The Encylopedia of British Football

Teddy Maguire

Edward (Teddy) Maguire was born in Meadowfield on 23rd July 1917. A winger, he played local football before being signed by Major Frank Buckley, the manager of Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1936. He joined a squad that included Stan Cullis, Gordon Clayton, Bill Morris, Dennis Westcott, George Ashall, Alex Scott, Jack Taylor, Tom Galley, Dicky Dorsett, Bill Parker, Bryn Jones and Joe Gardiner.

In the 1937-38 season Wolves finished second to the mighty Arsenal in the First Division. Dennis Westcott finished the season as top scorer with 22 goals in 28 appearances.

In the 1938-39 season Wolves finished second to Everton. The centre-forward Dennis Westcott scored 43 goals in 43 appearances. His fellow striker, Dicky Dorsett managed 26 goals that season. The captain of the side, Stan Cullis, was generally acknowledged as the best centre-half in the Football League. That season also saw the arrival of teenagers, Billy Wright, Joe Rooney and Jimmy Mullen, in the side.

The Wolves team in 1938. Back row from left to right: Bill Morris, Dennis Westcott,George Ashall, Alex Scott, Jack Taylor, Tom Galley. Front row: Dicky Dorsett, Bill Parker, Bryn Jones, Joe Gardiner and Teddy Maguire
The Wolves team in 1938. Back row from left to right: Bill Morris, Dennis Westcott,
George Ashall, Alex Scott, Jack Taylor, Tom Galley. Front row: Dicky Dorsett,
Bill Parker, Bryn Jones, Joe Gardiner and Teddy Maguire

Wolves also enjoyed a good run in the FA Cup and beat Leicester City (5-1), Liverpool (4-1), Everton (2-0), Grimsby Town (5-0) to reach the final against Portsmouth at Wembley. Wolves lost the final 4-1 with Dicky Dorsett scoring their only goal. Major Buckley's Wolves became the first team in the history of English football to be runners-up in the sport's two major competitions in the same year. Afterwards, it was discovered that the Portsmouth players, like those of Wolves, had also been injected with monkey glands.

The outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 brought an end to the Football League. The government imposed a fifty mile travelling limit on all football teams and the Football League divided all the clubs into seven regional areas where games could take place. Wolves joined the Midland League with West Bromwich Albion, Birmingham City, Coventry City, Luton Town, Northampton Town, Leicester City and Walsall. Wolves won the 1939-40 championship.

In 1947, Maguire, who had scored 7 goals in 82 games for Wolves, joined Swindon Town. He scored 4 goals in 28 games before signing for Halifax Town in 1948. Over the next two season Maguire scored 7 goals in 55 games.