England and Preston legend Sir Tom Finney dies at age of 91
Sir Tom Finney – one of England’s greatest footballers and the ultimate one-club man – has died aged 91.
The former Preston North End and England footballer Sir Tom Finney has died, aged 91.
Known as "the Preston Plumber" after his father insisted he complete his apprenticeship before signing professional terms with his hometown club Preston North End in 1946, Finney won 76 caps and had recently replaced former Wolverhampton Wanderers goalkeeper Bert Williams as the oldest living England international.
The forward played for the Lancashire club 433 times between 1946 and 1960, scoring 187 goals. He also scored 30 times for England, which leaves him at joint sixth in the all-time goalscoring charts.
Despite his reputation as one of the greatest players of his age, domestic success eluded him. He finished as a league runner-up in the Football League Division One in 1953 and again five years later. He was also on the losing side in the FA Cup final in 1954.
Former Leicester, Tottenham Hotspur and England striker Gary Lineker paid tribute on Twitter: "Sir Tom Finney has left us. One of the greatest players this country has ever seen, and a true gentleman."
Peter Reid, who played for Everton and managed Sunderland, wrote: "Sir Tom Finney, gentleman. Proper footballer."
A Preston North End statement read: "Preston North End have been informed of the extremely sad news of the passing of Sir Tom Finney. Sir Tom was the greatest player to ever play for Preston North End and one of the all time greats for England.
"The thoughts of everyone at the Club, and those connected with it, are with his family at this time."
After his playing career finished, Finney became president of Preston North End. He was born near Deepdale in 1922 and remained in the Preston area. He was incredibly popular with the city's people, appearing regularly at local events into his old age. He was knighted in the 1998 Queen's New Year Honours list.
Preston's Deepdale stadium is currently located on Sir Tom Finney Way and the ground's old West Stand was renamed the Sir Tom Finney Stand in 1995, with his image on its seats
Before he died, former team-mate Bill Shankly, who himself made 297 appearances with Preston North End before going on to enjoy huge success as Liverpool manager, said that, if pressed, he would say Sir Tom was "the best player ever born".
Stanley Matthews, who died in 2000, played for Preston's biggest rivals Blackpool at the same time as Finney was playing. He once said: "To dictate the pace and course of a game, a player has to be blessed with awesome qualities. Those who have accomplished it on a regular basis can be counted on the fingers of one hand - Pele, Maradona, Best, Di Stefano, and Tom Finney."
Sir Bobby Charlton said: "Sir Tom Finney was one of the greatest footballers there has ever been - he was the type of player that people would travel a long way to see."