a season ticket at Stamford Bridge. Francis died on 22 October 2014 at Wexham Park Hospital in Slough, after a long battle with bowel cancer. He was 80 years old.

As a player

Gillingham

  • Football League Division Four: 1963–64
  • As an individual

  • Brentford Hall of Fame
  • References

    George Francis (footballer) Wikipedia