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Alan Mullery

Alan Mullery

Alan Mullery MBE (born Notting Hill, London, November 23, 1941) was a footballer who enjoyed and eventful and outstanding carer with Tottenham Hotspur and England in the 1960s and 1970s.

Alan joined Fulham after leaving school at the age of 15. He was in the Fulham First Team at 17, and played over 250 Games in 5 years. He transferred to Spurs in 1964 for a British Record of £72,500 for a midfield player, and stayed with Spurs for 8 years. He then transferred back to Fulham in 1972 for £60,000, where he stayed for 4 years and retired in 1976.

After retirement Alan went on to manage Brighton (on two occasions) Charlton, Crystal Palace and QPR. He was voted in to the top 100 footballers ever to play in the Football League.

Alan is a brilliant after dinner speaker and is currently in demand. He is on Talk Radio regularly, with his unique no nonsense approach. He is also co-host of the hugely popular football programme – Sky’s Gillette Saturday.

Playing Honours:

  • 3 under 21 caps
  • 35 full England caps, played in the 1970 World Cup
  • Captained England on 1 occasion
  • Footballer of the year in 1975
  • MBE in 1975 for services to Football
  • FA Cup winner in 1967 – v Chelsea
  • FA Cup winner in 1975 – v West Ham
  • FA Cup winner in 1972 – v Wolves
  • Coca-Cola Cup winner in 1970 – v Aston Villa
  • Played in World Cup Finals in 1970
  • Voted Best England Player by the Evening Standard
Graham Taylor Graham Taylor
 

Graham Taylor resigned as manager of Aston Villa on May 14, 2003, after 15 months in his second spell in charge of the Birmingham club.  Although the team had struggled during the season that had just ended, Taylor cited his belief that the club was not being run properly as the major factor in his decision to leave.

Graham came out of managerial retirement to take charge of Aston Villa for the second time on February 5 2002, nearly 11-and-a-half years after leaving Villa Park to become England manager.

He had returned to the club as a non-executive director the previous summer after apparently ending his managerial career at Watford but was persuaded by the Villa board to sign a two-and-a-half year contract to succeed John Gregory as the club's manager. Having been appointed as manager of Watford Football Club in 1977 by Hornets Chairman Elton John, Graham Taylor has gone on to become one of the longest serving and most successful managers in League football.

He returned to Vicarage Road nine years after leaving Watford to become manager of Aston Villa for the first time, and teamed up once more with Chairman Sir Elton John. The partnership was again to prove successful after Taylor had endured what he describes as the two lowest moments of his managerial career.

It is a career that started with Lincoln City after Taylor was forced to retire from playing due to injury. He had played for Grimsby for six years before moving to Lincoln in 1968, taking up the managerial reins in 1972 aged just 28. In 1975/76 he led them to the Fourth Division Championship with the team scoring a record breaking 111 goals. The following season saw Lincoln finish in a very creditable 9th place in Division Three and the Watford chairman was alerted to the potential of the young manager. Taylor chose to move back into Division Four to join Watford, impressed by his famous new chairman's vision for the future of the club.
It was an inspired decision. Watford were promoted as Champions in his first season in charge and they went on to win promotion to Division Two the following season. After two seasons of consolidation, Taylor took The Hornets into the First Division for the first time in their history. The next season, 1982/83, saw them finish second in the league behind Liverpool, earning them a place in the UEFA Cup. Taylor had totally transformed the club in the space of five years.  In 1984, Watford were unlucky to finish runners-up for another domestic trophy, this time losing out to Liverpool's neighbours Everton in the FA Cup final.

Like Elton John before him, Aston Villa chairman Doug Ellis recognized Taylor's obvious abilities and after guiding Watford to top-half finishes in the league for the next three seasons, Taylor decided to take up a new challenge at Villa Park with a club that had just been relegated from the top division. He immediately returned the club to Division One and after keeping Villa up the following season, just, he was again beaten to the league title by Liverpool.

His achievements had not gone unnoticed by the FA, who were looking for a successor to Bobby Robson to manage the national team. After the 1990 World Cup, where Robson had led the team to the semi-finals, Taylor was given the honour of managing England.  Like many before him, Taylor was to find the England manager's post something of a poisoned chalice and despite an encouraging start to his international career, England's poor performance in the 1992 European Championships and subsequent failure to qualify for the 1994 World Cup led to his resignation. The constant media attention and, at times, unwarranted personal criticism Taylor received had made the job almost unbearable.

After a short break from the game, Taylor returned to management with Wolves and was hopeful, once again, of guiding another club to the top flight in English football. He was unlucky to miss out on promotion after taking Wolves into the play-offs after just two months at the helm but following a disappointing season in 1995/96, Taylor was sacked and left Molineux feeling extremely frustrated that he had not been given more time to turn things round.

He returned to Vicarage Road in February 1996 but was unable to prevent Watford from being relegated to Division Two. However, he was able to rebuild the team once again and he led The Hornets back to Division One in 1997/98 and achieved a successive promotion with a dramatic play-off win in 1998/99, taking Watford into the top division once more.  Life in the Premiership was too hot to handle and they were relegated to Division One after just one season. Taylor stayed at Watford for a further year, serving his 1000th league game as a manager in January 2001, before handing the reins over to Gianluca Vialli and retiring from club management.   

He remained in 'retirement' for just 8 months and having returned to Aston Villa as a non-executive director, he resumed his role as Villa boss for one last stint in the hot-seat.  His aim was to carry on where he left off in 1990 but a disappointing season on the field left the club in the lower reaches of the Premiership in his only full season in charge, and left many supporters frustrated. Taylor's resignation less than a week after the end of the campaign came as something of a shock however, as he said the club needed to move on and criticised the way it was run, pointing a finger at the board as the main cause of the problem.

Graham Taylor is one of the most well respected and well-known faces in English football and it was his vision and hard work that prompted the formation of the League Managers Association during his spell as national team boss.

Graham is now a very proficient after dinner speaker and speaks at many top sporting and corporate events throughout the UK and abroad

 


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