Jimmy Hasty Irish Footlballer with one arm.

Didn't City have a player with one arm - or an arm that he had lost the use of?
Think he got de-selected for England when they realised or something like that.
@Gary James can you help?

I recall Ronnie Goodlass at Everton who only had one hand
I think the referee in the 1956 FA cup final had one arm
 
Didn't City have a player with one arm - or an arm that he had lost the use of?
Think he got de-selected for England when they realised or something like that.
@Gary James can you help?

I recall Ronnie Goodlass at Everton who only had one hand


You’re thinking of George Smith, who scored all 5 in this game:

Most assume he had one hand as he used to have one hidden in a sleeve, or for team photos, hidden behind him. In fact quite a few have written stories of him ‘losing a hand in the war’ but he did have two. However, one arm was permanently rigid with his hand in a clasping position.

During WW2 he was the victim of friendly fire. A bullet fired from a South African Air Force plane (they thought they were firing at Germans) hit him and entered his arm roughly where his elbow was. It travelled down his arm and came out near his wrist.

I interviewed him in 2003 and saw the scars - you could still see the path the bullet had travelled in his arm.

He‘d already been a City striker before being called up for war service but when he returned City insisted he did a trial as they didn’t think he’d be up to playing. He pointed out that he was a goal scorer with his feet and head, not his arm!

He was told to cover his hand during games with bandages or a sleeve and not to talk about it, hence the belief he’d lost his hand.

The UK Govt insisted he kept quiet about the specifics of what happened, especially the ‘friendly fire’ stuff. The suggestion was that any future war pension might not be paid!

When he spoke with me in 2003 it was the first time, other than family and close friends, that the full story was told.

He should’ve played for England. The selectors came to Maine Rd (mentioned in a match programme that they were there to select Smith) but once they realised about his rigid arm/hand they decided not to pick him. They didn’t want any negative wartime story.

All sad and typical of that era sadly.
 
You’re thinking of George Smith, who scored all 5 in this game:

Most assume he had one hand as he used to have one hidden in a sleeve, or for team photos, hidden behind him. In fact quite a few have written stories of him ‘losing a hand in the war’ but he did have two. However, one arm was permanently rigid with his hand in a clasping position.

During WW2 he was the victim of friendly fire. A bullet fired from a South African Air Force plane (they thought they were firing at Germans) hit him and entered his arm roughly where his elbow was. It travelled down his arm and came out near his wrist.

I interviewed him in 2003 and saw the scars - you could still see the path the bullet had travelled in his arm.

He‘d already been a City striker before being called up for war service but when he returned City insisted he did a trial as they didn’t think he’d be up to playing. He pointed out that he was a goal scorer with his feet and head, not his arm!

He was told to cover his hand during games with bandages or a sleeve and not to talk about it, hence the belief he’d lost his hand.

The UK Govt insisted he kept quiet about the specifics of what happened, especially the ‘friendly fire’ stuff. The suggestion was that any future war pension might not be paid!

When he spoke with me in 2003 it was the first time, other than family and close friends, that the full story was told.

He should’ve played for England. The selectors came to Maine Rd (mentioned in a match programme that they were there to select Smith) but once they realised about his rigid arm/hand they decided not to pick him. They didn’t want any negative wartime story.

All sad and typical of that era sadly.
What a tragic tale
 
We should cut the arms off all of them. Just think how many var decisions would've gone our way if none of the first team had arms - would've got past spurs in the cl semi for starters.
 
Didn't City have a player with one arm - or an arm that he had lost the use of?
Think he got de-selected for England when they realised or something like that.
@Gary James can you help?

I recall Ronnie Goodlass at Everton who only had one hand
I've seen a good few City players who made me thing they'd only got one leg!
 
You’re thinking of George Smith, who scored all 5 in this game:

Most assume he had one hand as he used to have one hidden in a sleeve, or for team photos, hidden behind him. In fact quite a few have written stories of him ‘losing a hand in the war’ but he did have two. However, one arm was permanently rigid with his hand in a clasping position.

During WW2 he was the victim of friendly fire. A bullet fired from a South African Air Force plane (they thought they were firing at Germans) hit him and entered his arm roughly where his elbow was. It travelled down his arm and came out near his wrist.

I interviewed him in 2003 and saw the scars - you could still see the path the bullet had travelled in his arm.

He‘d already been a City striker before being called up for war service but when he returned City insisted he did a trial as they didn’t think he’d be up to playing. He pointed out that he was a goal scorer with his feet and head, not his arm!

He was told to cover his hand during games with bandages or a sleeve and not to talk about it, hence the belief he’d lost his hand.

The UK Govt insisted he kept quiet about the specifics of what happened, especially the ‘friendly fire’ stuff. The suggestion was that any future war pension might not be paid!

When he spoke with me in 2003 it was the first time, other than family and close friends, that the full story was told.

He should’ve played for England. The selectors came to Maine Rd (mentioned in a match programme that they were there to select Smith) but once they realised about his rigid arm/hand they decided not to pick him. They didn’t want any negative wartime story.

All sad and typical of that era sadly.
Sad story indeed but as ever Gary, fantastic reply
 

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