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Basil Hayward : ウィキペディア英語版
Basil Hayward

Carl Basil Hayward (more commonly known as Basil Hayward; 7 April 1928 – 9 December 1989) was an English footballer player and manager. He was the younger brother of Doug and Eric Hayward.
He scored 55 goals in 349 league games for local league side Port Vale from 1946 to 1957, a key period in the club's history. He won the Third Division North title with Port Vale in 1953–54, and also played in the FA Cup semi-finals. He then spent two years with Portsmouth, before becoming player-manager at Yeovil Town from 1960 to 1964. After a spell managing non-league Bedford Town he spent five years in charge of Gillingham, before finishing his management career with Telford United.
==Playing career==
He joined Port Vale in May 1946, having recently turned 16. He made his debut on 12 October of that year, in a 4–0 home defeat by Cardiff City, and finished the 1946–47 season with two Third Division South appearances to his name.〔 He attained a regular first team spot from December 1947, and played 24 games in 1947–48 and 42 games in 1948–49.〔 He fell out of favour in August 1949, though scored his first senior goal at The Old Recreation Ground on 25 February 1950, in a 2–2 draw with Norwich City, in what was his only appearance of the 1949–50 campaign.〔 In the 1950–51 season he featured 26 times.〔 In the summer, manager Gordon Hodgson died and was replaced by Ivor Powell, who was sacked and replaced by Freddie Steele.〔 Hayward played 28 games in 1951–52, though was sidelined with a back injury in February 1952.〔
It was under Freddie Steele's management though that Hayward came into his own and was given an attacking role.〔 He scored four goals in two days against Crewe Alexandra in a run of ten goals in seven games, and ended the 1952–53 season with 22 goals in 40 games, becoming the club's top scorer.〔 He hit 25 goals in 45 appearances in the "Valiants" legendary 1953–54 campaign to become the club's top scorer again as Vale topped the Third Division North table with only three defeats in 46 games and also reached the semi-finals of the FA Cup.〔 During the campaign he also managed to score in a club record eight straight games from 28 November to 26 January. He also scored a hat-trick in a 4–0 home win over Barrow on 31 August (the first hat-trick at the newly built Vale Park), and again in a 7–0 home win over Stockport County on 10 April.〔
Hayward scored six goals in 30 Second Division appearances in 1954–55, before returning to a more defensive role in 1955–56 in 43 goalless appearances.〔 He was an ever-present during the 1956–57 campaign, scoring three goals in 44 games, as new boss Norman Low could not prevent Vale suffering relegation in last place.〔 He scored once in 45 games in 1957–58, before he was sold to Portsmouth for a 'fair fee' in July 1958.〔
He scored four goals in 44 league games for "Pompey" in 1958–59 and 1959–60, as Freddie Cox's team dropped out of the First Division and then only avoided a second successive relegation by two points in 1959–60. He later played for and managed Yeovil Town, at the time a non-league team.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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