Tony Waddington
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Tony Waddington (9th November 1924 - 1994) was born in Manchester, Lancashire. He was an English football manager. He managed Stoke City F.C. from 1960 until 1977 and guided them to their only major trophy - the League Cup in 1972. He later managed Crewe Alexandra from June 1979 to July 1981.
Commonly regarded as Stoke's greatest manager he was promoted from assistant to take over as manager in 1960. His initial task was to stop the declining fortunes of the club and to prevent relegation from Division Two.
Within two years he had the club back in Division One, collecting the Second Division title in the club's centenary season of 1962/63, after pulling off the master stroke of enticing Stanley Matthews back from Blackpool. Waddington then established Stoke in Division One, reached two FA Cup semi-finals, and won the League Cup, the club's first major honour, in 1972.
He had a knack for squeezing 'Indian Summers' from players thought past their peak while at the same time getting the best out of home-grown youngsters. Under Waddington, the team built a reputation for playing exciting, entertaining football at times and signed the best goalkeeper in the world, Gordon Banks, in 1967, and paid a world record fee for a goalkeeper, Peter Shilton, in 1974.
Waddington was an amateur with Manchester United before playing over 200 games for Crewe and would have made many more appearances but for a knee injury suffered while serving with the Royal Navy in World War Two.
Tony Waddington left Stoke in 1977 after economics forced him to sell his best players and he then had a spell in charge of Crewe from 1979-81. However, he returned to Stoke when he was appointed an associate director of the club in 1993 - a position he retained until his death the following year.