Philip Henry Griffiths (25 October 1905 â 14 May 1978) was a Welsh international footballer. He won his only cap for Wales in 1931. He started and ended his career at Port Vale and also had spells with Everton, West Bromwich Albion, Cardiff City, and Folkestone Town. He played in the Southern League and every division of the Football League, winning the Third Division North title with Port Vale in 1929âÂÂ30, and winning the First Division title with Everton in 1931âÂÂ32.
Griffiths played for Tylorstown and Wattstown and, after failing a trial with Stoke City, joined Port Vale following a trial period in August 1926. He had walked to Stoke-on-Trent from South Wales to win a contract at one of the Potteries clubs. He played one Second Division game in the 1926âÂÂ27 season, and featured 11 times in the 1927âÂÂ28 campaign. He scored his first goal in the Football League on 14 April 1928, in a 3âÂÂ0 win over Blackpool at the Old Recreation Ground. He scored against rivals Stoke City in a 2âÂÂ1 defeat at the Victoria Ground on 15 September, and went on to play six matches in the 1928âÂÂ29 season, claiming his third career goal on the last day of the season, in a 5âÂÂ0 home win over Bristol City. The "Valiants" were relegated, and Griffiths established himself in the first-team in the Third Division North, claiming 14 goals in 31 appearances as Vale won promotion as champions in the 1929âÂÂ30 campaign. He went on to score 13 goals in 39 games in the 1930âÂÂ31 season and was sold to Everton for a ã6,000 fee in May 1931.
Griffiths helped the "Toffees" to win the First Division title in 1931âÂÂ32. Never a first-team regular, he left Goodison Park at the end of the 1932âÂÂ33 campaign and moved on to West Bromwich Albion. He helped the "Throstles" to post a seventh-place finish in the First Division in 1933âÂÂ34. He then left The Hawthorns to return to his native South Wales and turned out for Third Division South side Cardiff City in the 1934âÂÂ35 season. He played for Folkestone Town in the Southern League after departing Ninian Park. He returned to Port Vale in October 1939, where he was also made the "A" team coach. However, with World War II, he was called into active service during the 1944âÂÂ45 season.
Port Vale
Everton