Graham Taylor
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Graham Taylor | ||
Date of birth | 15 September 1944 | ||
Place of birth | Worksop, England | ||
Date of death | 12 January 2017 | (aged 72)||
Place of death | Kings Langley, England[1] | ||
Position(s) |
Full back | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1962–1968 | Grimsby Town | 189 | (2) |
1968–1972 | Lincoln City | 150 | (1) |
Total | 339 | (3) | |
Managerial career | |||
1972–1977 | Lincoln City | ||
1977–1987 | Watford | ||
1987–1990 | Aston Villa | ||
1990–1993 | England | ||
1994–1995 | Wolverhampton Wanderers | ||
1996 | Watford | ||
1997–2001 | Watford | ||
2002–2003 | Aston Villa | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Graham Taylor
Born in Worksop, Nottinghamshire,[2] Taylor grew up in Scunthorpe, Lincolnshire, which he regarded as his hometown.[3] The son of a sports journalist[4] who worked on the Scunthorpe Evening Telegraph, Taylor found his love of football in the stands of the Old Show Ground watching Scunthorpe United. He became a professional player, playing at full back for Grimsby Town and Lincoln City. After retiring as a result of injury in 1972, Taylor became a manager and coach. He won the Fourth Division title with Lincoln in 1976, before moving to Watford in 1977. He took Watford from the Fourth Division to the First in five years. Under Taylor, Watford were First Division runners-up in 1982–83, and FA Cup finalists in 1984. Taylor took over at Aston Villa in 1987, leading the club to promotion in 1988 and 2nd place in the First Division in 1989–90.
In July 1990, he became the manager of the England team. They qualified for the 1992 European Championship but were knocked out in the group stages. Taylor resigned in November 1993, after the team failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the United States. Taylor faced heavy criticism from fans and media during his tenure as England manager and earned additional public interest and scrutiny when a television documentary, An Impossible Job, which he had permitted to film the failed campaign from behind the scenes, aired in 1994.
Taylor returned to club management in March 1994 with Wolverhampton Wanderers. After one season at Molineux, he returned to Watford, and led the club to the
Early life
Born in
Playing career
His playing career began with as an apprentice for Scunthorpe United.[6] He then went on to join Grimsby Town in 1962 and played his first competitive game for them in September 1963 against Newcastle United when they won 2–1. He played 189 games at fullback for Grimsby Town, scoring twice. He was transferred to Lincoln City in the summer of 1968 for a fee of £4,000, scoring 1 goal in 150 appearances before being forced to retire from playing following a serious hip injury in 1972.
Club managerial career
Records
Taylor was the only manager to have twice led teams that amassed over 70 points in one
Lincoln City (1972–1977)
Taylor was the youngest person to become an FA coach, at the age of 27.[8] Following his retirement from playing, and a spell as player coach, Taylor became manager of Lincoln City, being the youngest manager in the league at the age of 28, on 7 December 1972 after David Herd resigned.[9] In his first season Lincoln finished 10th, then 12th in 1974, but the following season narrowly missed out on promotion after a 3–2 defeat at Southport on 28 April 1975.[10]
Taylor led Lincoln to the Fourth Division title in 1976;[8] his team's 32 wins, 4 defeats and 74 points were all league records (when 2 points were awarded for a win).[11][12] Lincoln finished 9th in the Third Division in 1976-1977 under Taylor.[10]
Watford (1977–1987)
In June 1977, Taylor was hired to manage Watford by new owner Elton John. He turned down an approach from First Division West Bromwich Albion in favour of the Hertfordshire-based club, then competing in the Fourth Division, surprising pundits and supporters alike. John acted on the advice of Don Revie when hiring Taylor.[13]
Taylor led Watford from the Fourth Division to the First Division in only five years.[14] In his first season Watford won the 1977–78 Fourth Division title, losing only five of 46 games and winning the division by 11 points.[15] In the Third Division Taylor led Watford to another promotion, finishing second, and losing out on the title by one point in the 1978–79 season.[16]
Taylor's third season, in the Second Division, was less successful. Indicating the tougher competition, Watford managed only an 18th finish, out of 22 teams, avoiding relegation by eight points and winning only 12 of their 42 games in the 1979–80 season.[17] In the next season, the 1980–81 season, Taylor improved Watford's performance, ending it with 16 wins and a 9th-place finish.[18] In the 1981–82 season Watford achieved promotion, ending the season in 2nd place, and gaining 23 wins and 11 draws in 42 games.[19]
In the First Division with Taylor as manager, Watford gained its highest-ever victory (8–0 against Sunderland)[7] as well as the "double" over Arsenal, an away win at Tottenham Hotspur, and home victories over Everton and Liverpool; this resulted in Watford finishing runners-up in the entire Football League.[20] He then took the side to the third round of the UEFA Cup, having finished second in 1982–83 (the club's first season as a top division club). Taylor also led Watford to the 1984 FA Cup final, which Watford lost to Everton 2–0.[21] In his final season, 1986–87, Watford finished ninth in the league and reached the FA Cup semi-finals, missing out on another Wembley appearance when they lost to Tottenham Hotspur, their chances hardly helped by the fact that both of their first team goalkeepers were injured.[22]
Aston Villa (1987–1990)
In May 1987, Taylor left Watford for a new challenge at
Taylor managed to take Aston Villa back to the top flight with his first attempt, securing their top flight safety in 1988–89 with a draw on the final day of the league season.[25] During his third season at the club Villa finished runners-up in the First Division, having led the league table at several stages of the season before being overhauled in the final weeks by Liverpool.[26] Following this success, Taylor accepted an offer to take over the England national football team from Bobby Robson, who left the job after England's semi-final defeat to West Germany at the 1990 World Cup.[27]
International management: England (1990–1993)
Appointment
When Taylor was appointed, critics in the media complained that he had never won a major trophy – although he had taken teams to second place in the league twice and an
1992 European Championship
Despite the unease at his appointment, England lost just once in Taylor's first 23 matches (a 1–0 defeat to
The number of players that Taylor was using in the run up to the championship was also questioned, the press and public viewed this as evidence Taylor did not know his best team. He used 59 players in total, as he struggled to find a "new spine" after the retirement of Peter Shilton, Terry Butcher and Bryan Robson.[31] He also faced accusations he could not cope with "stars", after he dropped Paul Gascoigne for Gordon Cowans for a qualifying game against Ireland.[32] fearing he might "lose his head" in what would be a "bruising" encounter.[33] Matters were not helped by Taylor's reluctance to use creative players who were not perceived to have high work rates, such as Chris Waddle and Peter Beardsley. He also suffered several injuries, notably to Gary Stevens, Lee Dixon, John Barnes and Paul Gascoigne, leaving the squad in a makeshift position going into the finals.[34]
England were drawn to face
England needed to beat hosts
During the game, after 60 minutes and with the score at 1–1, Taylor substituted Gary Lineker in his final game for England, preventing Lineker from having the chance to equal, or possibly break, Bobby Charlton's record of 49 goals for England. Many were dismayed to see Taylor substitute England's top striker when his side needed a goal. This led to the media's vilification of Taylor, including the "turnip" campaign by The Sun, which began the morning after the game under the headline: "Swedes 2 Turnips 1". During that campaign, the newspaper's back page featured an image of Taylor's face superimposed onto a turnip.[40]
1994 World Cup Qualification
Stuttering start
Taylor's relationship with the press was partially restored when he admitted his mistakes a few weeks after the finals.[41] However, this did not last long. England's first game after Euro 92 ended in a 1–0 defeat to Spain in a friendly, The Sun depicted Taylor as a "Spanish onion".[42]
England were drawn in Qualification
England began with a disappointing 1–1 draw with Norway. Norway were the early pace setters, with victories over San Marino, the Netherlands and Turkey. Gascoigne returned, but the Norwegians were confident.[43] Despite dominating the game, England could muster only half-chances. Platt gave England the lead in the 55th minute after a cross from Stuart Pearce.
Norway rarely threatened, but equalised in the 77th minute, when Kjetil Rekdal scored from 20 yards. The draw flattered the Norwegians but put them clear in the group.
Three wins and a Dutch draw
The campaign seemed to get back on track with two wins against Turkey (4–0 at home and 2–0 away) and a 6–0 home victory over San Marino. During the latter game, Taylor confronted a spectator who was racially abusing Jamaica-born
In April 1993 England faced the
Dennis Bergkamp scored a goal for the Netherlands towards the end of the first half, against the run of play, but England continued to control the game, and looked to be heading for a win which would have ended Dutch hopes of qualification, following the side's defeat in Norway, and a draw at home to Poland.
But four minutes from full-time
Draw in Poland, defeat in Norway
England's next chance of reviving their flagging fortunes came in May, requiring at least a win and draw away against Poland and Norway which were to be played just three days apart. England were poor against Poland and were largely outplayed.[45] Dariusz Adamczuk of Poland scored in the 36th minute, although the team missed several chances to extend their lead. Ian Wright salvaged a vital point through forcing an equaliser in the 85th minute, for a final score of 1–1.[45] Taylor was again vilified for his team's poor performance. England's next opponents were Norway.
The Norwegians had arrived from obscurity and had taken the group by storm; their series of early victories had left England, Poland, and the Netherlands scrapping for second place.
England lost 2–0, with few attempts on goal. Lars Bohinen and Øyvind Leonhardsen scored the goals in the 42nd and 47th minutes. The first was caused by a Des Walker error, while Walker was beaten for pace by a Norwegian counter-attack for Bohinen to score[46] Subsequently, Taylor said: "We made a complete mess of it. I'm here to be shot at and take the rap. I have no defence for our performance",[47] although his honesty did not spare him a roasting from the press, who were now calling for his head.[47] The press came up with headlines such as "NORSE MANURE" and "OSLO RANS".[48]
In July 1993, Peter Newman, an independent candidate in a parliamentary by-election for Christchurch, stood under the banner "Sack Graham Taylor".[49]
The US Cup
With their World Cup hopes hanging by a thread, Taylor's England were to play a four-team Tournament in the U.S (1993 U.S. Cup), which was expected to be a precursor to the following summer's tournament. Taylor stated before the game against the United States:
In football, you're only as good as your last game, and at the moment we're poor. You can always lose any game, to anyone. It's how you lose that matters. That was the thing that shocked us all in Norway. We would have been looking for a win here anyhow, but if we'd won last week, it wouldn't have been considered essential. Now it is. Whether we like it or not, people expect us to beat America, and there is definitely more intensity about this game because of our performance in the last one.[50]
For Taylor, the US Cup began with a humiliating 2–0 defeat in Boston, to the United States with Thomas Dooley and Alexi Lalas scoring goals, which was reported by The Sun as "YANKS 2 PLANKS 0!".[51][52]
Some pride was restored with a credible 1–1 draw with Brazil, and a narrow 2–1 defeat to Germany. Taylor was now living on borrowed time.[53]
Crucial match against the Netherlands
The 1993–94 season began with a much-improved performance, with a 3–0 win over Poland raising the nation's hopes going into what was now the crucial match against the Netherlands in Rotterdam.[53]
In October, England were to play the Netherlands in Rotterdam. With Norway having won the group, the encounter would effectively decide the second and last qualifier of the group. The game was played at a furious pace, with the Netherlands putting England under pressure early on. However, England hit back with a string of counterattacks, with Platt heading just wide and
Two minutes before half-time England were fortunate to have a Frank Rijkaard goal ruled out for offside, even though replays showed the goal was legitimate.[53] However, later in the second half with the game locked at 0–0 David Platt was fouled by Ronald Koeman as he raced in on goal. The German referee failed to apply the rule of sending him off for a professional foul. The Dutch charged down Dorigo's free kick, with Dutch players clearly encroaching.[55] Just minutes later the Dutchman took an identical free kick outside England's penalty area. His first shot was blocked, but it was ordered to be retaken because of encroachment.[53]
Koeman scored at the second attempt. Paul Merson hit a post with a free-kick moments later, while Dennis Bergkamp scored just moments later, despite using his arm to control the ball, for a 2–0 win.[53] In the meantime Taylor was in an apoplectic mood on the touchline, berating the officials and referee as the significance of the result sank in.[53]
San Marino and resignation
England still had a chance to qualify, providing the Netherlands lost in Poland on the same night, with England winning by a seven-goal margin or more. As such, England were hoping they could run up a big score against part-time minnows San Marino. But after just 8.3 seconds of play
Taylor resigned on 23 November 1993, six days after England's failure to qualify. He went "with great sadness", saying: "No one can gauge the depth of my personal disappointment at not qualifying for the World Cup. This is the appropriate course of action in the circumstances," he said. "If we didn't qualify, it was always my intention to offer my resignation."
Return to club management
Wolverhampton Wanderers (1994–1995)
Taylor spent heavily on players while at Wolves, paying large sums for the likes of Steve Froggatt, Tony Daley, Mark Atkins, John de Wolf, Dean Richards and Don Goodman.[59]
However, the 1994–95 season proved to be his only full season at Molineux, as, after a poor start to the following campaign, winning just four of the first sixteen league games, he resigned on 13 November 1995 due to overwhelming supporter pressure. During his tenure, he attempted to perform a citizen's arrest on a fan who had spat at him, prompting calls for closer crowd controls in the English game.[60]
Taylor called his Wolves' departure his "lowest ebb" in football - greater than even his Lancaster Gate exit - because he felt he had "lost his standing" in the game of football.[61]
Return to Watford (1996–2001)
In February 1996 Elton John, who had recently bought Watford for a second time, appointed Taylor as General Manager at Vicarage Road. Just over a year later Taylor had appointed himself as the club's manager succeeding Kenny Jackett, who was relegated to a coaching capacity at the club. Taylor later stated that the role of General Manager had "bored me stiff".[62] He won the Division Two championship at his first attempt in 1998.[63]
The following season Watford won the
Watford were relegated from the Premiership after one season.[65] Despite starting the following season well – unbeaten through the first fifteen league games and heading the table – Watford slumped to finish 9th in Division One.[66] At this point he decided to retire.[67] During this final season Taylor had become only the third manager to manage 1,000 league games in England, after Brian Clough and Jim Smith.[68]
Return to Aston Villa (2002–2003)
Taylor came out of retirement in February 2002 to return to his old job at Aston Villa, but retired for a second time after Villa finished the 2002–03 season in 16th place in the Premiership.[69] He subsequently cited tensions in his relationship with the club's chairman Doug Ellis and argued for an overhaul of the club's upper management to allow the club to be more competitive.[70]
Later life
In 2003, Taylor became vice-president at Division Three club
.His time at Scunthorpe saw a turnaround in the club's fortunes. In his
Taylor returned to Watford on 23 January 2009, being appointed to the new board as a non-executive director and was appointed interim chairman on 16 December 2009.[73] Taylor announced his resignation from his position as chairman on 30 May 2012. He retained the position of honorary life president of the club until his death in 2017.[74]
In 2014, Watford renamed the Rous Stand the Graham Taylor Stand to honour his achievements in two spells at the club.[21]
Other work
Taylor was a supporter of Sense-National Deafblind and Rubella Association and a Patron of DebRa. He was a Celebrity Ambassador for the Sense Enterprise Board in Birmingham, and worked to raise both funds and awareness, including running the
Personal life and death
Taylor married Rita Cowling at Scunthorpe Congregationalist Church on 22 March 1965.[77]They had two daughters, Joanne and Karen.[78]
Taylor died suddenly and unexpectedly of a "suspected heart attack"[79] at his home in Kings Langley early on the morning of 12 January 2017.[80][81][82] His funeral was held nearby, on 1 February at St Mary's Church, Watford, with many football figures in attendance.[83]
Honours
As a manager
- Lincoln City
- Football League Fourth Division Champions: 1975–76
- Watford
- Football League Fourth Division Champions: 1977–78
- Football League Third Division Runners-up: 1978–79
- Football League Second Division Runners-up: 1981–82
- Football League First Division Runners-up: 1982–83
- 1984
- Football League Division Two Champions: 1997–98
- 1998–99
- Aston Villa
- Football League Second Division Runners-up: 1987–88
- Football League First Division Runners-up: 1989–90
Managerial statistics
Team | From | To | Record | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
G | W | D | L | Win % | |||
Lincoln City | Dec 1972 | Jun 1977 | 236 | 104 | 69 | 63 | 44.07 |
Watford | Jun 1977 | May 1987 | 527 | 244 | 124 | 159 | 46.30 |
Aston Villa | May 1987 | Jul 1990 | 142 | 65 | 35 | 42 | 45.77 |
England | Jul 1990 | Nov 1993 | 38 | 18 | 13 | 7 | 47.37 |
Wolverhampton Wanderers | Mar 1994 | Nov 1995 | 88 | 37 | 27 | 24 | 42.05 |
Watford | Feb 1996 | Jun 1996 | 18 | 5 | 8 | 5 | 27.78 |
Watford | Jun 1997 | May 2001 | 202 | 79 | 52 | 71 | 39.11 |
Aston Villa | Feb 2002 | May 2003 | 60 | 19 | 14 | 27 | 31.67 |
Total | 1,311 | 571 | 342 | 398 | 43.55 |
Further reading
- Birnie, Lionel (2010). Enjoy the Game – Watford FC, The Story of the Eighties. Peloton Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9567814-0-6.
- Phillips, Oliver (2001). The Golden Boys: A Study of Watford's Cult Heroes. Alpine Press Ltd. ISBN 0-9528631-6-2.
- Phillips, Oliver (1991). The Official Centenary History of Watford FC 1881–1991. Watford Football Club. ISBN 0-9509601-6-0.
- England: The Official F.A History, Niall Edworthy, Virgin Publishers, 1997, ISBN 1-85227-699-1.
- Gary Lineker: Strikingly Different, Colin Malam, Stanley Paul Publications, London, 1993 ISBN 0-09-175424-0
- Do I not Like That – The Final Chapter, Chrysalis Sport, Distributed by Polygram Record Operations, 1994.
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External links
- Graham Taylor at Soccerbase
- Graham Taylor management career statistics at Soccerbase