Flamboyant Frank Worthington’s career included a brief Brighton stopover

3-fw-albionFRANK Worthington was one of football’s genuine entertainers and it was a privilege to witness his season at The Goldstone between 1984 and 1985.

An all-too-brief England career which saw him win eight caps in 1974 was a long way behind him by the time his former Huddersfield Town teammate Chris Cattlin secured his signature for Brighton, but what the legs could no longer do, the brain more than made up for.

He was on the scoresheet in only his second game, a bruising encounter when Notts County were beaten 2-1, even though Albion played the second half with only 10 men – centre backs Eric Young and Jeff Clarke having been hospitalised by clashes with Justin Fashanu.

Worthington went on to make 30 appearances (plus five as sub) scoring eight times in total. Two of the goals came in his penultimate match against Wolverhampton Wanderers, one being a penalty struck so hard that it broke the hand of their ‘keeper Tim Flowers.

In June 2013, in the Huddersfield Examiner, Cattlin told interviewer Doug Thomson: “He did a good job for me. Frank wasn’t only a great player, but a great bloke as well, a dedicated trainer and a great bloke to have around a club.”

Worthington reflected on his time at the club in a matchday programme interview with Spencer Vignes in 2003. “I’d known Chris since my early days at Huddersfield,” he said. “I’d liked him so when he asked whether or not I’d be prepared to come to Brighton, I didn’t really have to think too long about it. They were a good side that hadn’t long been out of the First Division, so it sounded attractive.”

He continued: “We had some good players and certainly had no problems finding the net. I felt as though I was playing OK and the fans seemed to like me. But Chris did have this thing where he would chop and change the team around quite a bit, even if we were winning. He never really seemed sure what his best side was, and I think our form began to suffer because of it.”

Worthington reckoned it led to disharmony in the dressing room, and, for his own part, while he was good friends with Jimmy Case and Hans Kraay, he couldn’t say the same for Chris Hutchings or Kieran O’Regan. Albion finished sixth in the table, three points off automatic promotion and, although he was offered a new one-year contract, he decided to move on to try his hand at management.

So Brighton was only a brief stop-off in a 20-year career which saw Worthington score 236 goals in 757 league games. Add in games he also played in the United States with Philadelphia Fury and Tampa Bay Rowdies, in South Africa, Sweden and in English non-league, and the games total amounts to an amazing 828.

Halifax-born Worthington’s father was a pre-war professional and his two brothers, David and Bob, were also professionals. Unlike his brothers, the hometown club dithered over signing Frank and Huddersfield jumped in and secured his signature.

After manager Ian Greaves selected him for the opening fixture of the 1969-70 season, he clocked up 100 consecutive appearances for the Terriers.

The flamboyant Worthington famously almost joined Liverpool in 1972 but the deal was called off when he failed a medical due to a reported high blood pressure reading.

Liverpool signed John Toshack instead while Worthington went to Leicester City for £85,000.

Having made nearly a quarter of a million pounds from the sale of David Nish to Derby County, Leicester boss Jimmy Bloomfield had a useful kitty which he splashed on Worthington, Dennis Rofe, Keith Weller, Jon Sammels and Alan Birchenall.

Worthington scored on his Leicester debut at Old Trafford and in an article with Goal magazine on 21 October 1972, he said: “It’s different playing for Leicester City compared with Huddersfield. At Huddersfield the emphasis was on hard running and effort – here it is on skill, and there is a hell of a lot of skill in this side.”

In the same publication two years later, he had finished the 1973-74 season with 25 goals to his name and he was full of compliments for Bloomfield.

“Basically I am a player who relies on skill and that fits perfectly into Jim’s plans,” he said. “I always think that teams reflect the style and outlook of their managers. That’s why Leicester’s philosophy is that there is no substitute for skill.”

His time at Leicester lasted five years and spanned more than 200 appearances before he switched to Bolton Wanderers – where one audacious goal he scored against Ipswich remains a YouTube favourite – and then Birmingham City, helping both sides to promotions.

In 1982 he played for Leeds, the following season Sunderland and the next, Southampton, before pitching up at The Goldstone.

Worthington’s first go at management, while continuing to play, came with two years at Tranmere – and his first signing was Albion’s Ian Muir. He told Vignes: “Ian Muir was a fantastic forward with great touch. He did things in training you just wouldn’t believe, yet he wasn’t even making the side at Brighton under Chris.”

Muir became a hero on Wirral, scoring 141 goals as Rovers won promotion twice and won the Associate Members Cup at Wembley in 1991. By then, Worthington was long gone, having moved on to Preston, then Stockport County, and, after a succession of brief stays with various non-league clubs, ended up with hometown club Halifax Town, where he was briefly joined by Case.

Albion’s shirt sponsor during his season with the club was Phoenix Brewery. Quite apt for a player who was famously quoted as saying: “I’ve squandered fortunes on booze, birds and gambling – it’s better than wasting it!”

Tellingly, his autobiography, published in 1995, entitled One Hump or Two, was a classic tell-all romp of a colourful career on and off the pitch.

Worthington died aged 72 on 22 March 2021 and, in a statement, his wife Carol said: “Frank brought joy to so many people throughout his career and in his private life. He will be greatly missed by everyone who loved him so much.”

The great man’s lifestyle spawned many eye-catching headlines over the years and there is no shortage of stories about him to be found on the internet.

Follow the links for just three examples.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2016/may/06/frank-worthington-denies-being-diagnosed-with-alzheimers-disease

http://www.90min.com/posts/26691-england-s-wasted-talent-1-frank-worthington

http://www-users.york.ac.uk/~sph2/lufc/mag/worthing.htm

1-fw-hudd2-fw-leic4-fw-headline

Pictures from my scrapbook show Worthington in Goal magazine in Huddersfield and Leicester’s colours, in Albion’s Phoenix Brewery-sponsored shirt and a classic headline. Pictures also from the Albion matchday programme.

Goalscorer Gilliver was heading for trouble in the days of heavier footballs

MOST football fans of a certain age will be familiar with the story of former West Brom and England centre forward Jeff Astle’s death in 2002 from early on-set dementia caused by heading footballs during his career.

The same condition has befallen Allan Gilliver, who played up front for Brighton and Lincoln City.

In September 2015, the Bradford Telegraph and Argus carried a report in which they said: “In 2013 Allan discovered he had dementia and that the likely cause is heading the ball – something he did throughout his football career.”

‘I scored a lot of goals heading the ball, we had heading practice every day,’ Allan told the newspaper. ‘It hurt like hell; footballs were much heavier back then and retained moisture.’

The story was being told in the run-up to a charity event to raise funds and awareness of dementia and Gilly was something of a legend in Bradford having worked behind the scenes at Bradford City for many years after his playing career had ended.

He had originally moved to City from Lincoln in 1972, where he teamed up with former Brighton captain and centre half John Napier (pictured below in a Bradford team photo).

Gilliver arrived at the Goldstone in the summer of 1969 on a free transfer from his hometown club, Rotherham United. He’d been born in the village of Swallownest (in the borough of Rotherham) on 3 August 1944. He was a keen all-round sportsman and when he was 14 was invited for net practice with the Yorkshire county side.

But he opted to pursue a career in football and joined Huddersfield Town in 1961. He scored on his debut in a 4-1 win at home to Swansea and he went on to score 22 goals in 45 appearances for Town. But in June 1966 a £12,000 fee saw him switch to Blackburn Rovers where he netted nine goals in 34 matches.Gilli Rovers

Two years later, Tommy Docherty signed him for Rotherham to partner Jim Storrie up front and he scored four goals in 29 matches for the Millers. His signing for Brighton proved to be a shrewd bit of business by manager Freddie Goodwin because Gilliver ended the 1969-70 season top scorer with 16 league and cup goals.

He made an encouraging start by netting on his debut in the pre-season 6-0 win over a Gibraltar XI. It wasn’t long before he was off the mark in the league too, scoring the only goal in a 1-0 win at Plymouth on 16 August.

Gilliver also scored in two of the Albion’s memorable League Cup ties in the autumn of 1969, netting in the 2-0 defeat of Birmingham, who were then in the division above Brighton, and also in the closely-fought epic against First Division Wolves when Albion narrowly lost 3-2.

Later that same season he scored a hat-trick in a 4-0 home win over Halifax. Even when Goodwin departed for Birmingham during the summer of 1970, Gilliver retained his place under new manager Pat Saward, and scored eight times.

But, presumably in the knowledge he’d got the loan signings of Bert Murray and Willie Irvine lined up, Saward surprisingly sold Gilliver and former captain Nobby Lawton to Lincoln in February 1971. The pair’s appearance in a 2-1 defeat away to Shrewsbury that month turned out to be their farewell.

As a youngster, I used to watch games from behind the manager’s dugout beneath the West Stand at the Goldstone.

I remember vividly how during one game, as the players trooped off down the tunnel for the half-time break, someone in the crowd behind me, clearly not impressed by the striker’s performance, shouted: “Gilly, why don’t you come off?” The forward looked into the crowd for the source of the comment and retorted: “And why don’t you p*ss off!”

The forward’s spell with Lincoln was ultimately a brief one but his switch to Valley Parade for a £4,000 fee began a lifetime association with the Bantams.

In researching this piece, I came across a picture of Gilliver in action for Bradford against Arsenal at Highbury in 1973.

He moved on to Stockport County in 1974 and had a brief spell with the Baltimore Comets in America, playing alongside the aforementioned Napier, before returning to England.

Back at Bradford in 1978-79, he played twice before his playing days came to an end but he stayed with the club and his subsequent roles included groundsman, safety officer, bar supervisor, stadium manager and commercial manager. He retired in 2007.

In May 2023, Gilliver’s wife Chris opened up to the Telegraph & Argus about the sad impact of the former footballer’s condition, which had necessitated putting him in a care home.  

“The grandchildren miss grandad as he was,” she said. “He doesn’t recognise them. He smiles but he would smile at anyone.

“He has got no incentive. He would just sit in one place all day unless someone does something with him.”

She told reporter Rowan Newman: “They are not suffering in many ways because they don’t know, but we are – the families who love and care for them.

“Every day you lose a little bit more. He could speak last week, he can’t speak now. He could use a knife and fork, he can’t cut his food up any more. He has lost so much.”

Gilliver appeaed  briefly in a news bulletin on BBC One News on 25 March 2025 about professional footballers and dementia. He died aged 81 on 23 December 2025.

napier-gilliver-73-74-bradfordag-v-arsenal

  • Pictures from my scrapbook show Gilliver in aerial action for the Albion; alongside John Napier in a Bradford team photo (and below with Baltimore Comets); in Goal magazine playing for Bradford City, challenging goalkeeper Bob Wilson in a 1973 FA Cup tie against Arsenal, a portrait in the stripes of City, and various shots that first appeared in Albion matchday programmes.
Allan Gilliver living with dementia in a care home, as featured on BBC One news in March 2025