|
Fergus Suter.

Fergie Suter was a likeable man by all accounts, a keen sportsman
he was a member of the Partick Glasgow team that played friendly
games in Lancashire during 1877. Along with teammate Jimmy Love he
settled in Darwen and they both signed with Darwen FC. Jimmy Love as
well as playing for the club also worked at the Orchard mill, wereas
Fergie who was a stonemason by trade was never seen doing any, so
giving rise to the rumours he was being paid by Darwen for playing,
this would have made him the first professional footballer, but it
was never proven, Darwen always denied paying for his services, but
as Furgus later put it " I would interview the treasurer as occasion
arose".
He played for Darwen against the Old Etonians in the three match
quarter final FA cup tie in 1879, and the semi-final match of 1881
against the Old Carthusians both of which Darwen lost. He caused an
outcry in 1881 when he signed for local rivals Blackburn Rovers, he
played with the Rovers in four FA Cup finals in all, winning three
winners medals 1883/4/5, and a losers medal in 1882. By the time
Rovers reached the final again in 1890 Fergie had retired from the
game. Although one of the best players of his generation Fergie
never got to represent Scotland mainly because of the stigma that
was attached to him being a professional, and by the time the
Football League was formed in 1888 Fergie could not command a place
in the Rovers first team -- the only League game he ever played was
in 1889 as a stand-in goalkeeper for the Rovers . After hanging up
his boots he became a prominent man in Darwen in the years leading
upto the Great war, being licencee of the Millstone and White Lion
hotels for many years, around 1918 he retired and moved to Blackpool
where he died in the late 1920's, his friend Jimmy Love had joined
the Royal Navy in 1880 and was killed in the bombardment of
Alexandria in 1882. In August 2000 Fergie's gold winners medal from
the 1885 final was auctioned at Sotherbys London, it fetched the sum
of £6,500 bought by a anonymous collector.
Acknowledgements for the history in this section are made to :
Darwen RBL -- who originally published this page in 2002
|