Career
Foulke was renowned for his great size (6 ft 4 in (193 m) by some estimates) and weight, reaching perhaps 24 stone (152 kg. 336 lb) at the end of his career, although reports on his weight vary. He played four first-class matches for Derbyshire County Cricket Club in the 1900 season, but is remembered primarily as a goalkeeper for although he later played for Chelsea and Bradford City.
According to The Cat"s Pyjamas: The Penguin Book of Cliches (), the "Who ate all the pies?" chant was first sung in 1894 by supporters, and directed at Foulke 300 lb (140 kg).
At the end of the first match in the 1902 Cup Final Foulke protested to the officials that Southampton"s equalising goal should not have been allowed. Foulke left his dressing room unclothed and pursued the referee, Tom Kirkham, who took refuge in a broom cupboard.
Foulke had to be stopped by a group of Field Artillery officials from wrenching the cupboard door from its hinges to reach the hapless referee. He then moved to Chelsea for a fee of £50 and was made club captain.
Foulke by now was remarkably temperamental.
If he thought his defenders were not trying hard enough, he would walk off the field Opposing forwards who incurred his displeasure would be picked up and thrown bodily into his goal. He was, however, a great crowd puller, and Chelsea decided to exploit this.
To draw even more attention to his size, they placed two small boys behind his goal in an effort to distract the opposition even more.
The boys would sometimes run and return the ball when it went out of play, and quite by accident, ball boys came into being. Foulke stayed for just one season before moving to his final club, Bradford City.
Foulke died in 1916 and was buried in Burngreave cemetery, Sheffield. His death certificate gives "cirrhosis" as the major cause of death.
Some modern sources contend that, beset by poverty, he was reduced to earning a pittance in a "beat the goalie" sideshow attraction in Blackpool where he caught pneumonia, from which he died.
These stories are not supported by contemporary accounts and seem to be apocryphal. Foulke appears in the Mitchell and Kenyon films, playing in a match on 6 September 1902.