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Sam Bartram

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Full name
  
Samuel Bartram

Years
  
Team

Playing position
  
Goalkeeper

Height
  
1.78 m

Role
  
Footballer

Date of birth
  
22 January 1914

Name
  
Sam Bartram


Sam Bartram BlackAndWhite Snapshot Charlton Athletic Reward Sam

Date of death
  
17 July 1981(1981-07-17) (aged 67)

Died
  
July 17, 1981, Harpenden, United Kingdom

Place of birth
  
South Shields, England

Place of death
  
Harpenden, England

Sam bartram s 500th match 1954


Samuel Bartram (22 January 1914 – 17 July 1981) was an English footballer and manager.

Contents

Sam Bartram Charlton legend Sam Bartram helps Boldon floodlights

Sam bartram goalkeeping legend


Career

Sam Bartram httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen110Cha

After school, Sam Bartram became a miner and played as either centre forward or wing-half in north east non-league football. As a teenager he had an unsuccessful trial with Reading. When his local village club Boldon Villa were without a goalkeeper for a cup final in 1934 Sam took over in goal. A scout from Charlton Athletic, Angus Seed, was watching the game and Sam played so well that Angus recommended him to Charlton Athletic. In his first three years with Charlton the club rose from Division Three to runners-up in the top division. He subsequently played in goal for Charlton for 22 years, and was never dropped from the team until he retired in 1956. He is considered one of Charlton's greatest players, and their finest keeper. In his time at Charlton he won the FA Cup in 1947.

Sam Bartram Sam Bartram Charlton Athletic English Football 195039s

Bartram was involved in a well reported incident when thick fog closed in on a game he was playing against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.

Sam Bartram Sam Bartram Charlton Goalkeeper Fists Clear a Ball from

"Soon after the kick-off," he wrote in his autobiography, "[fog] began to thicken rapidly at the far end, travelling past Vic Woodley in the Chelsea goal and rolling steadily towards me. The referee stopped the game, and then, as visibility became clearer, restarted it. We were on top at this time, and I saw fewer and fewer figures as we attacked steadily."

Sam Bartram Ftbol escultura Sam Bartram Cartas Esfricas

The game went unusually silent but Sam remained at his post, peering into the thickening fog from the edge of the penalty area. And he wondered why the play was not coming his way.

"After a long time," he wrote, "a figure loomed out of the curtain of fog in front of me. It was a policeman, and he gaped at me incredulously. "What on earth are you doing here?" he gasped. "The game was stopped a quarter of an hour ago. The field's completely empty".'

Although Bartram toured Australia with an England XI in 1951 and played for the England B team, he was burdened with the unwanted praise of 'the finest goalkeeper never to play for England' as the England national football team had both Frank Swift and Ted Ditchburn jostling for the goalkeeper position. He played in four successive Wembley finals between 1944 and 1947 and was runner-up in the 1954 Footballer of the Year vote at the age of 40.

Bartram left Charlton to manage York City, then Luton Town, prior to a career as a football columnist for The People and spent his final years in Harpenden. In 1976/7 an estate was built at the Jimmy Seed end of the ground consisting of a block of flats and seven houses. It was named Sam Bartram Close. In 2005, a nine-foot statue of Sam Bartram was erected outside The Valley, home of Charlton Athletic, in order to celebrate the club's centenary.

Fifty years after his retirement, Charlton Athletic named Bartram's bar and restaurant in his honour at their Valley headquarters.

Professional statistics

Sam Bartram holds the following records for Charlton Athletic:

  • Most FA Cup Appearances: 44
  • Most Total Appearances: 623
  • Most League Appearances: 579
  • Oldest League Player Aged: 42
  • References

    Sam Bartram Wikipedia