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Billy McCandless

Billy McCandless
McCandless around age 29, in a button-up shirt, with hair slicked back
McCandless c. 1922
Personal information
Full name William McCandless
Date of birth 20 December 1893[1]
Place of birth Craigs, County Antrim, Ireland
Date of death 18 July 1955(1955-07-18) (aged 61)
Place of death Swansea, Wales
Height 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Position(s) Left-back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1914–1920 Linfield
1920–1930 Rangers 202 (8)
1930–1933 Ballymena
International career
1919 Ireland (wartime) 1 (0)
1919 Irish League XI 2 (0)
1919–1929 Ireland 9 (0)
Managerial career
1930–1933 Ballymena
1933–1937 Dundee
1937–1946 Newport County
1946–1947 Cardiff City
1947–1955 Swansea City
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

William McCandless (20 December 1893 – 18 July 1955) was an Irish international football player and manager. As a player McCandless normally played at left-back, most notably at Rangers where he won six Scottish Football League titles with the side. Following his retirement from playing he went into management, enjoying most success with Welsh sides Newport County, Cardiff City and Swansea Town, taking all three sides to the Division Three South title.

Club career

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McCandless was born in Craigs[1] near Ballymena, and grew up in Ahoghill, County Antrim,[2] the son of John McCandless, a grocer, and Matilda (née Eyre), a dressmaker.[1][3]

He started his career with non-league sides Ligoniel and Barn before joining Linfield in 1914. He stayed with the Blues for six years, helping them to Irish Cup success in 1916 and 1919 before his performance in a 2–0 defeat to England while playing for Ireland prompted a number of British sides to show interest in signing him. Eventually joining Rangers in 1920 for £2,500, a record fee for an Irish player at the time, he went on to add six Scottish Football League titles to his honours collection[4] while playing at Ibrox where he formed a formidable full back pairing with another Irishman, Bert Manderson.

In 1930, by then a veteran, McCandless was given the opportunity to move into football management by Ballymena, where he was appointed player-manager. He returned to Scotland in 1933 to take charge of Dundee before moving to Newport County in 1937, where he helped them to promotion to Division 2 in 1939 despite using just 13 players throughout the season.[5][6] Following the end of the war the majority of his title winning team moved to different clubs and, after falling out with the board over the future of the team, he resigned.

He was a man who lived for football and Welsh soccer has sustained a severe loss in the death of this Irishman who did so much for it. Billy Mac will be mourned by the soccer public everywhere.

Western Mail[7]

A month later he was appointed Cardiff City manager in 1946 and took the side to the Division Three South title in his first year finishing nine points clear of second place Queens Park Rangers but, after only a few months of the following season, he left to join local rivals Swansea Town.[8] At the club he completed a unique treble, having taken three Welsh sides to the Division Three South title.[9]

He died suddenly on 18 July 1955 at his home in Swansea, while still the club's manager.[9]

International career

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McCandless won his first Ireland cap on 25 October 1919 in the first post-war international, a 1–1 draw with England.[7] He went on to win a total of 9 caps for Ireland, making his final appearance on 2 February 1929 in a 2–2 draw with Wales.

Honours

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Player

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Linfield Swifts
Linfield
Rangers

Manager

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Newport County
Cardiff City
Swansea Town

References

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  1. ^ a b c "SR District/Reg Area – Ballymena Birth of WILLIAM MCCANDLESS in 1893" (PDF). irishgenealogy.ie. 1893. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  2. ^ "Footballer's Death". Ballymena Weekly Telegraph. 22 July 1955. Retrieved 14 August 2017. Mr. Billy McCandless, manager of Swansea Town F.C., who died suddenly at his home in Swansea on Monday was a native of Ahoghill...
  3. ^ Census of Ireland in 1901 and 1911; National Archives of Ireland.
  4. ^ John Litster (October 2012). "A Record of pre-war Scottish League Players". Scottish Football Historian magazine.
  5. ^ "1920–1943" Government of the United Kingdom. Retrieved 10 June 2009
  6. ^ "Club history" Archived 29 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine newport-county.co.uk. Retrieved 9 September 2013
  7. ^ a b "Billy McCandless" NIfootball.com. Retrieved 10 June 2009
  8. ^ "The post-war recovery" Archived 30 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine cardiffcityfc.co.uk. Retrieved 9 September 2013
  9. ^ a b "Death of Billy McCandless". Dundee Courier. 19 July 1955. Retrieved 14 August 2017.