Bernard Arthur Coe, who died at his home in Haslemere on 28 February 2024, aged 91, was a tall centre-half who played for the Corinthian Casuals in the early to mid ’50s.
He was described as a ‘constructive pivot seldom mastered in the air’. The centre-half position in the first XI was usually filled at this time by Ralph Cowan, the club captain, so Coe’s opportunities were limited to mainly reserve-team football and he only made eight first team appearances between 1955 and 1957.
Born in Essex and educated at the Royal Liberty School, Romford, he did his National Service with the Royal Artillery in Hong Kong, and then went up to Selwyn College, Cambridge to study Geography. While at Cambridge, he won a soccer Blue in December 1955 (Cambridge won 4-2) and in December 1956 (Cambridge lost 1-4), both matches being played at Wembley. Of the 1956 match, Colin Weir wrote “…the Cambridge half-back line was impressive with Coe making the position of centre-half his own with good distribution as well as being a sound ‘stopper’”. At university, he also played occasionally for Pegasus.
His business career began when he joined an oil company which involved him working around the world, eventually becoming chairman of Shell Petroleum in Thailand. In a letter to the Newsletter in December 1971 from Nairobi, he remarked that his last game of soccer was in Jamaica in 1964 with, among others, Gerry Alexander (a member of the Corinthian-Casuals Amateur Cup Final team in 1956 and the future West Indian Test cricket captain). A long-standing knee injury put an end to “rough games”. He became a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society in 2000.