Terry Venables

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Terry Venables
Personal information
Full name Terence Frederick Venables
Date of birth 6 January 1943 (1943-01-06) (age 65)
Place of birth    London, England
Youth clubs
1958–1960 Chelsea
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1960–1966
1966–1969
1969–1974
1974–1976
1976
Chelsea
Tottenham Hotspur
Queens Park Rangers
Crystal Palace
St Patrick's Athletic
202 (26)
115 (19)
179 (19)
014 0(0)
? (?)   
National team
1964 England 002 0(0)
Teams managed
1976–1980
1980–1984
1984–1987
1987–1991
1993–1996
1997–1998
1998–1999
2000–2001
2002–2003
2006–2007
Crystal Palace
Queens Park Rangers
Barcelona
Tottenham Hotspur
England
Australia
Crystal Palace
Middlesbrough (head coach)
Leeds United
England (assistant manager)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Terence Frederick "Terry" Venables (born 6 January 1943 in Dagenham, London), often referred to as "El Tel", is an English football manager and former player. He most notably played for Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur and Queens Park Rangers, and gained two caps for England. He has been employed as the manager of both England and Australia, as well as management stints at Barcelona and various clubs in England. In recent years he has courted much controversy over a number of suspicious financial deals.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

Venables left school in the summer of 1957 and signed for Chelsea as an apprentice. He became professional for them in 1960, after being left out of England's Olympic squad. He emerged as the captain and one of the key players in the Chelsea side which challenged for honours in the 1960s, narrowly missing out on Football League and FA Cup success, and winning the League Cup in 1965. But a fall-out with manager Tommy Docherty culminated in him and seven other players being sent home for breaking a pre-match curfew and ultimately led to his sale to Tottenham Hotspur for £80,000 in 1966. He had made 202 appearances for Chelsea and scored 26 goals.

He played 115 League games and scored 19 goals for Spurs, with the highlight being an FA Cup Final win over his old side in 1967. In June 1969 he transferred to Queens Park Rangers for £70,000 playing 179 games and scoring 19 goals, eventually in 1974 he transferred to Crystal Palace for the same fee, but only played 14 games for them before being appointed manager in June 1976.[1]

He signed for St Patrick's Athletic in February 1976 and made his debut on the 22nd [1]

As well as receiving two International Caps for England, Venables was the first to play at all international levels (schoolboy, youth, amateur, Under-23, and for the full international team).[2]

[edit] Managerial career

[edit] Crystal Palace

He took over as manager of Crystal Palace when they were in the Third Division, he coached them to the Second Division in 1977 and the First Division in 1979.

[edit] Queen's Park Rangers

After a mid-table finish in 1980 he left that October for Queens Park Rangers, who were in the Second Division. He took them back into the First Division as Second Division champions in 1983. He also guided Rangers to the FA Cup final in 1982 whilst still a Second Division side, but lost in a replay against his former club Tottenham.

His final season as QPR manager, 1983-84, brought more success as they finished fifth in the league (their highest finish since they were runners-up in 1976) and qualified for the UEFA Cup. Venables then moved to Spain to take over at FC Barcelona, while Frank Sibley took over from him at Loftus Road.

[edit] Barcelona

Venables' growing reputation brought him offers from some of Europe's most prestigious clubs and in 1984 he took the role of manager at Barcelona, earning the sobriquet "El Tel". Venables was recommended by Bobby Robson, a good friend of the Barcelona President and who himself, years later, would take over the team. Terry used a very English system, a classic 4-4-2, which took advantage of outstanding defenders like Gerardo, Migueli and Julio Alberto and a hard-working midfield led by German Bernd Schuster. During his three seasons in Catalonia, Venables led the club to the Spanish title and League Cup but lost in the final of the first post-Heysel European Cup to Steaua Bucharest on penalties. He was sacked in September 1987, after failing to repeat his title success at the Camp Nou and the humiliation of losing home and away to Dundee United in the quarter finals of the UEFA cup < [2] >.

[edit] Tottenham Hotspur

On 23 November 1987, he returned to England to manage Tottenham Hotspur. His success with the north London team was varied, with the side finishing in mid-table for most of his tenure, though they did win the FA Cup in 1991. Venables had brought both Gary Lineker and Paul Gascoigne to Spurs and was a favourite to replace Bobby Robson as England national football team manager when the job became vacant in 1990, but doubts about his probity led him to be passed over in favour of Graham Taylor. After a failed £20m bid to take over Spurs with Larry Gillick, Venables was appointed chief executive by Alan Sugar who had won the takeover battle against Robert Maxwell in June 1991.[1] Over the next two seasons, the Spurs team was managed by Peter Shreeves and then the joint management team of Ray Clemence and Doug Livermore, with the final arrangement seeing Venables having more involvement with the first team. A clash of personalities developed and Sugar dismissed Venables on 14 May 1993, over his business dealings. After gaining a temporary injunction he was reinstated, but lost a 3-day high court hearing and ordered to pay costs.[1]

[edit] England

By November 1993, the England national football team had reached its lowest depths in 15 years under Graham Taylor, who resigned after being unable to take England to the World Cup finals. Venables, though not active in the game, seemed to have the presence and charisma that could re-ignite some patriotic pride and achievement. He was appointed manager on 28 January 1994.

However, the speculation coincided with Venables coming under scrutiny and censure in connection with several of his business dealings. The Football Association struggled to identify an alternative candidate but their discomfort with his soiled reputation for probity was articulated in their appointment of him as England 'coach' rather than under the traditional title of 'manager'. However, Venables agreed to leave the England job after the 1996 Championship in July 1996.

As hosts, England did not need to qualify for the 1996 European Football Championship. There were plenty of highs and lows during the finals where England won 3 of their 5 games (including one on penalties). The highest point came with the 4–1 defeat of the Netherlands. Venables suffered heartache in the semi finals losing to Germany on penalties.

[edit] Australia

Venables became manager of Australia in November 1996 following the resignation of Eddie Thomson. His side swept through the Oceania World Cup qualifiers but were beaten in a play-off by Iran on away goals, a match often referred to as the most tragic moment in Australian soccer history. With the team having drawn 1-1 in Tehran, Australia lead the second leg 2-0 at half time but the partisan crowd were left stunned when they conceded two late goals. Venables was later sacked.

[edit] Portsmouth (chairman)

At the same time, Venables acted as consultant and then chairman at Portsmouth. He purchased a 51% controlling interest in the club for £1 in February 1997 but left in controversial circumstances 11 months later. His company Vencorp received a £300,000 bonus in the summer of 1997 and he is thought to have been paid around £250,000 upon leaving the club, but he left them bottom of Division One.[3]

Although Portsmouth avoided relegation 1997-98, their financial situation worsened and they were in real danger of bankruptcy until being taken over by Milan Mandaric in late 1999.

[edit] Crystal Palace

In March 1998, he returned to Crystal Palace who had just been taken over by Mark Goldberg, and then relegated from the Premier League, for a brief period, before leaving acrimoniously in January 1999, as the south-London club went into administration. His appointment had created a media frenzy, with Goldberg boasting that he was going to turn Palace into a European force within the next five years. But the dream was over within a year, and Palace narrowly avoided going out of business.

[edit] Middlesbrough (head coach)

Despite being linked with vacant managerial positions with Wales and Chelsea, Venables remained out of football for nearly two years until December 2000, when he was appointed head coach to assist Middlesbrough manager Bryan Robson in a bid to help the club avoid relegation. The club eventually finished 14th and survived. However, Venables felt Teesside was too remote a base for his media and business interests and he left at the same time as Robson in June 2001.

[edit] Leeds United

In July 2002, Venables joined Leeds United as manager. Despite Venables inheriting an arguably stronger squad than the one that had qualified for the UEFA Champion's League two years earlier, the extent of Leed's disasterous financial problems were only begining to become clear with club captain Rio Ferdinand sold to Manchester United only a fortnight into Venables appointment. By December of that year the side had crashed out of both the League Cup and the UEFA Cup and were languishing in the bottom half of the table with mounting levels of debt. Leeds were further weakened in January 2003, when Jonathan Woodgate was sold to Newcastle United and Robbie Keane to Tottenham Hotspur, without Venables being informed, in an attempt to pay off mounting debts. Venables threatened to leave if Woodgate was sold, but was persuaded to stay by Peter Ridsdale[4]. With the club spiralling towards relegation, and amid later substantiated rumours of further player sales by the board Venables was sacked in March 2003.[5][6] The fortures of Leeds turned around temporarily after his sacking as they escaped relegation under Peter Reid, securing safety with a remarkable 3-2 win away to reigning premiership champions Arsenal, but continued selling of players to offset the clubs debt burden eventually saw the end of Reid and the relegation of the club.

[edit] England (assistant)

Venables was linked with Australian club Newcastle United Jets in 2005, but his commitments in the UK prevented him from taking up a role within the club, and his agent announced that he did not sign any deal with the club. At the end of the 2005–06 season, he was linked with a return to Middlesbrough,[7] but decided that at his age he would be unable to manage a Premier League club full time. Later in the year, Venables returned to the England set-up as assistant to new manager Steve McClaren. He was later sacked from this role in November 2007, along with McClaren, after England failed to qualify for the 2008 European Football Championship [8].

[edit] Future

Venables, now 65, has recently been linked in the media with the Republic of Ireland[9], Bulgaria[10] and Iran [11] managerial jobs.

[edit] Other interests

Venables is also well known for his business interests, most notably with English clubs Queen's Park Rangers (as Managing Director), Tottenham Hotspur (as Chief Executive) and Portsmouth (as Chairman). However, on 14 January 1998 he was disqualified by the high court from acting as a company director for seven years under section 8 of the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 for mismanagement of four companies - the London drinking club Scribes West Ltd, Edenote plc, Tottenham Hotspur plc and Tottenham Hotspur Football and Athletic Company Ltd.[12] The case was brought by the Department of Trade and Industry who cited instances of bribery, lying, deception, manipulation of accounts and taking money that should have been given to creditors.[13]

In addition to his widespread business interests, Venables also co-authored four novels with writer Gordon Williams and is credited as co-creator of the ITV detective series Hazell. Having been a football pundit for BBC since the mid-80s, he left for ITV in 1994, following a legal dispute with the corporation over allegations made against him in a Panorama programme. In 1990 Venables co-devised the board game, "Terry Venables invites you to be... The Manager". This is a football management game and is a cross between the Game of Life, Risk and Trivial Pursuit. In 2002 Venables recorded a single for the World Cup together with the band Rider. England Crazy reached number 46 in the UK charts. In May 2006, Venables guided the England Legends and Celebrities squad to victory in the charity Soccer Aid programme.[3]

[edit] Honours

As a player

Chelsea

  • League Cup winner - 1965

Tottenham Hotspur

  • F.A. Cup winner - 1967
As a manager

FC Barcelona

Tottenham Hotspur

  • F.A. Cup winner - 1991

English Football Hall of Fame

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] Football

[edit] Fiction

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Tord Grip
England national football team assistant manager
2006–2007
Succeeded by
Franco Baldini &
Italo Galbiati