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How The Freeze Of 1947 Gave Liverpool FC A Warm Glow

March 6, 2017
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By Paul Homewood

 

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https://blog.metoffice.gov.uk/2017/03/01/how-the-freeze-of-1947-gave-liverpool-fc-a-warm-glow/ 

 

Most of us will be aware of the bitter winter of 1947, but, as this fascinating blog from the Met Office shows, there was a lot of extreme weather around in 1946/7:

 

The February of 1947 was the coldest on record in the UK since 1910. Between January and March 1947, there were 55 consecutive days with snow falling somewhere in the UK. The impacts on post-war Britain were enormous.

Mark Platt of Liverpool Football Club describes how the winter of 1947 caused problems for the club, but gave the team the ultimate chance to shine.

For Liverpool FC, the inaugural post-war Football League of the 1946/47 season was one of the most memorable in its rich and illustrious history. The style in which they won the First Division Championship that year was to set a precedent for future Anfield success and it was achieved against all the odds; an ultimate triumph against adversity that the British weather did its best to scupper.

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An impression of a Liverpool FC training session in February 1947 prior to the famous Stubbins’ flying header. Still photograph courtesy: Liverpool Echo. Video animation: Met Office.

Amid the bleak austerity of a war-ravaged nation and continued rationing, the return of regular competitive football had been eagerly anticipated. Crowds flocked back to the game in record numbers and the British public revelled in its favourite pastime once again.

Liverpool, deemed as unlikely title challengers in pre-season, made a steady start. On the last day of August they opened their campaign with victory at Sheffield United, a game that kicked off in a monsoon and was played under dark thunder clouds. Such unseasonal conditions set the tone for the remainder of a season that would be dominated by the extreme and unpredictable weather.

Just a few weeks later, young Liverpool supporters were being passed out of a sweltering Kop as the country basked in an Indian summer. It wasn’t long before dense freezing fog then started to play havoc with transportation to and from games, while gale-force winds often hampered attempts to play good football.

Liverpool adapted better than most to these ever-changing climates and a run of victories saw them shoot to the top of the table in the run-up to Christmas. Then one of the worst winters on record kicked in and pitches became treacherous ice-rinks. When the thaw set in they were transformed into unplayable quagmires. Getting the ball under control and passing it, even a short distance, was becoming increasingly difficult.

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Albert Stubbins’ famous ‘goal in the snow’ has been dubbed by the Anfield faithful as the one of the greatest ever scored. Picture courtesy Liverpool FC

If the players had it bad, so too did supporters. As the snowstorms worsened, attending games became more hazardous. In a bid to prevent the country from grinding to a halt, the government ordered a widespread industrial shutdown and the knock-on effects were felt at the turnstiles. Rail and road links slowly ground to a halt, city streets were plunged into darkness and many factories were forced to close, meaning millions found themselves temporarily out of work. Due to a severe paper shortage, the size of match-day programmes were also significantly reduced, some to just a single sheet.

As the Arctic conditions continued to take a vice-like grip across Britain during the early months of 1947 matches were falling foul of the weather on a regular basis. The fixture list was soon decimated by postponements and Liverpool slithered back down the table. It peaked on Saturday 22 February when more than half that day’s scheduled games were called off. Ironically, Liverpool’s game at home to Huddersfield that afternoon did go ahead, but a new record had been set and it led to calls for the campaign to be extended.

When repeated pleas fell on deaf ears, the entire structure of football in this country was in danger of complete collapse. Thankfully, the authorities eventually saw sense. Although not before the touchlines at Anfield had to be painted blue to make them visible on a surface described as a ‘sea of porridge’ for the visit of Blackburn Rovers at the beginning of March, or when star centre-forward of the time Albert Stubbins lacerated his knees by sliding on the ice in celebration of a now famous diving header against Birmingham City. It was a goal that has gone down in Anfield folklore as one of the greatest ever scored, known simply as ‘the goal in the snow’.

A six-week extension to the season was granted. Playing conditions improved and Liverpool rediscovered their form. When they travelled to Wolverhampton on May 31 to contest their final game of a seemingly never-ending season, they did so on what was the hottest day of the year so far.

The pitch side temperature at a sun-baked Molineux was in the high nineties and the match officials sported unfamiliar white jerseys. For spectators, shirt sleeves, summer frocks and handkerchiefs on heads were the order of the day – a stark contrast to the bitter cold they’d been used to just a few months previous. ‘Hotter than the Melbourne Cricket Ground’ being one newspaper description of the scenes.

A 2-1 win ensured that the red hot Reds completed their league season back in pole position. However, because of the fixture backlog caused by that gruelling winter of discontent, one outstanding game remained and it didn’t take place until a fortnight later. If Stoke City beat Sheffield United they would pip Liverpool to the title. It was to be an agonising wait but one that, for every Liverpudlian, was well worth waiting for.

On June 14 at Bramall Lane, the venue where Liverpool opened the season almost ten months before, Stoke failed to get the result they so desired. The weather-beaten 1946/47 season, the longest ever known, was finally over and the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow was Liverpool’s fifth League Championship.

https://blog.metoffice.gov.uk/2017/03/01/how-the-freeze-of-1947-gave-liverpool-fc-a-warm-glow/

8 Comments
  1. fretslider permalink
    March 6, 2017 1:18 pm

    there was a lot of extreme weather around in 1946/7

    Doubtless, the klimate krew will tell you that this was a freak caused by particulates after all the shelling and bombing – ie anthropogenically caused.

  2. March 6, 2017 1:20 pm

    My comments are not about weather, but rather about the effects of WWII on everyday life. I was born in November, 1944 with older brothers born in 1930 and 1933. Daddy taught chemistry at WVU and the campus was about 2 miles from our home, 5 acres of an old farm, which I now own and where I now live.

    I remember mother talking about ration cards for everything: gasoline, tires, shoes, sugar, etc. It was a juggling act to keep my brothers in shoes, tires on the car and gasoline in the car.

    My first memory when I was about 4, so 1948 or 1949, was standing with mother in the attic while she got something out of a large plywood storage box my father had built. It had 2 sections and the lid lifted up. There on the bottom were 2 bags of sugar which must have been 25 lbs. each as I remember their size. The war was over, but she still stockpiled sugar. I have never forgotten that sight.

    So many today have absolutely no idea of what people went through during WWII to win that conflict. You in England much more than us here. Today’s snowflakes would not last 5 minutes as their traumas are self-manufactured.

    • Andy DC permalink
      March 7, 2017 6:56 pm

      Speaking of snowflakes, here in the US, we now call off our football games for snow or lightning 20 miles away.

      Some of our best folklore is related to games played in severe cold, blizzards, violent rain and windstorms. Nature used to be considered part of the game, something for real men (both players and fans) to overcome. Not so much anymore, especially with all the indoor stadiums.

  3. Broadlands permalink
    March 6, 2017 2:54 pm

    Trivia… The coldest February in the US 48 states was 25.2°F in 1936….during the warm 1930s. The next two coldest were in 1899 and 1895.

    The warmest February was in 1954…41.4°F. Followed by 1930, 1991.

  4. CheshireRed permalink
    March 6, 2017 6:10 pm

    20>18

  5. Tom O permalink
    March 6, 2017 8:17 pm

    Isn’t it fascinating how articles all like to say things like – “the hottest/coldest day/week/month,” and then follow it with something like “since 1910/1905/1880” what have you? The worst storm in 70 years is another example. And they do it without even realizing they are admitting that the current temperature/rainfall/drought/storm/whatever is neither unprecedented, unusual, or extreme. And of course, it might BE the worst storm since, but how much worse than normal? Don’t know, and neither do they I guess.

  6. Chris Martin permalink
    March 7, 2017 12:18 am

    The weather of 1947 was particularly extreme in the U.K. The coldest February of the 20th century was followed by the hottest August. And in both those months there were places in the west highlands that had no rain in either month – normally the wettest parts of the country

  7. John Corrigall permalink
    March 8, 2017 5:11 am

    Was Paul Nuttall at that Blackburn game? J Cog

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