Kevin Beattie Obituary

 Kevin Beattie celebrates a goal for England during a 5-1 win against Scotland at Wembley in the British Home Championship, 1975. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
Kevin Beattie celebrates a goal for England during a 5-1 win against Scotland at Wembley in the British Home Championship, 1975. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
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Kevin Beattie Obituary

 Kevin Beattie celebrates a goal for England during a 5-1 win against Scotland at Wembley in the British Home Championship, 1975. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock
Kevin Beattie celebrates a goal for England during a 5-1 win against Scotland at Wembley in the British Home Championship, 1975. Photograph: Colorsport/Rex/Shutterstock

When Ipswich Town were a footballing power in the late 1970s and early 80s, Kevin Beattie was at the core of their success. A central defender of unusual poise and class, he was the best player in a team that not only won the FA and Uefa cups but gave the great Liverpool side of that era a run for their money in the league.

Beattie, who has died aged 64 of a heart attack, was hailed by Ipswich fans as the club’s greatest ever player. But a greater measure of his standing was the universal respect he generated among his peers, who recognised not just his great technical prowess but the courage, strength and application that went with it. His ability to win the ball and then distribute it with calm precision drew comparisons with Bobby Moore, and of his generation there were few English footballers more highly rated within the game.

Yet given the level of acclaim that came his way, Beattie played a surprisingly small number of games for England – nine in total. Injuries were mostly to blame; he was often forced to withdraw after being selected, and at 28 had to make an early retirement with a longstanding and serious knee problem. What he failed to achieve on the international stage, however, he made up for on the domestic front with Ipswich, in 225 league appearances across a highly successful decade for the side. He remained close to the club for the rest of his life, including for a number of years as a football analyst on BBC Radio Suffolk.

Despite his long affiliation with Ipswich, Beattie was born in Carlisle. His background was a poor one – his father, a coalman, and his mother, a cleaner, had nine children, and his father’s heavy drinking took up much of the household income, often meaning Kevin did not eat for two or three days running. He left St Patrick’s Roman Catholic senior school, where he occasionally played truant because he had no shoes to wear, at 14 to work in factory and warehouse jobs.

Spotted by a scout playing in local leagues, at 15 Beattie was invited to talks with the Liverpool manager Bill Shankly, but when he arrived in the city the club had forgotten to send anyone to meet him, and with no money to get to the ground he returned on the first train home. Shortly afterwards Ipswich jumped in to exploit Liverpool’s missed opportunity and their manager, Bobby Robson, is said to have told his chief scout that he would lose his job if he failed to rendezvous with the youngster. Beattie turned up at the interview wearing his father’s shoes, and when Ipswich signed him as an apprentice in 1970, Robson’s first act was to make sure he was properly shod.

Beattie turned professional in 1971 and the following year made his debut, aged 18, in a 2-1 win against Manchester United. He was the inaugural winner of the Professional Footballers’ Association (PFA) Young Player of the Year award in 1974, and was playing for England – in a 5-0 win against Cyprus – by 1975.

Immensely strong, athletic, and extremely quick over the first 10 yards, Beattie was a superb tackler, could spring impressively high when heading the ball, and had a powerful left-footed shot. “He was quite annoying, really, because everything came so easy for him,” said his Ipswich colleague Roger Osborne. “He was just stronger, fitter and better than anyone else. He didn’t have to try.”In the season before Beattie’s debut, Ipswich were placed 13th in the First Division, but in all but one of the nine campaigns in which he featured, the club finished no worse than sixth, including runners-up to Aston Villa in 1980-81. With Beattie in the side they also won the FA Cup final in 1978 – a 1-0 victory against Arsenal, courtesy of an Osborne goal – and while he did not play in the two legs of the 5-4 Uefa Cup final victory over the Dutch club AZ Alkmaar three years later, he was eventually awarded a medal by Uefa to recognise his contributions earlier in the competition.

He had played in what turned out to be his last match for Ipswich shortly before that final, when he broke his arm in an FA Cup semi-final against Manchester City. By then, years of problems with his knees had already taken their toll, ending his England career in 1977 and increasingly interfering with his club availability. After the fifth in a series of unsuccessful operations in 1981 Beattie was forced to call time with Ipswich at the end of the year.

He tried short-lived comebacks in lower leagues with Colchester United and Middlesbrough during 1982-83, then moved into non-league football in the mid-80s, interspersed with brief periods at three minor teams in Scandinavia.

Despite having received £50,000 from a testimonial match with Ipswich and a fee for acting as Michael Caine’s body double in the football sequences of the 1981 film Escape to Victory, Beattie lived for much of the rest of his life in straitened circumstances. In recent years, however, he had received financial help from the PFA and had put his life on a more even keel, acting as a full-time carer to his wife, Margaret, as her multiple sclerosis worsened.

Affable and down to earth even at the height of his fame, Beattie remained a popular figure in Ipswich, and returned to the public eye through his matchday work on local radio from 2008 onwards. In 2012 he was given a 12-week curfew as punishment for benefit fraud, having failed to declare his modest radio earnings for fear that he would lose income support.

He is survived by Margaret (nee Boldy), whom he married in the early 70s, and by their three daughters, Emma, Sarah and Louise.

The Guardian Sport



Government: Soccer-related Arrests Have Risen in England

Soccer Football - Euro 2020 - Group D - General view of Wembley Stadium ahead of the England v Croatia match - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - June 12, 2021 REUTERS/Carl Recine/File Photo
Soccer Football - Euro 2020 - Group D - General view of Wembley Stadium ahead of the England v Croatia match - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - June 12, 2021 REUTERS/Carl Recine/File Photo
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Government: Soccer-related Arrests Have Risen in England

Soccer Football - Euro 2020 - Group D - General view of Wembley Stadium ahead of the England v Croatia match - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - June 12, 2021 REUTERS/Carl Recine/File Photo
Soccer Football - Euro 2020 - Group D - General view of Wembley Stadium ahead of the England v Croatia match - Wembley Stadium, London, Britain - June 12, 2021 REUTERS/Carl Recine/File Photo

Soccer-related arrests are the on rise in England and Wales, the UK government said on Thursday. The highest number of cases were recorded at West Ham matches for the third year in a row, The Associated Press reported.
There were 2,584 football-related arrests in the 2023-24 season — a 14% increase on the previous year, figures released by the Home Office showed.
The government said the rise was driven by arrests relating to the possession of class A drugs and this year's European Championship in Germany.
The rate of arrests over the season was 5.5 per 100,000 fans attending matches in the top six levels of men’s English soccer, the Welsh league and the top two levels of women's soccer. Statistics also covered matches involving the England and Wales national teams, the Champions League final staged at Wembley Stadium, and age group matches.
“It is important that these figures are put into context. Last season around 47 million people attended men’s domestic and international matches, the highest number we have on record, and the vast majority of football fans are law-abiding citizens who want to support their team," said chief constable Mark Roberts, who is the lead for soccer policing in the UK. “However, there are a small number of fans who commit offences, and we will continue to work closely with (prosecutors) and our other partners to ensure that those responsible are held accountable."
According to the figures, there were no arrests at women's matches, despite their growing popularity and increased attendances.
Figures showed 281 arrests related to Euro 2024.
The club with the highest number of arrests was West Ham, with 103. Manchester City and Manchester United were joint second with 88. Arsenal was fourth (85) and Chelsea sixth (67).
West Ham also had the highest number of banning orders (93), with Man United second (89). Second-tier Millwall was third with 82 banning orders.
A banning order can last from three to 10 years and can be issued by courts for reasons such as a conviction for a soccer-related offense.
There were 825 new banning orders, the highest number since 2010-11.
The most common type of arrest was for public disorder, which made up 43% of cases, with violent disorder making up 19%. Possession of class A drugs accounted for 13%.
The throwing of missiles was the most commonly reported incident, at 416 matches, with pyrotechnics reported at 394 matches.
There were reports of hate crime incidents in 341 matches, which related to issues including race (226) and sexual orientation (113).
There were 423 incidents of online hate crime.