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Next Game: Marine At Edgar Street On Saturday 9th November At 3.00pm

Thursday, December 05, 2019

Billy Meadows Has Died

Brian Owen, Billy Meadows and Andy Morris Pictured At A Hereford United Giantkillers dinner at the Starlite Club in 2012 - Andy Compton Photo
Billy Meadows, one of the famous Hereford United giantkillers team, has died at the age of 77.

He passed away in his sleep last night.

He had been in a care home recently.

Meadows moved to Hereford United from Barnet on July 29th 1970.

In his first nine league games he scored eight goals and later scored a hat-trick against Kidderminster in the FA Cup.

Hereford paid Barnet £300 for centre forward Billy Meadows to replace John Charles in attack. Billy was one of the greatest goalscorers in Barnet's history, averaging a goal every two games in some 250 appearances for the Bees. He netted 78 when he first joined the club in 1968 but he soon became a Hereford United favourite.

In fact, Billy was a member of United's Southern League side that memorably beat Newcastle United 2-1 a match that established Barnet fan John Motson as a top BBC television commentator!

 

Ricky George, who scored Hereford's winner that day and played alongside Billy with both the Bees and the Bulls, recalled: “The night before, John Shrewsbury, Motty, Billy Meadows, and I went out for dinner. We returned to the Green Dragon hotel in Hereford at around 10.30 and bumped into Jackie Milburn [Newcastle's greatest centre forward, a star of the 1950s].

“He said ‘nice to meet you son, but if I was your manager I'd have you in bed by now’. I replied ‘if I come on tomorrow and score the winning goal, nobody will mind will they?” I lived in Barnet and a convoy of four cars drove back to Billy Meadows' house in London to watch Match of the Day over fish and chips and a few cans of lager.

“On the way we stopped for petrol. A very school-boyish Motty ran from his car and said ‘it’s just dawned on me that you've created history!’” Billy later returned to Barnet as player-manager and signed Jimmy Greaves, arguably England's greatest-ever goal-scorer, for the club along with other star names.