top of page

BORN ON THIS DAY: GEORGE HERD


Born on this day in 1936 in Gartosh, Lanarkshire, is 1960’s SAFC stalwart George Herd.


George’s football career started off with local side Gartosh Thistle, then during his national service (ask yer granddad,) appropriately enough in Fort George, with Inverness Thistle until 1956 when he moved to Queen’s Park, at the same time working on the railways as he’d never really fancied being a professional as a youngster.


His growing reputation persuaded him that he could make it in the paid game despite being of slight build. After moving to Clyde the following year, George turned professional and his solid style as an “inside forward” was recognised with five Scotland caps, and he’d won the Scottish Cup before we snapped him up in 1961 for the large sum, by the standards of the day, of £42,500. As George later said, he was keen to move south: "If Clyde went to Parkhead I was called an Orange ******* and if we went to Ibrox I was called a Fenian *******. I was just pleased to get away from Scotland".


His debut came on the final day of the ’60-’61 season, along with keeper Keith Hird, in a 1-1 draw with Liverpool at Roker, and he was part of the sides that so narrowly missed out on promotion in the following two seasons. Predominantly right-footed, he switched between the flank and the inside right channel during his Roker days, forming a good understanding with Brian Usher, and was a regular in the promotion campaign of ’63-’64, weighing in with 13 league goals. Alongside famous Sunderland names like Clough, Sharkey, Fogarty, Mulhall, Crossan, Hurley, McNab, Irwin, Ashurst, Harvey, Anderson, and Monty, he became a big part of our history over his nine years at Roker.


There was also spell in the summer of ’67 when he and most of his teammates became Vancouver Royal Canadians in a precursor to the MLS, as a host of British clubs played a two month tournament – Dundee United (Dallas Tornado), Hibernian (Toronto City), Aberdeen (Washington Whips), Wolves (Los Angeles Wolves), Stoke City (Cleveland Stokers), Uruguay's Cerro Porteno (New York Skyliners), Holland's ADO Den Haag (San Francisco Golden Gate Gales), Northern Ireland's Glentoran (Detroit Cougars), Italy's Cagliari (Chicago Mustangs), and Ireland's Shamrock Rovers (Boston Rovers) also took part. For the records, George featured six times as we played 12, won3, drew 5, and lost 4, scoring 20 and conceding 28. There’s something for the pub quizzers amongst you.


More of a foil than a goalscorer, he was a player who could spot the best chances for his marras, but he still amassed 55 goals in his 318 Sunderland games before hanging up his boots after 25 games in the ’68-’69 season, moving into coaching.


After a year behind the scenes on Wearside, he moved down the coast to Hartlepool, where he laced up his boots again and put in 15 performances before becoming a part-time coach at St James Park. In the late 70’s he looked after our youth team, producing players like John Cooke and Colin West. In 1980 he became manager of Queen of the South, before coaching at Darlo, in Kuwait a couple of times, and at Boro before once again working with our youngsters alongside Monty. After this, he moved into the Northern League as head coach at Seaham Red Star and then Sunderland RCA, working well into his seventies with seemingly relentless energy. He is probably running a team somewhere at the moment.


Thanks for subscribing!

mast head for website BIGGER NO BACKG.webp
secure-ssl-encryption.jpg
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
cards accepted 6966 AZ-700x700 copy.webp
bottom of page