Peter Thompson, 19422018 (aged 76 years)

Name
Peter /Thompson/
Given names
Peter
Surname
Thompson
Birth
Played for Preston
1958 (aged 15 years)
Played for Liverpool FC
Winger
64 February 1963 (aged 20 years)
Played for England
Left and Right Wing
1964 (aged 21 years)
Note: Player No. 826
Tag
Death
31 December 2018 (aged 76 years)
Played for England

Player No. 826

Shared note

Professional football player (Liverpool FC & England)

When a sprightly, if rather distant championship challenge withered in
April 1963 - the Reds first spring in the top flight for 9 years - Bill
Shankly made a momentous decision. He earmarked Peter Thompson as the one
crucial ingredient missing from his title-winning recipe and signed the
Preston winger, in the face of opposition from Juventus, Everton, and
Wolves, for a club record fee of £40,000. A year later Bill’s mission
was accomplished and the new man had played a thrilling part in the 1st of
many triumphs before his Anfield days were done.

Peter Thompson was a soccer sorcerer, a pleaser of crowds and a teaser of
full backs. On his day he brought to the game a dancers grace and the
daring of a matador, but when the Muse was not with him he was prone to
over -elaboration and could be the most frustrating man on the park. Unlike
certain other gifted players, however, he offered no hint of the ‘prima
donna’ and he was never afraid of hard graft.

Despite being right footed, Peter came into the side of the left flank
where Alan A’Court and Kevin Lewis had both been judged deficient during
the previous campaign. He made an eye catching debut at Ewood Park, running
at the Blackburn defenders, making them twist and turn in their efforts to
stay with their elusive opponent, and rendering the offside trap too
perilous to contemplate. As autumn turned to winter and the points piled
up, Peter and Ian Callaghan, whose more direct approach was in marked
contrast to Thompson’s jinking and swaying, became the most formidable
wing partnership in British football.

The Deepdale man’s impact at Anfield could hardly have been greater,
though there were those who said he should have scored more goals and that
his final pass too often went astray. The fact was that his fierce shot
could be a wayward weapon but his crosses, while not always matching the
brilliance of his approach play, were as reliable as those of his
contemporaries. There was also a theory that Peter should switch to the
right to encourage him to reach the byline and cross with his favoured
right foot instead of being forced infield as he was on the left, but such
a scheme took no account of the excellent Callaghan.

The nitpickers were predictably notable by their silence when Peter capped
his 1st richly rewarding term as a Red with his most devastating display to
date. He scored twice and turned the Arsenal defence inside out as
Liverpool made certain of the title, drubbing the Gunners 5-0 in front of
an ecstatic Kop.

Peters progress continued as Shankly’s men lifted the FA cup in 1965. His
personal highlight was waltzing past John Hollins and Marvin Hinton to grab
the 1st goal in the semi final against Chelsea with a fearsome left footed
drive between Peter Bonetti and his near post. A 2nd championship medal
soon followed but the nearest Peter came to further cup success was in 1971
when he came on as a substitute to breathe life into a hitherto dull final
which Arsenal won to clinch the double. By then he was plagued by knee
trouble and after alot of time on the treatment table he moved to Bolton in
November 1973. Surprisingly in view of past injuries, he was able to put in
four spirited years before retiring.

One perennial gripe of Liverpool fans was Peters banishment for long
periods to the international wilderness. After starring in Brazil in 1964
his appearances were cruelly curtailed by Alf Ramsey’s decision to do
without wingers, though he did represent his country as late as 1970. But
in the final analysis, it is in the Red shirt that Peter Thompson will be
remembered by fans. As an entertainer, a showman, and one of the finest of
his time.

Shanks once said “if your feeling tired Boys, pass the ball to Peter and
let him go for a run with it”. Peter was a man who could dribble for 90
minutes, and still have enough left in the tank for more. As most of you
will know dribbling is an artform, and a very tiring one at that. Jinking
left and right, stepping over the ball, and changing pace and direction can
be an extremely tiring excersise. Peter was born to do it, and love it.

A true Liverpool Great….

Games - 404 (8)
Goals - 54
16 England Caps.

Played for Liverpool FC
Played for England
Media object
Peter Thompson football card
Peter Thompson football card
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Peter Thompson football portrait
Peter Thompson football portrait
Media object
Peter Thompson
Peter Thompson

Obituary

The footballer Peter Thompson, who has died aged 76, was a stellar figure at Liverpool for much of Bill Shankly’s fruitful reign as manager, both when the club first shot to the summit in the mid-1960s and then when Shankly assembled a second, different looking side in the early 70s.

Before Thompson was forced to leave Liverpool through injury in 1974 he won two league championships, in 1964 and 1966, and was a key figure in their first ever FA Cup triumph in 1965. By the time he left Anfield he was considered one of the club’s greats.

A supremely hard-working presence on the left wing, Thompson had dribbling skills, allied to pace, control and a determination to get to the byline, that tormented countless defenders over the years.


But his berth at outside left worked against him at international level, as the England manager Alf Ramsey generally preferred to operate without wingers. He was named in provisional 28-man squads for the World Cup finals of 1966 and 1970, but on each occasion was among the unlucky half dozen who failed to make the final cut. As a result Thompson played a modest 16 times for his country between 1964 and 1970.

Born in Carlisle, he was the son of Eric Thompson, a joiner, and his wife, Margaret. Peter was hailed as one of the finest schoolboy stars of the late 50s and, although he trained as an apprentice toolmaker after attending Harraby secondary school in Carlisle, it was clear he would eventually become a professional footballer.

Peter Thompson, centre, beats Peter Houseman, left, and Eddie McCreadie to whip over a cross during a Liverpool v Chelsea game at Stamford Bridge.
Peter Thompson, centre, beats Peter Houseman, left, and Eddie McCreadie to whip over a cross during a Liverpool v Chelsea game at Stamford Bridge. Photograph: PA Photos/PA
First Division Preston North End won the race to sign him in 1959, making him a first-team regular at the age of 17 as a replacement for the great Tom Finney. He was the club’s top scorer in 1960-61 and made 121 league appearances in three years before Liverpool snatched him away in the summer of 1963 for a £37,000 transfer fee.


As he arrived at Anfield to sign a contract with Shankly, a large crowd of fans were milling around outside the ground. When Thompson asked what they had come to see, the manager replied: “You.”

Liverpool had just emerged into the First Division, and with Thompson playing every league match in his debut season they were able to win the championship ahead of Manchester United in 1963-64. He then made a strong contribution to Liverpool’s extra-time 2-1 victory in the 1965 FA Cup final against Leeds, and missed only two games in the 1965-66 campaign as his side took the First Division title again before losing 2-1 in the European Cup Winners’ Cup final against Borussia Dortmund.

In his first seven years at Anfield Thompson missed only 10 of 294 league fixtures, and in his later seasons there, when Liverpool were still highly competitive but unable to win silverware, he remained one of Shankly’s go-to men as the manager rebuilt his squad.

In Shankly’s penultimate season, 1972-73, Liverpool, making the most of the talents of new players such as John Toshack and Kevin Keegan, won the title again. By then, however, Thompson had developed serious knee problems and was unable to play for the first team at all during the campaign. He remained on Liverpool’s books, but his contract was allowed to expire at the beginning of 1974 and he decided to drop down a division to sign for Bolton, where he could manage his ailing joints more easily.

Having made his last first team appearance for Liverpool in January 1972, Thompson had played 416 times in all competitions for the club, scoring 54 goals. His relationship with Shankly had become strained in his last injury-racked days, but there was no doubting the manager’s deep admiration for him. “His work-rate was outstanding, his fitness unequalled, his balance like a ballet dancer,” said Shankly later.

Thompson managed another 126 matches for Bolton before retiring in 1978 at the age of 35 – after the club had gained promotion to the First Division.

After his footballing career ended he ran caravan parks near Morecambe in Lancashire for a number of years, then sold up to move into the hotel trade, including as owner of the Hare and Hounds hotel at Bowland Bridge in the Lake District and then the Delaine hotel in Harrogate.

He is survived by his second wife, Debbie (nee Crosbie), whom he married in 1993, and their two children, Chantell and Connor; and by two daughters, Deborah and Karen, from his first marriage, to Barbara, which ended in divorce.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2019/jan/01/peter-thompson-obituary

 

Descendants of Peter Thompson

  1. Generation 1
    1. Peter Thompson football card

      Peter Thompson was born on 27 November 1942 in Carlisle, Cumberland, ENG and died on 31 December 2018 at the age of 76.

Ancestors of Peter Thompson

  1. Generation 1
    1. Peter Thompson football card

      Peter Thompson was born on 27 November 1942 in Carlisle, Cumberland, ENG and died on 31 December 2018 at the age of 76.