Alf Bishop (footballer, born 1884)

Alf Bishop
Personal information
Full name Alfred John Bishop
Date of birth (1884-08-13)13 August 1884
Place of birth Stourbridge, England
Date of death 14 November 1938(1938-11-14) (aged 54)
Place of death Stourbridge, England
Height 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Position(s) Half-Back
Youth career
1899-1902 Stourbridge Standard
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1903-1904 Halesowen Town 28 (0)
1904-1906 Aston Villa
1905Halesowen Town (Loan) 11 (0)
1906-1920 Wolverhampton Wanderers 382 (6)
1920 Wrexham 9 (0)
1921 Stourbridge 8 (0)
International career
1904 Birmingham and District Juniors 1 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Alfred John Bishop (13 August 1884 – 14 November 1938) was an English footballer who spent fourteen out of eighteen seasons of his professional career at Wolverhampton Wanderers. Bishop was known to be quite the brutal footballer, never shirking a tackle or a contest for the ball, which caught up to him later in his career as he began to struggle with injuries. He never played above the Second Division and therefore never received international recognition in his senior career.

Bishop began playing competitive football at Stourbridge Standard, which is now known as Stourbridge F.C., before moving to Halesowen Town with the hopes of getting more game time. Securing a place in the starting eleven immediately, he began at right half-back. He only played two games in this position before being switched to the opposite side at left half-back where he played every game of the 1903-04 campaign. At the end of that season in April 1904, Bishop, at 19 years, was called up to play for Birmingham and District Juniors in an international game against Scotland Juniors. It was in this game where Alf was noticed by scouts from First Division side Aston Villa and signed for them later that same month.

Bishop struggled for game time at Aston Villa and was loaned back to Halesowen in 1905 for a brief period. After his loan spell, he returned to Aston Villa but did not appear in any games.

In 1906, Bishop joined Wolverhampton Wanderers and became a regular first-team player. In his second season at the club, he was part of the 1908 FA Cup winning side that beat First Division side Newcastle United. In doing so, he suffered a broken jaw however continued to play the entire game. Bishop became captain in 1911 after the retirement of Billy Wooldridge and continued to hold this position and continue it after World War I, making 382 appearances for the Wolves in total.

Bishop left Wolves in 1920 and joined Welsh side Wrexham for a brief period before returning to his boyhood club Stourbridge to play out the rest of his career. He retired from football in 1921.