The Day I Discovered the Everton Contract Don Revie Never Signed
The mystery began with my mother’s gentle insistence. In the years before she passed last year, she would often muse, with a knowing look, that there was something valuable in the home she had shared with her husband, George. Not valuable in a purely sentimental sense, but something of substantial historical and financial worth. My mind, of course, raced to the obvious: a hidden heirloom, a piece of antique silver, perhaps a forgotten painting. I never imagined the truth would be a piece of paper that could rewrite a chapter of football history.
A House of Secrets and Football Legends
To understand the gravity of the find, you must first understand the man. George Watts was my stepfather, a quiet, astute, and fiercely intelligent businessman. To the world, he was a key director and later chairman of Everton Football Club during one of its most tumultuous and ambitious eras. To me, he was the man whose home was occasionally visited by giants. I have a vivid childhood memory of the great Bob Latchford, Everton’s record-signing and goal-scoring hero, sitting in our living room, discussing the intricacies of his contract. That was the norm. George’s primary role at the club was financial; he handled the money. Crucially, he also worked directly for the club’s owner, the retail magnate John Moores, at the Littlewoods Organisation. George was Moores’s man inside Goodison Park, a trusted lieutenant navigating the complex finances of a top-flight club.
When George died in 1988, the practical matters fell to Keith Tamlin, a fellow Everton director and a solicitor. He was tasked with handling the estate. I recall him emptying a filing cabinet in George’s study, a cabinet perpetually rammed with club paraphernalia, minutes, financial reports, and correspondence. It was, I was told, cleared out. The club’s business was returned to Goodison. Except, as I would learn decades later, for one single document. One piece of paper that, for reasons lost to time, Keith Tamlin either missed or deliberately left behind, tucked within a forgotten folder of personal financial notes.
The Forgotten Filing Cabinet and a Footballing “What If?”
It was during the sad, slow process of clearing my mother’s house that I found it. Beneath a stack of old utility bills and insurance documents, in a faded manila folder, was a single sheet of Everton Football Club letterhead. The typed text was formal, dense with legal and financial terminology. But two words leaped off the page and stole my breath: “Don Revie.”
It was not a signed contract. It was something arguably more fascinating: a fully drafted, finalized contract of employment for Don Revie to become the Manager of Everton Football Club. The date was 1973. The terms were detailed, specifying salary, bonuses, duration, and responsibilities. It was complete in every way, ready for signatures. But the signature blocks for the Club (presumably to be signed by George Watts or John Moores) and for Don Revie himself were hauntingly, profoundly blank.
The historical context is everything. In 1973, Don Revie was the revered, iconic manager of Leeds United, the architect of the most formidable team in England. Everton, under John Moores, had ambitions to match their neighbours across Stanley Park. The club had just won the league title in 1970 but was seeking a dynasty-builder. The document in my hands was proof of a clandestine, audacious plot to poach the best manager in the country.
- The Contract Date: Late 1973, months before Revie eventually left Leeds for the England job in 1974.
- The Everton Context: A club with immense financial backing from Moores, seeking a long-term visionary.
- The Staggering Implications: Had Revie signed, the history of English football would have irrevocably changed.
Expert Analysis: The Ripple Effect of a Signature That Never Was
As a football historian, analyzing this document is like examining the blueprint for an alternate universe. Let’s dissect the potential ripple effects.
First, Leeds United’s trajectory. Revie’s departure for England in 1974 began Leeds’ slow decline from their peak. Had he gone to Everton instead, would he have been tempted to bring key players with him? Would Leeds have collapsed sooner, or would a new manager have succeeded differently? The power shift from Yorkshire to Merseyside would have been immediate and seismic.
Second, Everton’s destiny. Instead of the managerial instability that followed, Everton would have secured a proven, detail-obsessed winner. Revie’s famed “dossiers” and meticulous preparation would have been funded by Moores’s wealth. The potential Everton dynasty of the late 1970s, possibly built around talents like Bob Latchford, would have directly challenged Liverpool’s own ascendancy under Bob Paisley. The Merseyside balance of power might never have tilted so decisively in Liverpool’s favour.
Third, the England job. If Revie was at Everton in 1974, would he have even taken the England role? Possibly not. That could have meant no ill-fated reign for Revie with the national team, and perhaps a different candidate for England, altering another strand of history.
Why did it never happen? The document offers no clue. Was it cold feet from Revie, unable to leave his Leeds project? Did John Moores get spooked by the compensation required? Or did Leeds United somehow get wind of the approach and intervene? The blank signature lines are a permanent monument to a negotiation that reached the one-yard line before being stopped dead.
Predictions: The Value and Legacy of Football’s Ghost Artifacts
This discovery goes beyond mere memorabilia. It is a “ghost artifact,” a tangible piece of a future that never materialized. Its value is multifaceted.
Financial Value: In the booming market of football collectibles, a document of this historical significance is priceless. It would be of intense interest to autograph collectors, football museums, and private investors, likely commanding a high five-figure or even six-figure sum at auction. Its uniqueness—a fully formed contract for a move that never happened—makes it extraordinary.
Historical Value: For Everton and Leeds United historians, it is a missing link, confirming long-rumoured whispers of Moores’s ambition. It provides concrete evidence of the club’s thinking at a pivotal moment.
Cultural Value: It embodies the endless “what if?” conversations that fuel football fandom. This single sheet of paper is the physical manifestation of every fan’s speculation about the road not taken.
I predict the market for such definitive, paper-trail evidence of major near-misses will only grow. In an age of transfer rumours and media speculation, a concrete document like this cuts through the noise and reveals the true, secret machinations of the game.
Conclusion: More Than Just Paper
My mother was right. There was something valuable in that house. But its worth isn’t just in the potential auction price. The value is in the story, in the profound window it opens into a parallel footballing timeline. That day, holding the crisp, unsigned paper, I wasn’t just holding a contract. I was holding the ghost of a potential Everton dynasty, the unbroken legacy of Don Revie at Leeds, and a different 1970s for English football. The empty space where a signature should be is louder than any autograph. It echoes with the silence of a history that was planned, prepared for, and ultimately, left unwritten. It is the most important piece of paper Everton never used, and the ultimate proof that in football, sometimes the most compelling stories are about the deals that were never done.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
