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Maurice Reeday
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Maurice was born in Darwen and played with the youth team in the
early 1930's before graduating first to the West Lancs team then Combination
side. A brilliant full back Maurice soon had Scouts taking notice and when in
1934 he had not signed a contract for the club he moved to Blackpool for no
fee. His chances at Blackpool were few and he joined Accrington Stanley in 1936,
then moving on to Leicester City for a four figure sum in 1937. During his spell
at Leicester Maurice came up against the legendary Stanley Matthews of Stoke
City three times, in quick succession once in the League and then in a FA Cup
tie -- plus replay, and Maurice kept the star forward off the scoresheet on
each occasion.
The Daily Mirror serialised Matthews biography in 1961. In it Sir Stanley himself
takes up the story: "I had not even heard of Reeday
up to that league game, in fact I did not know his name until after the game
when I grabbed a programme anxious to find the name of my tormentor. I found
my early attempts to get round him failed, I went inside-left, and Mister Reeday
was again there to take the ball off me. Eventually fed up with failure, I said
" hav'nt you got a home to go to?" He grinned and replied " Yes,
but it won't blow away before the games over"
Unfortunately, as with many of his generation the Second World War deprived
Maurice of what would have been his best years in first class football. On the
outbreak of war he took a job in Accrington and played for Howard and Bulloughs
works team.
When the Stanley team started up again after the war he again played for them
but suffered a knee injury which put him out of the game for some time. In later
years he returned to finish his playing days with Darwen. After which he ran
a cobblers shop for many years in School street Darwen.