Keith Eddy

Nationality: England
Position: Defender

Profile

Keith Eddy - who sadly passed away in October 2022 - has a special place in Watford folklore, having captained the club to its first ever Football League title: the Division Three crown in 1968/69.

He arrived at Vicarage Road in the summer of England's 1966 World Cup win, leaving his hometown club in Barrow-in-Furness as a 21-year-old to sign for Watford FC manager Ken Furphy for the sum of £1,250. He had become disaffected with the game at Barrow and was contemplating giving up life as a footballer and becoming a milkman before Watford signed him amid strong interest from Brighton.

He quickly established himself in the revolution under Furphy, becoming part of a trailblazing team that included Duncan Welbourne, Stewart Scullion, Mickey Walker, Tom Walley, Terry Garbett and Barry Endean; all of whom helped lead the club into unchartered territory... the Second Division and an FA Cup semi-final.

He played every game of the promotion-winning season: all 46 matches, scoring eight goals - most of which were penalties. The Hornets pipped Swindon Town to the title on goal difference, finishing three points ahead of rivals Luton Town, who missed out on promotion, with a squad put together at the cost of £56,000.

The following season, 1969/70, saw this progressive team reach the semi-finals of the FA Cup. One of Keith's biggest career regrets is that he missed the 1-0 Vicarage Road quarter-final win over the mighty Liverpool - captained by fellow Barrow-in-Furness boy Emlyn Hughes - and the 5-1 semi-final defeat to Chelsea at Tottenham's White Hart Lane because of a knee injury.

Seasoned observers have him down as the club's greatest ever captain - ahead of the likes of Sam Ellis, Cliff Holton, Robert Page and Troy Deeney. Keith wasn't blessed with pace, the fans affectionately hailing him as 'Steady Eddy' as a result, but he more than made up for it in composure and command either at the heart of the defence or in the middle of midfield.

He reluctantly left the club for Sheffield United in the summer of 1972 but did so as he just could not turn down the chance of playing in the First Division, so he could complete the full house of playing in all of England's four tiers. He was reunited at Bramall Lane with his mentor Furphy a year later when he took charge of the Blades. Watford had been relegated back to Division Three that summer. Keith finished top-scorer in his final season with six.

During his six seasons at Vicarage Road, he gave fans an education in the art of penalty taking; converting 18 out of 19 penalties, missing just one against Swindon in 1969.

He carried on his spot-kick proficiency at the New York Cosmos, who he joined in 1976 thanks to Furphy, assuming the duties from Pelé after the great Brazilian missed one. Keith converted eight from eight, captained both Pelé and Franz Beckenbauer and was named in the All-Star team.

Keith retired from playing in 1977, and managed Toronto Blizzard for two years before setting up the Tulsa Soccer Club in Oklahoma, a grassroots organisation that now boasts 100 teams.

With children and grandchildren spread out across the USA and elsewhere, he fell in love with the States and never left once he'd arrived. Home for Keith - and wife Jacqueline - until his death was Tulsa, Oklahoma, the city where he'd had such an impact on the growth of grassroots 'soccer'.

Appearances (goals):

Football League: 239+1 (26)
FA Cup: 19 (3)
Football League Cup: 15 (2)

Total: 273+1 (31)

Profile updated October 2022.

'Join date' refers to first-team debut for former players.

Born

October 23rd, 1944

Barrow-in-Furness

Join Date

1966-08-20

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