Jack Reynolds (footballer, born 1881)

Jack Reynolds
Personal information
Full name John Reynolds
Date of birth (1881-09-23)23 September 1881
Place of birth Manchester, England, United Kingdom
Date of death 8 November 1962(1962-11-08) (aged 81)
Place of death Amsterdam, Netherlands
Playing position Winger
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1902 Manchester City 0 (0)
1903 Burton United 32 (3)
1904–1905 Grimsby Town 29 (3)
1905–1907 Sheffield Wednesday 2 (0)
1907–1908 Watford 27 (4)
1908–1911 New Brompton 108 (16)
Rochdale
Teams managed
1912–1914 St. Gallen
1915–1925 Ajax
1919 Netherlands
1925–1928 Blauw Wit
1928–1940 Ajax
1945–1947 Ajax
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

John "Jack" Reynolds (23 September 1881 in Manchester, England – 8 November 1962 in Amsterdam, Netherlands) was an English football manager and player. He was the manager of Ajax Amsterdam from 1915–1925, 1928–1940, and 1945–1947. He was one of the pioneers of the Total Football system of playing and is considered to be among the best managers the team has had. He was also the manager of the Swiss side St Gallen.

Playing career

Reynolds was not highly regarded as a player and played for several clubs without much success, the high point being a season in the Second Division with Grimsby Town in 1904–05.

Managerial career

F.C. St. Gallen

Reynolds started his career as a coach with St. Gallen in 1912, and after a two-year stay he left to become coach of the German national football team. The outbreak of World War I prevented that, and he moved to the Netherlands instead.

Ajax Amsterdam

In 1915, Reynolds started his 27-year association with Ajax, during which he set the bases of the Total Football system of playing later developed by Rinus Michels. During his three spells with the club they won the Eredivisie (the Dutch top division) 8 times and the KNVB Cup (Dutch FA cup) once; Ajax had not won either prize before. After Reynolds retired in 1947, he lived in Amsterdam until his death in 1962. Three years later in 1965 a stand at the De Meer Stadion was named after him.

Netherlands national football team

In 1919, Reynolds became the first manager to coach the Netherlands since the suspension of international football due to World War I. He assumed the honours for the match against Sweden on 9 June 1919. The Dutch won the match 3–1. After this match, the Royal Dutch Football Association appointed Fred Warburton as the coach of the national team.

Personal life

When the Nazis invaded The Netherlands in 1940 during World War II, Reynolds was interned in Tost (now Toszek) in Upper Silesia (now in Poland), along with other foreign nationals including P. G. Wodehouse.

Reynolds' older brother Billy was also a footballer.[1]

Honours

Ajax Amsterdam

1918, 1919, 1931, 1932, 1934, 1937, 1939, 1947
1917

References

General
Specific
  1. "William Reynolds" (PDF). Croydon Common FC. Alan Futter. Retrieved 29 April 2010.
  2. Hardgras
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