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ALF D'ARCY

In the spotlight is a very special gentleman who was “The Governor” in the 1950's at Underhill. A legend in the amateur game and perhaps the best centre half in England never to turn Professional. He is one of the players that are the foundation stones for our football club.

I am very lucky to say I keep in contact with and continue to meet ex Barnet players and many have become dear friends. Alf is one in particular and I caught up with him at a recent Barnet home game at the Hive - so I felt compelled to update this tribute, originally written in 2014 to him.


Alf was born in The City Road Islington in 1935 one of two brothers with two sisters. The family were “bombed out” in early 1940 and the children were evacuated to friends of his parents in Mays Lane Barnet. “That was a real stroke of luck for me, close to the football ground where I watched some great players like Dennis Kelleher, Lester Finch and Ted Bunker. My sisters still live next door to each other in Dollis Brook Walk.”
Alf 1950's

He played over 300 times for Barnet, won over 40 Amateur International Caps, captained his club and country, and represented the Middlesex Wanderers travelling all round the world. He played at the old Wembley 5 times in Amateur Cup finals, won Athenian League and Isthmian League Championships with Barnet, Enfield and Slough But it all started at Underhill in 1950.

Alf went to school at Elizabeth Allen School in Mays Lane and was soon playing football at County and District level. “My brother Denny who was in the Barnet first team by now introduced me to the club and I scored four goals in my trial game. Lester Finch was manager then and I rapidly progressed into the reserve team and actually signed for Barnet when I was 15 as an inside forward like my brother. George Wheeler tried me out as a centre half one day where I felt very comfortable and there I stayed”. Alf was not a tall man unlike most centre halves at the time who where towering 6 foot plus types, “Barnet’s style was calm and collected, building up from the back. I could give it out if needed and loved a row with a centre forward but that superior footballing style really suited my game.”

Throughout the 1950's, after a break for National service in the RAF, Alf D’Arcy built up a reputation as the finest centre half in the non-league game and was selected to represent his country while at Underhill and was soon made captain of England Amateurs.
His debut for the first team came in April 1953 as an inside forward (Number 10) in the following line up in 2-1 defeat away at Tooting & Mitcham. 
Stevens - Livermore, Duncan - Bennett, Clark, Cooper - Gerrans, D'Arcy (D), Phipps, D'Arcy (A), Scott.

The crowds at Underhill in those days were fantastic, five and six thousand and never a hint of trouble, just great comradeship. So soon after the war the whole country was like that. The 1959 Cup Final at Wembley was incredible, we had a wonderful young team including Roy Drake, Bobby Warman, Reggie Finch, Tony Harding and of course Bobby Brown who scored 2 great goals but we lost 3-2. Bobby scored 64 goals in 67 games for Barnet, that is a great player. The previous season we won the League and were runners up the year after. I am proud to say I played in that team alongside my brother Denny.”
Denny, a quick, skilful inside forward or link man with perfect balance, who spent nearly 10 years at the club was tragically killed aged 30 in a car accident in South Mimms on New Year Eve 1962

Alf was selected time and time again for the Middlesex Wanderers FC, the team of guests whose basic aim was to promote the ‘beautiful game’ throughout the world. Alf toured to the Far East, The West Indies, and all over Europe with the Wanderers.
Dennis and Alf

Let me tell you the changing rooms in the old wooden stand at Barnet were pretty basic and the baths were old storage tanks! Before the game we were served tea and toast, half time was a cup of tea or soup. We trained on the pitch and did our running around the terraces. There were no wages as such just basic expenses but to be fair the club always arranged a nice meal for us after away matches in a hotel or a restaurant on the way home. Around this time I bought a house in East Barnet right next door to someone who played a huge part in my early football career, Lester Finch”. “I was working as a plumber, but I thought that was too cold out in all weathers! So I got a job with my father as a machine setter and spent 22 years doing that before starting a travel business in the 1960’s with my pal Tommy Lawrence”.

Sadly in February 1962 Alf left Underhill after a disagreement with then Chairman APG Walters and finished the season with St Allbans City and then moved to our bitter rivals Enfield where he had more success winning League titles and then two FA Amateur Cup winners medals in 1967 and 1970.  “I didn't go out in a blaze of glory from Barnet but it really was a wonderful place to play. At Enfield I came up against my old mates at Barnet and some of the best tussles were with Roger Figg, there was a great goalscorer. I left Enfield in 1970 and moved to Slough Town and played at Wembley again aged 38”. I asked whether he had ever considered managing a club? “I was basically a number two to Tommy Lawrence at Enfield when I was captain and coached a little while at Slough. I went back briefly to Southbury Road to coach the reserve side but it wasn’t for me. I wanted to concentrate on my business interests, a travel company specialising in arranging tours for football clubs to all parts of the world”. The company has been a major success story as KAM Sports and it moved on quickly to looking after the travel arrangements for the top English teams like Liverpool and Tottenham in Europe. “I got even more opportunities to travel to some wonderful places with the business and It is still going strong run by my sons and has given me a comfortable lifestyle” said Alf proudly.

I then asked Alf why he never turned professional? He was very honest and sincere about why. “Every time I think about it I know I made the right decision. I had many opportunities to turn pro, and Bill Nicholson at Spurs approached me but I was a big fish in a small pond and happy with life at Barnet. I doubt very much I would have represented my country so many times or indeed had the opportunity to visit some of the fantastic countries I did had I taken the plunge and gone full time. Anyway the pro wages in those days were nothing like the scale of today’s players earnings and I was making a comfortable living with my business interests.”


Who were the greats? I asked him and again he replied with assured reasoning. “The greats are players who have the ability to almost stop a game in full flow by just receiving the ball. Bobby Moore had it, Bobby Charlton had it, John Charles had it, Johnny Haynes had it, Jimmy Greaves had it, almost like a respect that made normal players take a step back. I didn’t get anywhere near to their level but that is how I tried to present my self on a pitch.

Alf is now aged 83, fully retired and spends his days at home, visiting his apartment home in Southern Spain or just socialising. He tells me proudly, yet in a modest almost apologetic manner that Dave McKay, Keith Burkinshaw and Steve Perryman are among his close friends. He has recently moved to a lovely bungalow in Watten at Stone  but on the walls in one room of his last beautiful home in Tewen Hertfordshire, which doubled as a bar and billiard room, were numerous precious personal photographs of his heroes – Jimmy Greaves, Bobby Moore, The Charltons, the list is endless. They will I am sure find new homes on new walls.
Alf and I talk on the phone regularly, he is keen to know the ins and outs and who and why at Barnet FC. As I said I am very proud to call him a dear friend too now. Every summer he hosts a huge Bar B Q in his garden for his 4 sons, 11 grandchildren plus his close friends – most of them ex professional footballers. His hospitality reflects his personality, warm and generous.
He won't feel embarrassed when I tell you he looks great and when it comes to football and tactics his mind is as sharp as a tack.

With Chairman Tony Kleanthous 
Alf April 2014

Football is still strong in the D’Arcy family most notably with his nephew Henry Lansbury who is at Aston Villa.  “He is a strong player and I have tried to teach him to be blinkered because that is how you succeed nowadays but I want him to get as much pleasure as I did from playing the game. I have had a brilliant and exciting career and a great life from doing what I always wanted to do and that was simply kicking a football!
Reckless and Alf 2009



1 comment:

  1. Still remember you Alf glad to know you are doing well
    Harry Lucas the HAMLET 84 now not playing as much anymore would be good to hear from you HFLucas@icloud.com 01255852887

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