Background
Corbett was born in Birmingham, and began his football career with his local professional club, Birmingham F.C. He never appeared competitively for the first team, and moved on to Worcester City.
Corbett was born in Birmingham, and began his football career with his local professional club, Birmingham F.C. He never appeared competitively for the first team, and moved on to Worcester City.
He played as a full back. In preparation for the 1929-1930 season, Womack made "extensive changes", which included the signing of Corbett, described by the Daily Express as a "young and promising back". Corbett played regularly for Torquay at full-back alongside fellow youngster Sid Cann.
The pair were often picked out in match reports as playing well, and both were sold to First Division club Manchester City before the end of the season.
Corbett had to wait until November 1932 – nearly three years – for his City debut. He replaced Cann at right-back in what the Manchester Guardian"s correspondent called "a surprising change in the defensive arrangements of the team", fearing that, however much Corbett may have contributed to the "excellent defensive record" of the second eleven, the visit of the League leaders might not be an ideal time to introduce a debutant.
By the following week, he was "shaping as though he might establish himself in the right full-back position", but despite remaining at City for six years, he made only 15 first-team appearances, and was transfer-listed at the end of the 1935-1936 season. Lincoln City signed Corbett in May 1936.
He missed only two of Lincoln"s 46 games in all senior competitions in his first season as the club were runners-up in the Third Division North, and missed four out of 46 in the next.
He appeared less frequently in the 1938-1939 season, and when the Second World War put an end to league football for the duration, he had made 113 appearances for Lincoln in all competitions. He scored 51 goals from 120 appearances in all senior competitions in five years with Lincoln,
When Corbett left Manchester City, the club paid him £200 in lieu of the benefit which he might have received as a long-serving employee. The Players" Union funded a test case in 1939 in the names of Corbett and former City teammate Bill Dale to challenge the Inland Revenue"s opinion that benefit payments were taxable.
Some 130 football players would be affected by the decision.
The local Tax Commissioners ruled against the players. On appeal to the High Court, the judge noted that under Football League regulations, testimonials were not obligatory but were expected and usually granted.
He ruled that such payments were not "a purely exceptional gift", as contended on the recipients" behalf, but were "made in respect of and as remuneration for employment" and thus taxable. Corbett died in 1974 at the age of 65.