Irish Daily Mail

How ‘Fergie’ taught the English to pass

New television drama shows Scotsman Fergus Suter creating the beautiful game

- IAN HERBERT @ianherbs

FOR reasons buried in the mists of time, the Blackburn Rovers club photograph­er once asked Fergus Suter to pose next to a huge bearskin, though, as ever, he did not seem terribly fazed.

The individual who could say, with no exaggerati­on, that he taught the English how to pass a football had supremely modest beginnings that included long hours crafting red Glasgow sandstone as a stonemason and rejection by Rangers on the basis of one trial match, at the age of 20.

But the Scottish club’s loss was English football’s gain.

Suter, the man they came to call ‘Fergie’, gravitated to Partick Thistle and then Darwen, Lancashire, where in the words of the actor Kevin Guthrie, who plays him in a new eight-part Netflix drama, he told his teammates that there was a way to beat the rich teams from southern England who dominated the early years of the FA Cup: ‘We pass. We move. We pass again.’

There is some consternat­ion in Scotland that the title of the new drama, written by Downton

Abbey creator Julian Fellowes, is The English Game, given the incarnatio­n of football bequeathed by Suter was very much Scottish. The public schoolboys of Eton, Harrow and played a friendly there in 1878 and Suter, perhaps influenced by the Rangers rejection, wrote to the Lancashire side’s president Tom Hindle asking if he could get a game, too.

It was more likely a case of Darwen pursuing this two-footed player, who headed the ball strongly, had pace and passed well. Mill owner Charles Walsh financed the team so well they were challengin­g the aristocrat­ic amateur southern teams who dominated the FA Cup.

Suter seems to have earned £10, cash in hand, every three weeks. He and Love were football’s first profession­als.

Fellowes makes no pretence of understand­ing football, though the new drama paints a vivid picture of the class struggle at the heart of Suter and his team-mates’ extraordin­ary 1879 FA Cup quarter-final clash with Old Etonians.

They reached the game by beating Remnants, a team of gentlemen from Berkshire, 3-2 after extra time — the first giantkilli­ng in English football.

But after three goals in the last 15 minutes saw them rescue a 5-5 draw at Old Etonians, an FA committee comprised of Old Etonian players denied them extra time and forced them to travel south again for the replay.

It doesn’t make the cut of the drama but it was a second replay — also played on southern turf — which the shattered players lost 6-2. Most had jobs in cotton mills while the Etonians were rested and languid.

Blackburn Rovers’ first attempts to hire Suter put the relatively modern notion of ‘tapping up’ into focus.

The new drama depicts John Cartwright, Blackburn chairman, walking calmly on to the pitch before a match to invite Suter to sign — ‘£100 up front and we’ll double your salary,’ Cartwright tells him, a full six years before profession­alism was legalised.

The drama presents a highly watchable depiction of Suter’s invidious position as one of only two players being paid by a mill owner who is being forced to cut mill wages and close the factory, against the backdrop of plummeting cotton prices.

The other protagonis­t is Old Etonian captain Arthur Kinnaird (Edward Holcroft) who, having cheated past Suter’s Darwen in the FA Cup, begins to realise the complacenc­y of the ruling class.

Suter made that big move to Blackburn — a controvers­ial developmen­t in a sport already attracting a mass following.

He played in four FA Cup finals for the club, winning three.

By the time he was contributi­ng strongly to Blackburn’s defeat of West Bromwich Albion in the 1885 final replay, the game had been wrenched from the aristocrat­s’ grip. Dozens of Scots were following his route south. When Liverpool FC were founded, 10 Scots were in the team. Preston North End, who won the first league title, contained seven. Suter’s career was in its closing stages when the Football League was formed in 1888. He made one appearance, deputising in goal. There was a handsome testimonia­l for him before he became landlord of Blackburn’s Bay Horse Hotel. With Lancashire mills closing, the original Darwen FC were bankrupt 20 years after the miracle season of 1879. Suter died in 1916. His 1885 winners’ medal fetched £6,500 at Sotheby’s in August 2000. ‘He knew in every dressing room he was the best player in the team,’ said Guthrie, who plays him. ‘If we equate him to someone in England, he’s Paul Scholes, Ryan Giggs. ‘An entire social movement was borne of his decision to come down to England, take wages and play.’

The English Game is now available to view on Netflix

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Leader of the pack: how Suter and team look in the show
NETFLIX Leader of the pack: how Suter and team look in the show
 ?? NETFLIX ?? Class act: Guthrie as Suter and (right) the man himself
NETFLIX Class act: Guthrie as Suter and (right) the man himself
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