Manny Andruszewski
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Manny Andruszewski | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Emanuel Franciszek Andruszewski | |
Date of birth | October 4, 1955 (age 51) | |
Place of birth | Eastleigh, Hampshire, England | |
Height | 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) | |
Nickname | Manny | |
Playing position | Defender | |
Youth clubs | ||
1970-1972 |
Holy Cross F.C. Southampton |
|
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1972-1980 1980-1981 1982 1982-1983 |
Southampton Tampa Bay Rowdies Southampton Aldershot |
83 0 (0) 25 (2) |
(3)
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Emanuel Franciszek (Manny) Andruszewski, born 4 October 1955 in Eastleigh, Hampshire of Polish parents, is a former footballer who played for Southampton F.C.. He played at full back and centre back during the late 1970s.
Contents |
[edit] Southampton
He joined Southampton as an associate schoolboy in November 1970, having played for St. Georges School and represented Southampton & Hampshire Schools. Ted Bates and Lawrie McMenemy signed him firstly as an amateur and then, in October 1973, as a professional.
He graduated through the reserves, playing alongside players such as Nick Holmes, David Walker and Malcolm Waldron, making his first team debut on 1 February 1975 in a 3-0 victory away to West Bromwich Albion in League Division 2. He had replaced Steve Mills, who had been seriously injured in a road crash. He retained his place for the rest of the 1974-75 season, in which he made 16 appearances.
The following season, Saints had signed Peter Rodrigues and Andruszewski was to make only a handful of appearances in the first team, and did not figure at all in the squad who went on to win the FA Cup on 1 May 1976.
Over the next few seasons, he was unable to establish himself as a first choice player although he did make 2 appearances in the quarter-finals of the European Cup Winners' Cup against Anderlecht in March 1977.
He was an uncompromising tackler and was at his best when given a particular opponent to shadow and was often brought in to the side to perform a specific man-marking task. He rarely got forward into attack, but the few goals that he did score were usually fairly special. On 5 March 1977, he scored the winner against Charlton Athletic, when he crashed a shot past the keeper after running on to a return pass from Mick Channon.
In the 1977-78 season, he was selected fairly regularly including appearing in the final 13 games as Saints finished as runners-up (to Bolton Wanderers) to gain promotion back to Division 1.
His finest game for the Saints was against Birmingham City in the Football League Cup on 29 August 1978, when he shackled Trevor Francis so well that Saints were able to notch up a 5-2 victory, which set them on the way to the League Cup final at Wembley against Nottingham Forest on 17 March 1979. Unfortunately, although Andruszewski had featured in several of the earlier games, he didn’t even make the bench for the final.
[edit] Tampa Bay Rowdies
He continued to make occasional appearances over the next season, before being transferred for £150,000 to Tampa Bay Rowdies of the NASL in May 1980. His period in the USA was not a great success and was cut short by illness.
He briefly returned to The Dell in 1982, although he made no further first-team appearances. In all he made exactly 100 appearances for Southampton’s first team, scoring 3 goals.
[edit] Aldershot
In the season 1982-83, he signed for Aldershot, and then returned to the USA to play indoor soccer with Houston Dynamos for the summer of 1984, and the for Dallas Sidekicks from November 1984 to May 1985.
[edit] After football
After retiring from football, he worked for Peter Green furniture stores and in 2005 he set up his own gardening business in Eastleigh.
[edit] References
- Duncan Holley & Gary Chalk (2003). In That Number - A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC. Hagiology. ISBN 0-9534474-3-X.
- Duncan Holley & Gary Chalk (1992). The Alphabet of the Saints. ACL & Polar Publishing. ISBN 0-9514862-3-3.