|
DON REVIE
Donald George Revie, OBE, (10 July 1927 - 26 May 1989), was a football player for Leicester City, Hull City, Sunderland, Manchester City and Leeds United as a deep-lying centre forward. After managing Leeds United (1961-1974) with great success -- his reign becoming known as Leeds' "Glory Years", he managed England from 1974 until 1977.
Revie was born in Middlesbrough on 10 July 1927 and first signed as a footballer for Leicester City in 1944. From there he went on to play for Hull City in 1949 (transfer fee £20,000), Manchester City in 1951 (£25,000), Sunderland in 1956 (£22,000) and Leeds United in 1958 (£12,000). The combined transfer fees paid over his career were at the time (i.e. in 1958) a record in English football.
He won six caps for England, was Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year in 1955 and won an FA Cup winners medal with Manchester City in 1956. At Manchester City the playing tactic of using a deep-lying centre-forward (Revie's position, evolved from the more traditional inside-right), and based on the style of the successful Hungarian national team, and in particular Nándor Hidegkuti, who invented the role, became known as the "Revie plan".
Revie was made player-manager on his arrival at Leeds, and after an initial slow start developed the team that would by the early 1970s be the major force in English football. He was named English Manager of the Year in 1969, 1970, and 1972, and was awarded the OBE in 1970.
In 1974 Revie was offered the job of England national football manager, but was unable to reproduce the success he had enjoyed at Leeds. He was not helped by the loss of important players such as Colin Bell, Roy Mcfarland and Gerry Francis. In 1977 he controversially quit the role to become coach to the United Arab Emirates. The FA suspended Revie on a charge of bringing the game into disrepute, which Revie successfully overturned in court. After leaving the UAE coaching role in 1980 he took over management of Al Nasr, followed in 1984 by the Egyptian club Al Al of Cairo.
In 1987 he revealed that he was suffering from motor neurone disease, and he died in Edinburgh in May 1989, aged 61.
A controversial figure in his time, his team was criticised for its abrasive play, most notably by Brian Clough, although it was widely recognised as among the finest of its day. However, in the years following his death, his reputation has recovered and he is now considered one the finest managers in English football history.
Although never popular with the English national press (which is largely based in London and Manchester), he continues to be worshipped by the Leeds supporters and beloved by his former team. A stand at Leeds United's ground, Elland Road, is named after him. Revie was inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame in 2004 in recognition of his impact as a manager on the English league.
External links
|