Harry Sellars

{{short description|English footballer and manager}}

{{Use British English|date=July 2013}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2023}}

{{Infobox football biography

| name = Harry Sellars

| image =

| fullname = Harry Sellars

| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1902|04|09}}

| birth_place = Beamish, Durham, England

| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1978|12|30|1902|04|09}}

| death_place = Stoke-on-Trent, England

| position = Half-back

| height =

| years1 = 1919–1921 | clubs1 = Darlington | caps1 = 0 | goals1 = 0

| years2 = 1922 | clubs2 = Leadgate Park | caps2 = | goals2 =

| years3 = 1923–1935 | clubs3 = Stoke City | caps3 = 370 | goals3 = 18

| years4 = 1937–1938 | clubs4 = Congleton Town| caps4 = 36 | goals4 = 0

| years5 = 1938 | clubs5 = Port Vale | caps5 = 0 | goals5 = 0

| totalcaps = 406 | totalgoals = 18

| manageryears1 = 1947 | managerclubs1 = Dundalk

}}

Harry Sellars (9 April 1902 – 30 December 1978) was an English footballer and football manager, who played in the English Football League for Stoke City.{{cite book|last=Matthews|first=Tony|title=The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City|year=1994|publisher=Lion Press|isbn=0-9524151-0-0}} He made 395 appearances for Stoke in all competitions, and helped the club to win the Third Division North title in 1926–27 and the Second Division title in 1932–33. He went on to briefly manage League of Ireland side Dundalk in 1947. His son John also played for Stoke in the 1950s.{{cite book|title=Stoke City 101 Golden Greats|year=2002|publisher=Desert Islands Books|isbn=1-874287554}} Together, father and son played 808 league and cup games for the club.

Playing career

Sellars was born in Beamish, Durham and joined his local club Darlington as an amateur in 1919. The "Quakers" found him a job cleaning train carriage windows an improvement on his previous employment as a miner. Sellars turned down a trial at Manchester United in favour of turning professional with ambitious Northern League club Leadgate Park who offered him £2 a week. He was recommended to several Football League clubs by various scouts and Stoke City manager Tom Mather signed him on 15 December 1923. He began his Stoke career at inside-left and scored on his debut against Clapton Orient on 26 January 1924. He was in and out of the side in the next three seasons before Sellars converted to half-back in 1925–26 as Stoke were relegated to the Third Division North. A strong half-back line with Sellars, Cecil Eastwood and Tom Williamson helped Stoke win the title and return to the Second Division.

He became a steady and consistent performer for Stoke. He helped them win promotion to the First Division in 1932–33. He remained in the side until he injured his knee in September 1935, which allowed Frank Soo to take his place. In total, Sellars made 395 appearances, scoring 19 goals, for Stoke in a 13-year career at the Victoria Ground. He then helped Congleton Town to win the Cheshire Senior Cup. He had a short spell at Port Vale (without playing a first-team game). During World War II, he worked at the PMT bus in depot in Hanley, and once the war was over, he returned to Stoke to become Bob McGrory's assistant manager and first-team coach. In his role he helped to train his son John.

Managerial career

Sellars was recruited to manage League of Ireland side Dundalk at the start of the 1947–48, before he agreed to a mutual termination of his contract in October 1947.{{cite web |title=Harry Sellars {{!}} History of Dundalk F.C. |url=http://www.dundalkfcwhoswho.com/player.php?id=110 |website=dundalkfcwhoswho.com |accessdate=10 June 2019}}

Career statistics

Source:{{ENFA}}

class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition

!rowspan="2"|Club

!rowspan="2"|Season

!colspan="3"|League

!colspan="2"|FA Cup

!colspan="2"|Total

DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
rowspan="14"|Stoke City

|1923–24

|Second Division

|8

40084
1924–25

|Second Division

|8

11091
1925–26

|Second Division

|13

200132
1926–27

|Third Division North

|30

030330
1927–28

|Second Division

|33

340373
1928–29

|Second Division

|40

010410
1929–30

|Second Division

|40

310413
1930–31

|Second Division

|33

130361
1931–32

|Second Division

|42

151472
1932–33

|Second Division

|39

220412
1933–34

|First Division

|38

140421
1934–35

|First Division

|40

010410
1935–36

|First Division

|6

00060
colspan="2"|Total

!370

1825139519
Port Vale

|1937–38

|Third Division North

|0

00000

Honours

References