Bill Bann

William Edward "Bill" spell ( born August 15, 1902 in Broxburn, † March 16, 1973 in Haringey, London) was a Scottish football player.

Career

Bill ban was brought in February 1923 by Peter McWilliam, coach of Tottenham Hotspur, the Scottish Second Division club Broxburn United to London to White Hart Lane. There, it took a year before he first ran aground in a friendly match against Chelsea at the side of Matt Forster for the professional team. To his competitive debut in the First Division came spell on 25 March 1926 as a replacement for Tommy Clay in a 1-0 home win against Newcastle United. Bann also completed the following seven games to end the season in defense on the side of Forster. After relegation to the Second Division, he came in the season 1928/29, to four other league operations. Having originated from club side was no interest in continuing obligation already in May 1929 and he was cleared, he was committed for the 1929/30 season again. Until his final departure in the summer of 1930 came spell but to no further use.

The defender continued his career in the Third Division South at FC Brentford continued, for which he sporadically appeared in the first team and the reserve team 1931/32 won the championship of the London Combination. He then played for one season at Premier League rivals Bristol Rovers, represented there with his only league use, a 2-2 draw against Newport County, his compatriot Alec Donald. The end of his football career in the Football League when he spent also playing in the third-class Südstaffel FC Aldershot, for whom he played 1933/34, seven league games.

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