'A Little Street Fighter' - Willie Carlin's Foxes Career
Liverpool-born Willie Carlin, a tenacious and energetic midfield player, was a key member of Frank O’Farrell’s Leicester City side which won the old Second Division title in 1971.
willie-carlin-leicester-city
willie-carlin-leicester-city
by John Hutchinson
Published
13 Jun, 2025
'A Little Street Fighter' - Willie Carlin's Foxes Career
Liverpool-born Willie Carlin, a tenacious and energetic midfield player, was a key member of Frank O’Farrell’s Leicester City side which won the old Second Division title in 1971.
John Hutchinson
'A Little Street Fighter' - Willie Carlin's Foxes Career
Liverpool-born Willie Carlin, a tenacious and energetic midfield player, was a key member of Frank O’Farrell’s Leicester City side which won the old Second Division title in 1971.
John Hutchinson
'A Little Street Fighter' - Willie Carlin's Foxes Career
Liverpool-born Willie Carlin, a tenacious and energetic midfield player, was a key member of Frank O’Farrell’s Leicester City side which won the old Second Division title in 1971.
John Hutchinson
'A Little Street Fighter' - Willie Carlin's Foxes Career
Liverpool-born Willie Carlin, a tenacious and energetic midfield player, was a key member of Frank O’Farrell’s Leicester City side which won the old Second Division title in 1971.
John Hutchinson
Before Willie sadly died last summer, he reminisced about his career with Club Historian John Hutchinson.
Capped by England at schoolboy and youth level, Willie started his career at Liverpool as a 16-year-old. He signed professional forms at Anfield in May 1958 and made his debut five months later.
After leaving Merseyside in 1962, he went on to make 445 appearances in all four divisions of the Football League, playing for Halifax Town, Carlisle United, Sheffield United, Derby County, Leicester City, Notts County and Cardiff City. Speaking from his home in Derbyshire, Willie began by referring back to his schoolboy days in Liverpool.
“I couldn’t believe I was picked for England Schoolboys,” he said. “Each city, like Manchester or Liverpool, could only nominate two players for the England Boys’ trials. Liverpool’s left-back was brilliant and then I got through as an outside left. I’d never played there! When our trainer told me I’d been picked, I didn’t believe him. He told me to buy a newspaper and, when I did, I saw that the outside-left was J. Carlin. So I said: ‘That’s not me. I’m not J. Carlin.’
“When I was at school the next day, the headmaster said: ‘Congratulations! You are playing for England!’ I told him it wasn’t me who had been picked. It is a J. Carlin. Anyway he phoned up and then said: ‘No, you’re playing at Wembley at outside-left!’ We played Scotland and were beaten 2-1. David Gaskell (who played for Manchester United against Leicester City in the 1963 FA Cup Final) was in the side.
“I went part-time rather than sign on at Liverpool as an apprentice. My parents said I had to have a trade. My dad didn’t want me to end up on the docks like he had. So, I had six years on a building site, unlike my mates, who were apprentices.
Moving in on Arsenal's Charlie George during the First Division match at Filbert Street in 1971.
Moving in on Arsenal's Charlie George during the First Division match at Filbert Street in 1971.
“The greatest of these was a lad called Ian Callaghan (who went on to become a Liverpool legend and an England international). He was about 14 months younger than me. We both lived in Tower Gardens in Dingle. He went everywhere with me.
“Then, when I was at Liverpool, I got a phone call asking me what Callaghan was doing now. I went down to see his family and told them that Liverpool wanted Ian to go training with them on Tuesday and Thursday nights like me. His parents were made up but he never turned up.
“I went down to where he lived and took him to Melwood (Liverpool’s training ground). Just as we got to the gates, he said he wanted to go home. I got him by the neck and took him into Melwood and told him: ‘What’s wrong with you? Get in there. Stop messing around. You’re here now!’ He was a lovely lad. I looked after him. He went onto play over 850 games for Liverpool.
“I played two games for Liverpool, at outside-right. I was no good as an outside-right and when Cally (Callaghan) came in, I was knocked back to the reserves.”
In August 1962, Willie signed for old Third Division side Halifax Town. That season saw the worst winter in Britain since 1740. The icy conditions caused a massive number of games to be postponed. The third round of the FA Cup took over two months to complete. Halifax weren’t able play their home games for three months. The pitch at their Shay Ground was so frozen the club turned it into an ice rink for the public, charging people to use it.
“It was awful,” Willie continued. “The bad weather meant that there were no games played. I was top scorer in my second season there but that was because no one else could play, apart from me and Don McEvoy, the manager. We were relegated from the Third Division. Honestly, it was a waste of time. If I’d stayed there another year, I’d have walked out.
“Luckily, Alan Ashman, Carlisle’s manager, came in for me (in October 1964). It was the finest thing that ever happened to me.”
John Radford is watched by Willie during the FA Cup Quarter Final against Arsenal on 6 March 1971.
John Radford is watched by Willie during the FA Cup Quarter Final against Arsenal on 6 March 1971.
Willie spent three seasons at Carlisle. The Blues were promoted as old Third Division champions at the end of his first season, more than held their own in the second tier the following season, and then missed promotion to the top flight by one place the year after that. One of Willie’s team-mates at Carlisle was the future Leicester cult hero, the centre-forward Frank Large.
“He was unbelievable,” Willie remembered. “He was a smashing lad. Really and truly, a good lad.”
Willie’s next move was to top-flight outfit Sheffield United in October 1967, where a team-mate was Alan Birchenall, until Birch’s move to Chelsea a month later.
“John Harris signed me,” Willie added. “He was a gentleman. They had a really first-class set of players, like Alan Hodgkinson, Lenny Badger, Tony Currie. Alan Woodward and Tony Wagstaff. The players had great individual skills. The trouble was some of them were kids from Sheffield and, after a match, they were in the pubs and the clubs. It was a shame because a lot of those lads could have really made it. I learned a lot from that.
“In those days, Bramall Lane only had three sides. The fourth side opened out to the cricket ground. If we were winning 1-0, we just kicked the ball into the cricket ground!”
At the end of Willie’s maiden campaign at Sheffield United, John Harris became general manager and, in August 1968, Arthur Rowley, who had scored 265 goal for Leicester City between 1950 and 1958, became team manager.
Willie pictured far left as Derby County captain Dave Mackay receives the Evening Standard Footballer of the Month award before the League Cup Third Round replay against Chelsea at the Baseball Ground on 2 October, 1968.
Willie pictured far left as Derby County captain Dave Mackay receives the Evening Standard Footballer of the Month award before the League Cup Third Round replay against Chelsea at the Baseball Ground on 2 October, 1968.
“Once Arthur arrived there was no way I was going to stay at Sheffield,” he explained. “When I was at Carlisle, he was manager at Shrewsbury. In a game against Shrewsbury, I was on the bench getting over a broken leg. Arthur Rowley came over and clashed with our trainer Dicky Young so I got up and joined in. I would have left anyway though because of an offer I got from Cloughy (Derby County manager, Brian Clough).
“He’d been tracking me since he’d been manager at Hartlepool, when I was at Carlisle, but I’d told him that there was no way I was going to Hartlepool.
“John Harris told me that he wanted to see me at Bramall Lane. When I got there, he told me Cloughy was there. Then he said: ‘Oh, you’re going to Derby!‘
“I told him I wasn’t and that I was going to buy a house in Sheffield because my family was still in Carlisle. Cloughy was in the office. I knocked on the door, went in and Clough said: ‘Right you, who have you hit this time?!’ When I said: ‘I beg your pardon?’ even though he knew I was going to buy a house, he said: ‘You’re coming to Derby with me.’
“What had happened was that Rowley, who’d just been appointed as team manager, told Cloughy that he was getting rid of me. I realised I had to go, so I went to Derby.”
Willie was at the Baseball Ground for just over two seasons (August 1968 until November 1970). In his first season, the Rams were second-tier champions and, the following year, they finished fourth in the old First Division behind Everton, Leeds United and Chelsea.
Willie shoots past Manchester United's John Aston and Pat Crerand during Derby's First Division match at Old Trafford in 1970.
Willie shoots past Manchester United's John Aston and Pat Crerand during Derby's First Division match at Old Trafford in 1970.
“Cloughy was fantastic,” Willie recalled. “He’d just brought in Dave Mackay (the Scotland international who’d had trophy-laden spells at Heart of Midlothian and Tottenham Hotspur). Everyone respected him. He could talk on the pitch. We looked after him on the pitch and Roy McFarland, who was about 21, played alongside him.
“After we’d been promoted, we beat Liverpool 4-0 at Anfield on a Bank Holiday. All my Liverpool-supporting family went. They couldn’t believe it. After the game, I went to this big pub outside Anfield. My family were there and wouldn’t speak to me!”
In October 1970, Frank O’Farrell signed Willie for Leicester City, who had just missed promotion back to the top flight at the first attempt in 1970, finishing third. O’Farrell also brought in another midfielder, Bristol City’s Bobby Kellard.
O’Farrell referred to Willie, who was 5ft 4in tall, as his ‘little street fighter’. He knew that City had some very good players but he felt they were a bit quiet and lacked nastiness. He wanted Willie and Bobbie Kellard, with their energetic and combative midfield play, ‘to provide a different mix’ by adding aggression and competitiveness to the side.
This pragmatic approach worked. Leicester returned to the top flight as the 1971 Second Division champions.
“I got a phone call from Frank about moving to Leicester,” Willie recalled. “But I’d reached an age where my kids were at school and I wanted to stay living in Derby. By this time, though, Cloughy had brought in Archie Gemmill to take over from me, so I moved to Leicester but I had to travel every time from Derby and it wasn’t good.
“Bobby Kellard was good to play with. He was a good lad. The Leicester lads were too nice! I sometimes felt some of them were a bit too easy going once the game was over. I felt that they didn’t worry enough about the game. But we did well and I got another promotion under my belt.
“Frank O’Farrell was a gentleman. Not like the other fellow, Cloughy! You had to take notice of Cloughy! He was brilliant.”
The City squad of 1971.
The City squad of 1971.
Following promotion, O’Farrell was appointed to the manager’s post at Manchester United. He was replaced by Leyton Orient’s manager, the ex-Arsenal star Jimmy Bloomfield, who brought in Jon Sammels, Alan Birchenall and Keith Weller.
“Frank had to take the Manchester United job, didn’t he?” said Willie. “Jimmy came in, but then (in September 1971) Jimmy Sirrel signed me for Notts County. There were a lot of young lads there and, after just missing out in 1972, we won promotion in 1973.”
In November 1973, Willie moved to his final club, second-tier Cardiff City, managed by O’Farrell.
“I was promised a coaching job at Cardiff and I found a house for the family to move into,” he continued. “But then O’Farrell departed and I was left on my own, living all week in a hotel, with my family back in Derby. So I just said: ‘I’ve had enough of this’. I went home and that was it. That was the end of my playing career.
“A pal of mine got me a newsagent job in Melbourne and then I opened a bar in Majorca. I had all the football photographs up. You couldn’t get in. I was there for about 15 years. It was unbelievable. My lad Matt grew up there. He loved it. Then I came back to Derbyshire and I worked again as a newsagent before I retired.”
It was a pleasure talking to Willie. His tenacious, combative and aggressive performances alongside Bobby Kellard in the impressive Second Division title-winning season of 1971 are an important part of Leicester City’s folklore and history.

LATEST HEADLINES

LATEST PHOTOS

LATEST VIDEOS

King Power Stadium,

Filbert Way,

Leicester

LE2 7FL

Club >

Men >

Women >

Community >

App >

King Power Stadium,

Filbert Way,

Leicester

LE2 7FL

Club >

Men >

Women >

Community>

App >