Personal information | |||
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Full name | Robert Davison | ||
Date of birth | 17 July 1959 | ||
Place of birth | South Shields, England | ||
Playing position | Striker | ||
Club information | |||
Current club | Leeds United | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps† | (Gls)† |
1980–1981 | Huddersfield Town | 2 | (0) |
1981–1982 | Halifax Town | 63 | (29) |
1982–1987 | Derby County | 206 | (83) |
1987–1992 | Leeds United | 91 | (31) |
1991 | → Derby County (loan) | 10 | (8) |
1992 | → Sheffield United (loan) | 11 | (4) |
1992–1993 | Leicester City | 25 | (6) |
1993–1994 | Sheffield United | 12 | (1) |
1994–1996 | Rotherham United | 22 | (4) |
1995 | → Hull City (loan) | 11 | (4) |
Teams managed | |||
2000 | Guiseley | ||
2008–2009 | Ferencváros | ||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. † Appearances (Goals). |
Robert "Bobby" Davison (born 17 July 1959 in South Shields) is an English former professional footballer and current youth team coach at Leeds United and assistant manager to Noel Blake's England national under-19 football team.
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Davison started his career at Huddersfield Town making only two appearances between 1980 and 1981. He moved on to Halifax Town on 1 August 1981 and holds a good record 29 goals in 63 appearances. This caught the eye of Derby County and between 1982 and 1987 he made 206 appearances scoring 83 goals, contributing towards their promotion to the Second Division in 1986 and the First Division a year later. He played a total of 206 league games for the Rams, scoring 83 goals.[1]
Much to Derby fans disappointment he was sold for £350,000 to a rebuilding Leeds United squad, managed by Billy Bremner, in November 1987.
Howard Wilkinson succeeded Bremner as Leeds managed in September 1988 and in the subsequent push for promotion Bobby became a cult hero for Leeds due to a high work rate and general rapport with the crowd. His scoring record of 35 times in 110 games is a good one for Leeds at that time. He helped them seal a return to the top flight as they sealed the Second Division title on the last day of the 1989–90 season by beating AFC Bournemouth 1–0 at Dean Court.
However, Davison lost his first team place for the 1990–91 season following the arrival of Lee Chapman, who was established as a top goalscorer. He played just five times in the 1990–91 First Division campaign and scored once as Leeds finished fourth. He managed just two league appearances in the 1991–92 campaign, which Leeds ended as champions. He was loaned back to Derby County (who suffered Second Division playoff disappointment in 1991–92) that season, scoring an impressive eight goals in just 10 league games, but the permanent return to the Baseball Ground never happened.
In 1992, he was released to Leicester City. After helping Leicester come close to achieving promotion to the Premier League, he found himself out of favour with the club, so joined Sheffield United in 1993. Again, after coming close to achieving promotion, he found himself out of favour and spent the rest of his career playing bit-part appearances with Rotherham United and Hull City where he retired in the 1995–96 season.
In 2000, Davison had a short spell managing Guiseley before resigning in October 2000. He also had short spells coaching Bradford City and Sheffield United.
On 20 February 2008, when Sheffield United announced their takeover of Ferencváros, they also announced the appointment of Davison as an advisory coach to the Hungarian side. On 16 April 2008, after the removal of János Csank, Davison became Ferencváros's new head coach.[1] His first game in charge was a 1–0 victory against Bõcs KSC.and went on to win promotion back to the big time the next season by a massive 17 points. On 30 October 2009, Ferencvaros have replaced sacked manager Bobby Davison with Craig Short.[2]
November 2010 Davison joined his former club Leeds United as youth team coach.[3]
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded by Archie Gemmill |
Derby County Player of the Year 1984-85 |
Succeeded by Ross MacLaren |
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