Arsenal Tapscott played for
Barry Town as a youth whilst continuing his work as a bricklayer. He was eventually signed by manager
Tom Whittaker of
Arsenal for £4,000 in October 1953. This move came about after he spent time on trial at the club's
North London rivals
Tottenham Hotspur. He started off with a prolific run in the reserves, scoring thirteen goals in fifteen matches in the
London Combination League. After such he made his first-team debut against
Liverpool on 10 April 1954 and scored twice. Tapscott went on to score five more goals in as many matches that season. The young Welsh
inside forward became a regular in the following
1954–55 season as he missed only five matches. Despite not being played as a centre forward he was the club's top goal scorer within the
1955–56 and
1956–57 seasons with 21 and 27 goals, respectively. His club form saw him play and start in a
London XI side which won by 1-0 against a
Basel XI in the
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup on 4 May 1956. Tapscott played for the Gunners in Manchester United's last ever domestic match before the
Munich air disaster in February 1958 - a 5-4 win for the visitors in a game Tapscott described as "the best I ever played in". An injury sustained while playing for Wales during the
1957–58 season, put Tapscott out of Arsenal's first team, and he then struggled to oust his replacement
Vic Groves once he had returned to full fitness. He thus left Arsenal in September 1958, moving to Cardiff City, whom he had rejected earlier on in the season. In all, he scored 68 goals in 132 matches for Arsenal. Tapscott made his debut in a 4–1 win over
Grimsby Town. Cardiff, managed by his former manager at Barry Town, Bill Jones, won promotion back to the
First Division in 1960. This came with Tapscott forming an effective partnership with his ex-Arsenal teammate
Brian Walsh. Tapscott is also the club's record holder for the most goals scored within a game with six netted during a 16–0 win over
Knighton Town in the
Welsh Cup. Tapscott was also part of the Cardiff side that played in the club's first ever European competition when they reached the quarter-finals of the
UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, including scoring the winning goal against
Sporting Clube de Portugal in the second round. He played his final game for Cardiff on 6 February 1965 in a 2–0 defeat to
Northampton Town as injury kept him out of the side for the remainder of the 1964–65 season and at the end of the season he was released. Altogether Tapscott scored 102 goals from a sum of 234 appearances for the club making him Cardiff City's sixth-highest goalscorer of all time.
Later career Following his release, Tapscott received offers from South African side Addington and a player-manager role at
Sligo Rovers but, not wanting to move away from his
Cardiff home, he signed for
Division Four side
Newport County. However, he appeared just 15 times for the club, scoring one goal during a 3–1 win over
Bradford City on 7 March 1966, before leaving at the end of the 1965–66 season. He later moved into
non-league football with spells at
Cinderford Town,
Haverfordwest County and
Carmarthen Town before retiring in 1970. ==International career==