When Sep Smith Played Against Two Brothers In The 1934 FA Cup Semi-Finals

Heritage
16 Apr 2021
4 Minutes
Leicester City tackle Southampton in the semi-finals of the Emirates FA Cup on Sunday. Ahead of that tie at Wembley Stadium, Club Historian John Hutchinson recalls the occasion when Sep Smith faced two of his brothers in the last-four stage back in 1934.

On 17 March, 1934, City took on Portsmouth at St. Andrew's in their first-ever FA Cup Semi-Final. For the only time in FA Cup last-four history, three brothers played in the same game. One of these men was Sep Smith, on the verge of an England cap, who played for Leicester.

His brothers, Jack and Willie, starred for Portsmouth. Along with two other brothers who were also professional footballers, the Smith family originated from the North East coastal mining village of Whitburn, near Sunderland. 

Ever since defeating Preston North End in the quarter-finals, cup excitement had engulfed Leicester. There were traffic jams outside Leicester London Road station when the team returned from Preston and, by Tuesday morning, the telephone at the Club office was ringing constantly with ticket requests.

The fact that Sep would be playing against his brothers in the semi-final was quickly picked up by the press. Their mother was quoted in the media as saying: "Sep is the baby but he is the grandest footballer of the bunch. I fully expect Sep to be on the winning side, but I shall be very sorry for the other two boys, especially Jack, whose last chance this may be to win a cup medal. If only the two teams could have avoided each other until Wembley! Then I should have been the happiest mother in England, whatever the result was."

The Club's 1933/34 first team squad pictured as a group.

The article went on to explain: "Neither of the proud parents will be at Birmingham on Saturday. Mr. Smith is unemployed and cannot afford the long journey. And his wife said: ‘I wouldn’t go even if I could afford it. It would be far too exciting for an old lady, and I should hate to see any of my boys hurt'."

City’s training for the match included concentrating on shooting, climbing up to Old John, rounds of golf at Kirby Muxloe and table tennis. Leicester were to play the game in white shirts and black shorts, to avoid a colour clash, with Pompey also usually adorning blue.

The team trained on the Thursday before the game in this kit ‘in order to give the players an opportunity of getting accustomed to their new rig out’.

Due to the interest in the game, special arrangements were made by banks for paying the wages of local workers. Many thousands of pounds normally paid out for wages on Saturday, were paid out on Friday instead.

Leicester travelled to Birmingham by road on the morning of the match. It was reported that 'in order to avoid scenes that might disturb the temperaments of the team who will carry the hopes of a quarter of a million people, the time and the place of the team’s departure is being kept secret'.

Some 15,000 Leicester supporters travelled to the game. A special fleet of buses departed from Humberstone Gate, each with banners proclaiming that they were 'Leicester Mercury Special Cup Coaches'.

The bus station was choked with cars and with several hundreds of people who had come to see their friends off. As each bus started off, there was a blowing of toy trumpets and a waving of rattles. Another 12,000 fans travelled in 12 trains, each with 12 coaches, leaving the Midland Station.

Police helped regulate the crowds. Ambulance staff were on standby. There was one crowd surge, which swept everyone aside, as rail passengers dashed to take their seats on one of the trains steaming into the station. Hundreds of supporters were also going to travel in their own cars.

[The game] will be the culmination of the most remarkable waves of enthusiasm football has ever known in Leicester.

Leicester Mercury

Other buses and trains were leaving from Hinckley, Market Harborough, Elmsthorpe, Wellingborough and Peterborough. Most local park matches were cancelled or postponed. Items in City’s temporary colours of black and white were selling by the thousand.

The Mercury reported that the game 'will be the culmination of the most remarkable waves of enthusiasm football has ever known in Leicester'.

However, the game ended in disappointment for Leicester's army of supporters. In front of a record crowd for St. Andrew's of 66,544, Leicester lost 4-1.

The fact that City's mascot for the day was a lamb, brought to the ground in a wicker basket, led to the metaphor of a lamb going to slaughter being developed in the sporting press. 

With a dazzling sun in Leicester’s eyes, Portsmouth were 2-0 up in 22 minutes, but Arthur Lochhead had pulled a goal back for City by half-time. However, Portsmouth scored two more goals in the first five minutes of the second half. Jack Weddle completed his hat trick and Septimus Rutherford added a fourth.

Just before half-time, Leicester full back Sandy Wood broke his nose after running into and falling over a touchline photographer. Sep, though, was singled out for special praise by the press: "Sep was second to none in the match as a polished performer."

The match at St. Andrew's took place on a very big sporting weekend. As well as the semi-finals, there was also the Boat Race and an England-Scotland Rugby Union international at Twickenham. The newsreels took full advantage.

Their verdict on the semi-final was that Leicester City deserved high praise for their first-half performance but that the game had been irrevocably lost in those first five minutes after half-time. As a postscript, Sep’s brothers lost out to Manchester City in the final six weeks later.