C&P from The Independent


Don Weston 
Wing-heeled Leeds striker 
Published: 29 March 2007 
Donald Patrick Weston, footballer: born New Houghton,
Derbyshire 6 March 1936; played for Wrexham 1958-60,
Birmingham City 1960, Rotherham United 1960-62, Leeds
United 1962-65, Huddersfield Town 1965-66, Wrexham
1966-68, Chester 1968; married (one son, two
daughters); died Mansfield, Nottinghamshire 20 January
2007. 

When the progressive young manager Don Revie guided
Leeds United into the top tier of English football as
champions of the old Second Division in the spring of
1964, Don Weston was one of his most potent attacking
weapons.

The foundation of the Yorkshiremen's success was a
formidably flinty rearguard featuring the likes of
Jack Charlton, Norman Hunter and Paul Reaney, while
the most influential individuals were the tiny but
inspirational Scottish schemer Bobby Collins and his
rising midfield henchmen Billy Bremner and Johnny
Giles. But it was the wing-heeled Weston, frequently
damned by historians' faint praise as a mere
journeyman front-runner, who supplied much of the
crucial cutting edge.

As Collins put it, "Don had a turn of foot like
nobody's business" and, during that memorable season,
as Revie proceeded with his painstaking construction
of a team destined to bestride the national game by
decade's end, the north Midlander employed it to such
devastating effect that he finished joint top-scorer,
on 13 goals, with the left-winger Albert Johanneson.

Usually operating at centre-forward or inside-right,
the shortish, wiry Weston relished dropping deep,
where he was difficult for his designated marker to
locate; then he would sprint at wrong-footed
defenders, frequently climaxing his dash with a
powerful shot.

He compensated for lack of extravagant natural talent
through fitness and dedication to his craft, though
later he would be revealed to lack the necessary class
to thrive among the First Division élite.

When Weston had arrived at Leeds in December 1962 as
part of the "Revie revolution", he was enlisting with
the club for the second time. After appearing for East
Derbyshire Schoolboys, then working briefly as a
coalminer near his hometown of Mansfield, he served
United as a 16-year-old amateur, but refused to sign
as a professional for personal reasons.

There followed National Service at an army camp near
Rhyl, in North Wales, and it was while excelling in
military competition that he was spotted by the local
Football League club, Wrexham. After enlisting at the
Racecourse Ground on amateur terms, Weston was so keen
to impress that he went Awol to play in one game,
being confined to barracks for two weeks for his
pains.

Undeterred, the intrepid escaper bounced back to earn
a professional contract with the lowly Third Division
club, for whom he netted 21 goals in 42 appearances
during 1958/59 and the first half of the following
campaign, before joining Birmingham City for £15,000
in January 1960. However, he failed to settle and 11
months later he stepped down a division, moving to
Rotherham United in a £10,000 deal.

At Millmoor, Weston flourished immediately, his goals
helping United to reach the two-legged final of the
League Cup in 1960/61 and, after a 2-0 first leg home
victory over Aston Villa, the Merry Millers seemed set
to lift the trophy in its inaugural season. But Villa
prevailed 3-0 on the night, 3-2 on aggregate.

Thereafter the pacy marksman continued to perform
creditably for Rotherham, enough to persuade Revie to
pay £18,000 for his services in December 1962. Having
been bought to fill a gap left by the departed hero
John Charles Weston might have been on a hiding to
nothing, but he slotted in smoothly in central attack
alongside another recent purchase Jim Storrie, his
cause enhanced immeasurably by a début hat-trick at
home to Stoke City.

Weston missed only seven games in the Second Division
title campaign which followed, but although Revie kept
faith with him at first, as Leeds made a rousing
return to the First in 1964/65 he receded to the
fringe of the team following the purchase of the
England centre-forward Alan Peacock.

In October 1965, with his 30th birthday approaching,
Weston moved to Huddersfield Town but featured only
intermittently for the Second Division promotion
hopefuls before rejoining Wrexham, by now in Division
Four, in December 1966.

Weston departed the Racecourse for the second time in
1968, following differences with the new boss Alvan
Williams, then served Chester fleetingly before
finishing his playing days with non-League Altrincham
and Bethesda Athletic. Later he returned to Mansfield,
where he ran a car dealership.

Ivan Ponting 



 
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