Maurice Evans (footballer)

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Maurice George Evans (22 September 193618 August 2000) was a football player with Reading Football Club, and later manager of Shrewsbury, Reading and Oxford United.

Evans was born in Didcot (now in Oxfordshire, but then in Berkshire) in 1936. He signed for Reading in 1952 as a ground staff junior, aged just 16. He soon won his place at left-half in the first team and held it throughout the adversities of National Service in the RAF. He went on to make the wing-half position his own for the next ten seasons, and was a skilful, thoughtful player without an ounce of malice in him, playing 459 first-team games without being booked once. In a vote to compile the Royals' best-ever eleven, Evans was voted the best right-winger with 48.4% of the vote [1].

After leaving the club in 1967, he briefly took over as player-manager at Andover before joining Shrewsbury as player-coach, eventually becoming their manager in 1972. He returned to Elm Park as Charlie Hurley's assistant manager in 1974, and finally took over as manager in 1977. He managed the 1978-79 championship-winning team, securing the Manager Of The Year Award in the process. He remained Reading manager until 1984, making perceptive signings from non-league football such as Kerry Dixon and Trevor Senior.

Evans then joined Oxford United as Chief Scout and Youth Development Officer. He became the manager after the resignation of Jim Smith in the summer of 1985, and lead the team in their first season in the top flight of English football. The season ended with United beating QPR (managed by Smith) 3–0 in the final of the Milk Cup at Wembley, and avoiding relegation by achieving the same scoreline over Arsenal in the last game of the season a week or so later. At the Wembley final, Evans famously sent up long-serving club physio Ken Fish in his place to collect his winner's medal; this gesture is seen as typifying Evans' modesty and generosity. Evans stepped down as manager in March 1988, towards the end of United's last season in the old First Division. He continued at the club in various capacities, including a brief stint as caretaker manager in 1993 and elevation to the board of directors in 1998, before rejoining Reading as Chief Scout in November 1999.

He died of a heart attack on 18 August 2000 at the age of 63.

In memory of Maurice Evans, a plaque was placed in the wall of the Madejski Stadium by Reading F.C., reading "Maurice Evans, 1936-2000. Player, Manager, Gentleman". A lounge at the Kassam Stadium is also named in his honour.

Preceded by
Charlie Hurley
Reading F.C. Manager
1977–1984
Succeeded by
Ian Branfoot
Preceded by
Jim Smith
Oxford United F.C. Manager
1985-1988
Succeeded by
Mark Lawrenson
Preceded by
Brian Horton
Oxford United F.C. Manager (caretaker)
1993
Succeeded by
Denis Smith

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