Background
Sharp was born in Hereford and after playing his youth football with Hereford Comrades, played for Hereford Town and Hereford Thistle in the Birmingham & District League.
cricketer association football player
Sharp was born in Hereford and after playing his youth football with Hereford Comrades, played for Hereford Town and Hereford Thistle in the Birmingham & District League.
Villa finished the season in sixth place, a disappointment after the two previous Championship winning seasons.
He was the elder brother of England international football player and test cricketer Jack Sharp. He later became a director of Everton Football Club. During the opening month of the 1897-1898 season, Sharp took over at full-back from Howard Spencer who had sustained a serious leg injury, causing him to miss the remainder of the season.
Sharp made 19 appearances during the season, before losing his place to Tommy Bowman who had been signed from Blackpool.
Foreign the following season, Spencer returned to the side and Sharp only made four further appearances as Villa once again took the league title. Sharp was used as cover for William Balmer and George Eccles, and made only three appearances in December 1899.
At the end of the season, Sharp moved to the south coast to join Southern League. At the "Saints", he gained a reputation as an honest, hardworking defender, who was "versatile and a good athlete".
He made his debut playing at left-half in a 4–3 victory at Luton Town.
After seven matches he switched to right-back, replacing Arthur Blackburn who was out with an ankle injury, with Bert Lee taking over at left-half at the start of an association with the Saints that would last until 1935. Sharp performed consistently during his one season at The Dell, at the end of which claimed the Southern League title for the fourth time in five years. Sharp returned to Goodison Park in the summer of 1901, where he made a further six appearances towards the end of the season, before retiring from professional football.
In 1904, his amateur status was restored and he turned out for Kirkdale and then Southport Central of the Lancashire Combination.
Sharp was also a good cricketer and in the summer of 1900 averaged over 40 for Herefordshire. In 1904, he became the landlord of a public house situated opposite Goodison Park.