John Thomson Love DFC (18 March 1924 â 14 June 2007) was a Scottish football player and manager. He scored 47 goals in 146 league games in the Scottish and English leagues, playing for Leith Athletic, Albion Rovers, Nottingham Forest, and Walsall. He later managed Llanelli, Walsall, and Wrexham. He was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross for his service during World War II.
Love, "a hard inside forward with a strong shot", won a Distinguished Flying Cross after being wounded by shrapnel whilst serving in the Royal Air Force in 1944.
He started his career at Leith Athletic, and scored five goals in nineteen games during the 1947âÂÂ48 Second Division, after which Leigh were relegated. He moved on to Albion Rovers of the First Division, and scored eleven goals in 28 league games in 1948âÂÂ49.
He won a move to Nottingham Forest in February 1949, just as the club suffered relegation at the end of 1948âÂÂ49. He scored 21 goals in 62 league and cup games for Forest, helping the club win promotion into the Second Division as champions of the Third Division South in 1950âÂÂ51. The club missed out on a second successive promotion in 1951âÂÂ52 by just two points, after which Love moved on to Welsh side Llanelli, where he was appointed player-manager.
Love joined Walsall in March 1955, as the club floundered at the foot of the Third Division South table; he scored twice in sixteen games. Having successfully applied for re-election, Walsall chose Love to replace the legendary Frank Buckley in September 1955. Love picked himself for 24 league games, and scored eight goals, in 1955âÂÂ56, as his side finished twentieth. He then retired as a player, due to injury, and then managed the "Saddlers" to a fifteenth-place finish in 1956âÂÂ57.
Love took up the management reins at Third Division North Wrexham for the 1957âÂÂ58 campaign. The "Red Dragons" finished twelfth, and lifted the Welsh Cup after victory over Chester City in a replay at the Racecourse Ground. His side founded the newly formed Third Division in 1958âÂÂ59, and ended the season in eighteenth place. He stepped down at the end of the campaign. He returned to Edinburgh and took up a post with a furniture company and went on to become sales director.