Lem Newcomb


Real Name: Leamon Robinson Newcomb
Born: 28/11/1903 (Stillington, near Darlington)
Died: 03/07/1964 (Southport)

Heritage Number: 682
Debut Match*: 08/09/1936 v Carlisle United (Football League)
Last Match*: 25/03/1940 v New Brighton (Welsh Cup)
* Qualifying Games


Lem Newcomb

One of the most well-loved players and managers ever to have graced Southport Football Club, this cultured wing-half became a big favourite with the Haig Avenue crowd until he hung up his boots early in World War II. After the war he became the manager of Marine before coaching the Southport ‘A’ team in an honorary capacity. He also helped Ray Minshull for a brief period as a scout at Wigan Rovers.
To commence a managerial career thirty-five years after starting in professional football is exceptional but then Lem was almost unique amongst sportsmen. He was a gentleman both on and off the field and in the managerial chair he relied upon encouragement and understanding rather than a bullying or domineering attitude. He was greatly appreciated by the players, almost all of whom have regularly avowed that they have never played under a finer manager.
Lem was Southport’s team manager for three and a half seasons, taking over after four disastrous years. Few greater challenges existed in the game but Lem’s side played some of the most attractive football ever seen at Haig Avenue and, significantly, each of his three full seasons showed a profit. When, in January 1964, ill-health forced Newcomb to abandon his job, Gordon Hunt was appointed acting-manager after the directors had decided that ‘in view of the club’s financial position, Lem Newcomb’s wages should cease until he is fit to resume duty’. Indeed Lem had not always enjoyed one hundred per cent backing from the board; big, goal-scoring centre-forward Frank Lord was among the players Newcomb missed because the modest amounts needed to secure their services were not forthcoming.
Lem Newcomb died on July 3rd, 1964. As Len Peet (`The Scout’ in the Southport Journal) reported: ‘There are precious few characters of his calibre in football and the game is all the poorer for the loss of such a highly respected, genuinely capable figure who ought really to have been appointed club manager many years earlier’. Scores attended the funeral service at Southport Crematorium where the Reverend R.H. Percival expressed the thoughts of many when he opined: ‘Southport is very much the poorer by his death’.

Profile reproduced with Permission from:
The Sandgrounders: The Complete League History of Southport F. C., by Michael Braham and Geoff Wilde (Palatine Books, 1995). ISBN 978-1-874181-14-9

Season: 1941/1942 [Back to Player Stats]
The player made an appearance in the following games:
Date Home Club Away Club Score Goals Competition Round Heritage Qualifying Void
30/08/1941 Southport Blackburn Rovers 3 - 2 0 War-Time: League 30/08/1941 No No
13/09/1941 Blackpool Southport 10 - 1 0 War-Time: League 13/09/1941 No No
20/09/1941 Southport Blackpool 1 - 5 0 War-Time: League 20/09/1941 No No
27/09/1941 Southport Oldham Athletic 4 - 3 0 War-Time: League 27/09/1941 No No
04/10/1941 Oldham Athletic Southport 3 - 1 0 War-Time: League 04/10/1941 No No
11/10/1941 Burnley Southport 4 - 2 0 War-Time: League 11/10/1941 No No
18/10/1941 Southport Burnley 1 - 1 0 War-Time: League 18/10/1941 No No
25/10/1941 Southport Rochdale 4 - 1 0 War-Time: League 25/10/1941 No No
08/11/1941 Preston North End Southport 2 - 0 0 War-Time: League 08/11/1941 No No
15/11/1941 Southport Preston North End 1 - 5 0 War-Time: League 15/11/1941 No No
22/11/1941 Southport Halifax Town 2 - 3 0 War-Time: League 22/11/1941 No No
13/12/1941 Bury Southport 6 - 1 0 War-Time: League 13/12/1941 No No
25/12/1941 Bolton Wanderers Southport 4 - 0 0 War-Time: League 25/12/1941 No No
17/01/1942 Southport Tranmere Rovers 2 - 4 0 Football League War Cup 17/01/1942 No No


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