Cartwright played in three youth international matches. The first was a challenge match against Luxembourg on 2 February 1957 at West Ham's own Boleyn Ground.[6] He then played against the Netherlands in the UEFA International Youth Tournament on 14 April 1957,[7] and against Ireland in the British Youth Championships on 11 May 1957.[3]
It was through Ted Fenton that Cartwright got into coaching at an early age, as Fenton encouraged all the players at the Academy to take their coaching badges so that after playing they had something to fall back on.[8] He gained his junior coaching qualification in 1958, while still playing for the youth team. He added the senior qualification in 1961, the year he left West Ham.[9] He had also witnessed the influence that players such as Malcolm Allison had had on team tactics and motivation,[10] later describing it as "a form of communism at the club. The players really ruled it. In short, a dictatorship of the football proletariat".[11]
Cartwright made his senior debut for West Ham on 17 October 1959, starting the match against Everton at Goodison Park. "I made Malcolm Musgrove's goal in my first game", Cartwright later recalled.[1] The match ended in a 1–0 win for West Ham.[12] However, with competition from the likes of Phil Woosnam and Ron Boyce, Cartwright found his chances limited at West Ham. He made just four senior appearances in the Football League for the club between 1959 and 1961,[4] although he managed three goals in four appearances in the League Cup and it's forerunner, the Southern Professional Floodlit Cup.[13]
Shortly after Ron Greenwood took over the reins at West Ham, Cartwright moved to Crystal Palace,[1] where he made 11 appearances in the League,[14] before dropping down to the Southern League to join Malcolm Allison at Bath City in the summer of 1963.[15][16] He played 60 games for the Somerset club, scoring 30 goals, and left in October 1964.[17][18]
He joined Wimbledon, also of the Southern League,[16] becoming their first player to be paid a fee after the club turned professional in 1964. He made 120 league appearances for the Dons, scoring 19 goals.[8]
Cartwright worked as youth coach at Crystal Palace between 1971 and 1978, working with the team that won the FA Youth Cup in 1976–77 and 1977–78.[9]
He managed the England Youth (under 18) team,[4] as England's first full-time youth coach,[19] between 1978 and 1982.[9]
After another spell in Kuwait,[8][9] he became technical director at the Football Association's National School of Excellence, Lilleshall.[21] He resigned after two years in the job after disagreeing with former director of coaching and education, Charles Hughes.[22] He has since been a vocal critic of coaching methods in England.[23][24]
After a third spell in Kuwait, Cartwright became academy director at Crystal Palace.[9][26] In 2001, he set up Premier Skills, a company which delivers coach education and player development courses.[23]
Cartwright is an author of two books about football coaching. Teaching Soccer to Boys, cowritten with Alan Gibbon, was released in 1972,[28] and Football for the Brave was released in 2008.[29]
^Southern Professional Floodlit Cup (first round) v Charlton Athletic, 27 October 1958[31]
^Southern Professional Floodlit Cup (Semi-final) v Arsenal, 5 April 1960 (2 goals); Southern Professional Floodlit Cup (final) v Coventry City, 27 April 1960 (1 goal)[33]
^Cartwright made 60 competitive appearances for Bath City, scoring 30 goals. In 1963–64, he made 50 appearances, scoring 26 goals (21 league and 5 cup). In 1964–65, he made 10 appearances, scoring 4 goals (all league).
References
^ abcdBelton, Brian (1999). Days of Iron: The Story of West Ham United in the Fifties. The Breedon Books Publishing Company. pp. 163–164. ISBN1-85983-153-2.
^"John Cartwright". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 13 October 2017.
^Curtis, Simon (1 June 2015). "The Whiskey Option". The Blizzard – The Football Quarterly. No. 17. Blizzard Media Ltd. p. 102. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
^ abcPurkiss, Mike; Sands, Nigel (1990). Crystal Palace: A Complete Record 1905–1989. The Breedon Books Publishing Company. pp. 216–219. ISBN0907969542.
^Hugman, Barry J. (2005). The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–2005. Queen Anne Press. ISBN1-85291-665-6.