ALBION’S right back when I first started watching them in the late 1960s was someone who would go on to make much more of a mark as a coach.
Gareth Bale, Theo Walcott and Adam Lallana were among the players developed by Stewart Henderson. Wayne Bridge and Chris Baird, too.
That was all to come for Stewart when I first saw him wearing the number 2 shirt in Freddie Goodwin’s Division 3 side.

Henderson, who shares the same June birthday as me, albeit he was born 11 years earlier, was only 5’6″ tall but he had noticeably muscular thighs. Hailing from Bridge of Allan in Scotland, his stature didn’t stop him earning Scottish schoolboy international honours and he was on the winning side in three matches.
The Scots beat Northern Ireland 5-1 at Windsor Park, Belfast – when future Albion teammate John Napier was playing for the home side – Wales at Ninian Park, Cardiff, and England at Ibrox Park where a 30,000 crowd watched.
That recognition followed his success playing for his school team, St Modans High School in Stirling, and Stirlingshire Schoolboys. It eventually took him to England at the age of 17 in 1964 to join Chelsea.
Tommy Docherty was their manager at that time and he obviously wasn’t convinced Henderson was good enough for the First Division, so he dropped down to the Third with Brighton where, for a couple of seasons, he had the unenviable task of trying to oust captain and Northern Irish international Jimmy Magill from the right back slot.

He made his debut on 3 May 1966 away to Exeter a month before his 19th birthday and didn’t make his home debut until 1 October that year, stepping up when Magill was injured and helping Albion to a 5-2 win over Peterborough.
It wasn’t until March 1968, though, that he eventually cemented his place in the side. But when he did, he became a near-permanent fixture for the next four years. He only scored once in 199 appearances, that coming in a 6-0 drubbing of Oldham Athletic on 24 August 1968.
In the 1969-70 campaign, he missed only one game and the supporters chose him as player of the season. He played 36 league games in Pat Saward’s first season in charge and in the 1971-72 promotion campaign was a regular in the line-up right through until the famous televised Aston Villa home game in March 1972 when Saward made two shock changes and left out both Henderson and captain John Napier for the top of the table clash.
It was the beginning of the end for Henderson and he cuts a rather-forlorn looking figure in a picture of the newly-promoted team captured in the Goldstone dressing room after gaining the necessary point against Rochdale, standing fully-clothed alongside his team mates in their kit, taking a sip of champagne.
Saward made him available for transfer at the end of the season and although he stayed with the club, he played only two more league games, and a league cup game, in the following season before being transferred to Reading in June 1973.
Henderson had chalked up 198 league games and 14 cup games during his time with Brighton but the move to Berkshire was by no means a petering out of his career.
I am grateful to the website of the Reading FC Former Players Association (readingformerplayers.co.uk) to discover how, although manager Charlie Hurley signed Stewart initially as a full-back, in 1975 he pushed him into a midfield role with immediate success: Stewart scored twice in the first 17 minutes at Bradford City.
He went on to be an influential member of Reading’s 1976 Fourth Division promotion winning side. In May 1977, he was made club coach and worked closely with manager Maurice Evans helping the club win the 1978/79 Fourth Division Championship.
Amazingly Stewart was recalled to the playing squad at the beginning of the 1979/80 season, at the age of 32, and continued playing intermittently until May 1983 when he played the last of his 186 games for the Royals and became Reading’s first Centre of Excellence director.
Coaching became his new direction and he was at manager Ian Branfoot’s side when Reading beat Luton at Wembley to win the Simod Cup in 1988 (a game incidentally in which former Albion winger Neil Smillie was one of the goalscorers for the Royals and Steve Foster and Danny Wilson were playing for Luton).
Henderson left Elm Park in 1989 to take up the role of youth development officer at Southampton, where his work began helping to produce some of the finest footballing talent in the country.
He was to spend over 20 years at Southampton in various roles working with the youth and academy teams, the reserve side and even had a short spell as first team manager.
It’s worth quoting an article from the Mirror in October 2012, when Matt Law reckoned Southampton owed a £55million debt of gratitude to Malcolm Elias, Steve Wigley, Huw Jennings and Stewart Henderson who spotted and coached the incredible Southampton Fame Academy, which through transfer fees effectively saved the club from extinction.
Gareth Bale, Theo Walcott, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Wayne Bridge, Kenwyne Jones, Adam Lallana, James Ward-Prowse and Luke Shaw were all named as coming under the influence of the quartet who, after being released by Southampton moved on together to Fulham.


BILLY McEWAN was part of a £15,000 double signing made by Brian Clough in his brief reign as manager of the Albion in the 1973-74 season.
Albion were flirting dangerously close to the relegation places as Clough struggled to find the right formula with players nowhere near the quality he had been used to working with at Derby.
He moved onto the coaching staff at Millmoor and subsequently managed the side between 1988 and 1991. In his first season in charge (1988-89) he guided them to the old 4th division championship with a side featuring 

SCOTTISH international Neil Martin remains a legend at one of his homeland clubs but his brief time at Brighton was more like a bad dream after a goalscoring start.
Martin scored 28 goals in 119 games for Nottingham Forest having moved down from Scotland in the 1960s and begun his English league career with Sunderland.
One of his most prolific spells was at Coventry City (above) where, in three years, between 1968 and 1971, he scored 40 goals in 106 appearances.





DANNY WILSON, a Brian Clough signing for Nottingham Forest who struggled for games at the City Ground, hit the ground running when he joined the Albion, initially on loan, in November 1983.
“It was a fantastic move for me,” Wilson said in a retrospective matchday programme article. “I’d gone from being a regular at Chesterfield to being a bit part at the City Ground, surrounded by all these players who had won European Cups, people like Garry Birtles and Viv Anderson. But with the likes of Ian Bowyer ahead of me, I was never going to get first team football.






THE SONGS still sung today that immortalise




To be fair, Baird had a reasonable goalscoring record at Brighton, netting 14 in 41 games following a £35,000 move from Plymouth Argyle.
GRAHAM MOSELEY once played in a FA Cup semi-final for Derby against Manchester United but went one better with Brighton and made it to the final.

Nevertheless, when injury curtailed big Joe’s career, Moseley stepped back into the top spot and his heroics in the 1984-85 season earned him the player of the season accolade.
BBC TV football pundit Garth Crooks in his playing days scoring for Spurs past Moseley.

The climax to the season was a classic case of ‘if onlys’ where ‘Budgie’ was concerned: if only he hadn’t been injured in that final game against Ipswich, he would have been fit to play from the start in the final.






The performances of the lad from Colwyn Bay also saw him earn three international caps for Wales, two against Scotland and one in a rout against Malta when he also got on the scoresheet. Unfortunately for him, during the same period, a superb left-sided player called Leighton James was the first choice for the national side.
