Players - Berry Nieuwenhuys

Berry Nieuwenhuys
Birthdate: 5 November 1911
Birthplace: Kroonstad, South Africa
Date of death: 12 June 1984
Other clubs: Boksburg, Germiston Callies; Arsenal, West Ham United (wartime guest)
Signed from: Germiston Callies
Signed for LFC: 11.09.1933
Liverpool debut: 23.09.1933
Last appearance: 01.02.1947
Debut goal: 30.09.1933
Last goal: 26.12.1946
Contract expiry: 1947
Win ratio: 36.19% W:93 D:64 L:100
Games/goals ratio: 3.25
Honours: League Championship 1946/47
Wartime games/goals: 138 / 65
League games / goals: 236 / 74
Total games / goals: 257 / 79

Player Profile

"I rate him as being without superior, and I am not excluding Stanley Matthews. He is much more the direct and effective player; a goal-getter and a goal-provider." A football writer on Berry Nieuwenhuys.

Nieuwenhuys was born on 5 November 1911 in Kroonstad in the Free State, and after completing his schooling at Bethlehem went to work in the mines in the Transvaal. A keen and natural sportsman, his first love was rugby, but he soon switched to the round ball game. Imagine this. You’re a relative youngster playing a minor club game of football in South Africa when a man dashes onto the field during a lull in play and asks if you’d like to play for Liverpool. You wonder if he’s for real, but, of course, accept. A few weeks later, on the other side of the world, you are playing in front of 50,000 plus screaming spectators at Anfield. It sounds like something out of Boys Own magazine or the Beano annual, but that’s just what happened to Berry Nieuwenhuys in 1933. Eight years earlier another young South African player, Arthur Riley, had gone across to England to keep goal for Liverpool Football Club. His English-born father still lived in South Africa, where he keenly followed the sport. Having been impressed by Nieuwenhuys and another player, Lance Carr, he contacted the management at Liverpool and told them that he’d found a couple of “likely lads” in South Africa. The Brits told him to go ahead and hire them. That was the way people did business in those days – no agents, no contracts, no fat commissions; just a shake of the hand.

Nivvy passing the ball from the right flank

The eager Nieuwenhuys and Carr arrived in England on 11 September 1933 and were met on the quayside by Walter Cartwright and George Patterson, Liverpool Football Club’s Chairman and Secretary/manager respectively. After one warm-up game in a junior side Nieuwenhuys was named for the senior side to play against Tottenham Hotspur at White Hart Lane on 23 September. The Evening Express headlines told it all. “A gem from South Africa” they trumpeted. “Nivvy’s triumph in first big match for Liverpool. Home defeat for Spurs after 2 years." The English had trouble with his full name and immediately shortened it to something more handy; "Nivvy" as "the typewriter won't stand the strain of spelling his name in full." The South African had battled with a wet ball and unfamiliar slippery grass at the Lane in the first half, but in the second he gained confidence and set up two brilliant goals for his new club. Nivvy's second game was no less than a Merseyside derby at Anfield. He opened the scoring after roughly half an hour's play in a "cool and calculating manner" in the best derby for 30 years according to the Evening Express. The local papers were full of praise for the newcomer: “'Nivvy' afterwards showed that he has the big game temperament, but he has more – the ability. He moved about smoothly, employed touches of the master craftsman, and his centres were ever thoughtful. He certainly captured the fancy of the 'Koppites'. He is neatness personified. By no means an individualist, he adopts the easiest path, making some delightful short passes along the ground to his inside partner and next turning over a choice centre. “Nivvy” is anything but flashy, but he has a wonderful turn of speed." 

Nieuwenhuys was interviewed by the Evening Express following the game and he was thrilled to have taken part in "the greatest match in which I have ever had the honour to play." "Never before had I seen such a vast crowd, such brilliant football, or such clean football, and it was the thrill of my life when I managed to score the first goal. The point which struck me most was the cleanliness of the game. When we were leaving for England we were told that the game here was rough and dirty. Well, I can assure you that this match was 100 per cent cleaner that anything I have seen in Africa. I did not see one real foul in the entire ninety minutes. I confess I was rather staggered by the size of the crowd at the start but I did my best to forget they were there. That was hard in view of the continuous roar of voices. Still you could play in front of a crowd like that for years. They are such sportsmen. I thank them for the encouragement they gave me and also for the wonderful reception I was accorded when I left the field. I don't mind confessing it touched me." 

"It's Our Nivvy, our British Nivvy", the Liverpool fans sung, convinced that their favourite should play for England, and numerous football writers declared the fleet-footed player to be the best winger in the land. Not only was Nivvy a brilliant right-wing, but he could fit into any position without effort, being one of a select few to play in nine different positions in top-level football. The two positions he never filled – left-wing and goalkeeper – he was quietly confident would not pose a problem if the need arose. But it was not to be. The rules stated that for a player from the Commonwealth to represent England his father had to have been born in the UK, as in the instance of Gordon Hodgson, and this was not the case with Nivvy. The debate was, however, shortened by the unwelcome arrival of Hitler in Poland in September 1939. During the war years Nivvy served as a PT instructor with the Royal Air Force, captaining the RAF side and still managed to play numerous games for Liverpool. Footballers usually represented the clubs nearest the camps where they were based and Nivvy played for West Ham in the early 40's and Arsenal in 1945/46.

One thing that didn’t come with the fame was the obscene wealth associated with modern football. After Nivvy had given Liverpool five years’ staunch service, the club rewarded him with a benefit match against Everton from which he received the princely sum of £658. During the war things were even less rewarding – players were paid with sweets and cigarettes. Nivvy, a lifelong teetotaller and non-smoker, used to hang onto his sweets and swap his cigarettes for even more delicacies. When hostilities ceased Nivvy and his Liverpool teammates travelled to the USA to promote the game in that country. They played ten games and won all ten, with 70 goals for and just ten against, in front of a total in the excess of 100,000 spectators. The players’ earnings? Just £6 per game and a £2 bonus for each match they won – a gross earning of £80 per player for the trip.

 

Nivvy turned 35 in the first post-war season, 1946/47. He played the first seven games of the campaign and then featured again in eight in the middle of the successful season in which Liverpool triumphed in the First Division. He retired from football in 1948, returning to South Africa to take up a position as assistant coach to golf legend Bobby Locke. In 1946 Nivvy entered the British Open at St Andrews after hurrying back from Liverpool's tour of the USA. Nivvy finished round one on 85 strokes, 15 behind the leader but was cut after the second round, missing the cut by two strokes. That same year he played in the Irish Open, figuring amongst the money winners, and during the last years of his football career he doubled as assistant coach at the West Derby Golf Club. Nivvy moved for a spell to Rhodesia and then returned to Johannesburg to work as a golf pro while coaching various premier league soccer teams, including Southern Suburbs and his old club, Germiston Callies. Nivvy was also a very talented tennis player. King Gustav VI of Sweden once sent an aircraft to the UK to fetch the South African for a knock-up on the royal courts. Nivvy also scouted for talent in England as was reported by the Daily Mirror in July 1959: "Instant suspension faces any Soccer stars accepting offers from a South African agent, who plans a talent swoop in Britain. In a warning letter to the clubs the FA have revealed that the agent is Berry “Nivvy” Nieuwenhuys, former Liverpool winger, who now coaches in Johannesburg. Acting for the Transvaal Professional League – a newly formed rebel outfit not affiliated to the South African FA – Nieuwenhuys will approach players here with big money contracts, a job outside football and free passage to South Africa. But stern action faces any who accept. They would be blacklisted automatically by the FA, and any body associated to FIFA, the international controllers."

The South African sporting hero passed away in Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa in 1984. He led an eventful life filled with the greatest wonder, the biggest of which was moving from his homeland to the hustle and bustle of the English game. “Just think. In South Africa we only get three or four thousand – we did have 25,000 for a cup final – and then to find 55,000!" Nivvy said astounded following his Merseyside debut. “I find it is no easy thing to carry on for 90 minutes at top pace and must say that the second half always seem twice as long as the first. Training, however, will soon get me right and soon I shall no longer silently pray for the sound of the final whistle. A reception such as I received might easily 'turn one's head' but I don't think there is any danger of that. I was once a rugby player and then when I turned over to soccer and joined Germiston I played in only four matches before being chosen for the Transvaal. I did so well in that game that I swanked a bit but our trainer gave me such a telling off that I broke down and cried. No more swollen heads for me!

Appearances per season
Please note

The three League games played in the 1939/40 season were expunged from Football League records as the season was stopped due to World War II. The games are therefore not considered valid by LFChistory.net and as the "Association of football statisticians" does not count them towards official player totals. The profile is based on the writings of Gavin Foster, whose aunt Marjorie Richards, Nivvy married in Rhodesia in 1964.

Season League FA LC Europe Other Total
Totals 236 21 0 0 0 257
1933-1934 34 4 0 0 0 38
1934-1935 29 2 0 0 0 31
1935-1936 39 2 0 0 0 41
1936-1937 40 1 0 0 0 41
1937-1938 40 5 0 0 0 45
1938-1939 39 3 0 0 0 42
1939-1940 0 0 0 0 0 0
1945-1946 0 4 0 0 0 4
1946-1947 15 0 0 0 0 15
A more detailed look at the player's appearances
Apps Minutes Opponent
13 1170 Middlesbrough
13 1170 Chelsea
13 1170 Arsenal
12 1080 Everton
12 1080 Bolton Wanderers
12 1080 Leeds United
12 1080 Stoke City
12 1080 Portsmouth
12 1080 Sunderland
11 990 Huddersfield Town
11 990 Wolves
10 900 Birmingham City
10 900 Derby
9 810 Manchester City
9 810 Preston North End
9 810 Grimsby Town
8 720 Brentford
8 720 WBA
7 630 Sheffield Wednesday
6 540 Leicester City
6 540 Blackburn Rovers
6 540 Aston Villa
5 450 Charlton Athletic
5 450 Sheffield United
4 360 Blackpool
4 360 Manchester United
4 360 Tottenham
2 210 Crystal Palace
2 210 Fulham
2 180 Chester City
2 180 Newcastle United
1 90 Luton Town
1 90 Norwich City
1 90 Swansea City
1 90 Yeovil Town
1 90 Stockport County
1 90 Tranmere Rovers
Total Venue
131 Home
126 Away
Total Competition
236 League
21 FA Cup
Total W D L Win % Manager
147 52 39 56 35.4% George Kay
110 41 25 44 37.3% George Patterson (2nd term)
Goals per season
Please note

The three League games played in the 1939/40 season were expunged from Football League records as the season was stopped due to World War II. The games are therefore not considered valid by LFChistory.net and as the "Association of football statisticians" does not count them towards official player totals. The profile is based on the writings of Gavin Foster, whose aunt Marjorie Richards, Nivvy married in Rhodesia in 1964.

Season League FA LC Europe Other Total
Totals 74 5 0 0 0 79
1933-1934 9 1 0 0 0 10
1934-1935 10 1 0 0 0 11
1935-1936 10 0 0 0 0 10
1936-1937 13 0 0 0 0 13
1937-1938 13 0 0 0 0 13
1938-1939 14 2 0 0 0 16
1939-1940 0 0 0 0 0 0
1945-1946 0 1 0 0 0 1
1946-1947 5 0 0 0 0 5
A more detailed look at the player's goalscoring
Wartime Appearances / Goals
Season Appearances Goals
1939-1940 22 19
1940-1941 21 15
1941-1942 17 6
1942-1943 7 3
1943-1944 10 6
1944-1945 30 10
1945-1946 31 6
Milestone Appearances
# Date Against Stadium Competition
1 23.09.1933 Tottenham White Hart Lane League
50 12.01.1935 Yeovil & Petters Utd Huish Park FA Cup
100 07.03.1936 Portsmouth Anfield League
150 24.04.1937 Huddersfield Town Anfield League
200 10.09.1938 Charlton Athletic Anfield League
250 14.12.1946 Sunderland Roker Park League
Milestone Goals
# Minute Date Against Stadium Competition
1 32 30.09.1933 Everton Anfield League
50 20 30.10.1937 Sunderland Roker Park League
Related Articles
Rare and unseen pictures of Berry Nieuwenhuys

LFChistory.net is pleased to be able to share with you these images that are from Carole Jean Richards, Berry Nieuwenhuys' daughter.

100 Percent Football

Evening Express analysis of Liverpool 3 - 2 Everton played on 30.09.1933.

The Greatest Thrill of his Life - interview with Nivvy

Evening Express interviews Berry Nieuwenhuys - published on October 2 1933.

Berry to make his debut

From Daily Express on 23 September 1933.

Old-time methods of Liverpool puzzle defenders

From the Daily Mail on 25 September 1933.

Nivvy mocked but conquers in the end

Daily Express report on Liverpool 1 - 0 Wolves on 10 April 1937.

Liverpool's Berry Nieuwenhuys scrapbook - A one of a kind

LFChistory.net is opening a memorabilia corner where we want to feature rare items from Liverpool history. Send us images of them to [email protected] and we will feature them in a way they deserve.

Berry Nieuwenhuys - The Kop's Real Rooinek

A great feature by Gavin Foster on a South African star that shone bright at Liverpool.

Related Quotes

"I rate him as being without superior, and I am not excluding Stanley Matthews. He is much more the direct and effective player; a goal-getter and a goal-provider."

Football writer on Berry Nieuwenhuys

Scrapbook
Bok in the day - Liverpool match programme 1994
Bok in the day - Liverpool match programme 1994
English welcomed t the club in July 1933
English welcomed t the club in July 1933
Liverpool Echo sketch - 30 September 1933
Liverpool Echo sketch - 30 September 1933
Liverpool Echo sketch from 30 September 1933
Liverpool Echo sketch from 30 September 1933
Liverpool get a new kit in 1938
Liverpool get a new kit in 1938
Nieuwenhuys earned the Arsenal cheers
Nieuwenhuys earned the Arsenal cheers