List of Bury F.C. managers
Bury Football Club was founded in 1884 and joined the Football League in 1894. In its early years, team management was the responsibility of one or more members of the club committee and the first specialist manager was appointed in 1907. The table below provides a list of all the club's managers to date.
The Bury F.C. website contains a list, drawn from the club's own records, of first team managers from 1890 until David Flitcroft's appointment on 9 December 2013.[1] The page has not been updated since then so all later dates are individually sourced.
Manager | Caretaker manager | From | To | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1890 | 1891 | Hargreaves was a member of the club committee given matchday charge of the team in 1890–91. | ||
1891 | 1892 | Ingham was the club chairman but he acted as team manager in 1891–92, during which Bury won the Lancashire Cup and he originated the club nickname (see above). | ||
1892 | 1893 | Duckworth was a member of the club committee given matchday charge of the team in 1892–93.[1] | ||
unknown | 1893 | 1894 | It is possible that more than one member of the club committee was responsible for the team in 1893–94. | |
1894 | 1895 | For the club's first season in the Football League, sole responsibility reverted to Duckworth. The team won the Second Division championship. | ||
management committee | 1895 | 1907 | Management of the team in this period, throughout which Bury were in the First Division, was the responsibility of a three-man committee.[1] According to a Sheffield newspaper report, the committee seems to have included, and may have been headed by, club secretary Harry Spencer Hamer.[2] | |
1 February 1907 | 30 April 1915 | The committee stepped aside and the first specialist manager was appointed. Montgomery, then aged 34, had been the club's goalkeeper. Like Cameron and Thompson who succeeded him, he was Scottish. Montgomery managed the team in 316 league games, a total beaten only by Dave Russell. The club site says that, technically, Montgomery was the first Bury manager to be sacked but the reason for it was the club's lack of income in wartime so it was effectively a redundancy. | ||
none | 1 May 1915 | 15 May 1919 | The position was unfilled for the remainder of World War I. | |
16 May 1919 | 29 May 1923 | Cameron was the club's first player-manager. The reason for his departure is unknown. | ||
11 June 1923 | 10 February 1927 | Hunter-Thompson was the first Bury manager to be sacked because of poor results. The team finished nineteenth in 1926–27, narrowly avoiding relegation. | ||
24 May 1927 | 4 January 1930 | Smith left to take over at Tottenham Hotspur. | ||
7 January 1930 | 29 December 1935 | Arthur Paine joined Bury in 1923 as club secretary, but then served as team manager for nearly six years before reverting to secretary. Through the Second World War, he took additional employment as a company secretary in industry and decided after the war to remain there permanently. He resigned his job with Bury on 1 July 1946.[3] | ||
30 December 1935 | 21 June 1938 | Bullock played for Bury as a forward from 1920 to 1935, representing England three times. He became a coach and then team manager after he retired from playing. He left to take over at Chesterfield. | ||
21 June 1938 | 14 March 1944 | The club website does not name a manager in this period and it is possible that Dean was appointed on a temporary or part-time basis. He is listed by Soccerbase as manager from June 1938 to March 1944.[4] The club site confirms the exact dates of Bullock's departure and Porter's appointment. | ||
14 March 1944 | 14 June 1945 | Porter played for Bury as a wing half from 1921 to 1935 and then became a coach. He appears to have been a stand-in as wartime manager because he stepped aside in June 1945 to become assistant manager on Norman Bullock's return. In 1949, Porter became manager at Accrington Stanley for two years. | ||
15 June 1945 | 30 November 1949 | Bullock's second term as Bury manager. He was the first Bury manager to be given sole responsibility for team selection. He left to become manager of Leicester City. | ||
30 March 1950 | 28 November 1953 | Formerly manager of Torquay United. McNeil left Bury for health reasons. | ||
1 December 1953 | 13 December 1961 | Russell managed the team in 352 league games, more than any other manager. Bury were Third Division champions under him in 1960–61. He left to take over at Tranmere Rovers. | ||
13 December 1961 | 11 August 1965 | After Cameron and Bullock, Stokoe was the club's third player-manager. He left to take over at Charlton Athletic. | ||
16 August 1965 | 10 April 1966 | Head left to take over at Crystal Palace. | ||
11 July 1966 | 29 May 1969 | Shannon managed the club's 1967–68 immediate re-promotion to the Second Division. He left to take over at Blackpool. | ||
1 July 1969 | 16 September 1969 | Marshall was in charge for a mere seven games before being sacked and his term was the shortest of any Bury manager. | ||
16 September 1969 | 17 September 1970 | Hart was only the third Bury manager to be sacked for poor results and there have been several more sackings since then. | ||
17 September 1970 | 10 November 1970 | A local man whose career as a goalkeeper was mostly with Burnley. He held an executive post with Bury after he retired from playing and agreed to stand in as temporary team manager after Hart's dismissal, until McAnearney's appointment. He was afterwards the club's general manager for a time. | ||
10 November 1970 | 8 May 1972 | McAnearney left to take over at Aldershot. | ||
20 June 1972 | 19 December 1973 | Brown left to take over at Nottingham Forest where, until 3 January 1975, he was Brian Clough's predecessor. | ||
19 December 1973 | 17 November 1977 | Won promotion from Fourth Division in 1974. Sacked. | ||
17 November 1977 | 21 May 1978 | Stokoe's second term at Bury. He left to take over at Blackpool. | ||
1 June 1978 | 30 October 1979 | Arrived as player-manager. Sacked. | ||
9 November 1979 | 13 June 1980 | Sacked. | ||
1 July 1980 | 14 February 1984 | Sacked. | ||
14 March 1984 | 1 April 1989 | Arrived as player-manager. Won promotion from Fourth Division in 1985. Sacked. | ||
16 May 1989 | 11 December 1990 | Ellis left to take over at Manchester City. | ||
11 December 1990 | 4 September 1995 | Sacked. | ||
18 September 1995 | 30 May 1998 | Arguably the club's most successful manager as he led the team to successive promotions from fourth tier to third in 1995–96 and, as champions, from third to second in 1996–97. He left to take over at Burnley. | ||
16 June 1998 | 2 December 1999 | Warnock left to take over at Sheffield United. | ||
3 December 1999 | 1 June 2000 | Preece and Redmond shared management duties after Warnock departed until Preece was formally appointed. | ||
1 June 2000 | 16 December 2003 | Initially player-manager. Sacked. | ||
16 December 2003 | 19 September 2005 | Sacked. | ||
19 September 2005 | 14 January 2008 | Sacked. | ||
15 January 2008 | 4 February 2008 | |||
4 February 2008 | 31 March 2011 | Knill left to take over at Scunthorpe United. | ||
1 April 2011 | 1 June 2011 | Secured the club's 2010–11 promotion in the last month of the season. | ||
14 June 2011 | 7 August 2012 | Barker left to take over as manager of Crawley Town. | ||
7 August 2012[5] | 26 September 2012 | Shirtliff was the first-team coach and filled the gap between Barker and Blackwell as the 2012–13 season began. | ||
26 September 2012 | 14 October 2013 | Sacked. | ||
14 October 2013 | 9 December 2013[6] | Jepson was on a short-term caretaker contract which ended early when Flitcroft was appointed. | ||
9 December 2013 | 16 November 2016[7] | Won promotion from League Two in 2015. Sacked. | ||
15 December 2016[8] | 15 February 2017[9] | Brass was on a short-term contract as head coach, not manager as such, and this was terminated early when Lee Clark became available. | ||
15 February 2017[9] | 30 October 2017[10] | Sacked. | ||
30 October 2017[10] | 22 November 2017[11] | |||
22 November 2017[11] | 15 January 2018[12] | Sacked. | ||
15 January 2018[12] | 10 May 2018[13] | |||
10 May 2018[13] | 5 June 2019[14] | Having won promotion to League One, accepted offer to manage Plymouth Argyle. | ||
2 July 2019[15] | c. November 2019 | Formerly caretaker manager at Truro City. It is understood that Wilkinson left several weeks after the club was expelled from the EFL. | ||
References
- "Former Managers". Bury F.C. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
- Sheffield Daily Telegraph, 22 December 1913.
- "Bury Record Score". Soccer Nostalgia. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- "Bury Manager History". Soccerbase. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Crawley Town appoint Bury's Richie Barker as new manager". BBC Sport. 7 August 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- "Bury appoint Ronnie Jepson as manager until January". BBC Sport. 25 October 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
- "David Flitcroft: Bury part company". BBC Sport. 16 November 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Chris Brass: Bury appoint new head coach". BBC Sport. 15 December 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Lee Clark: Bury agree deal for Kilmarnock boss to join". BBC Sport. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Lee Clark: Bury sack manager after eight months in charge". BBC Sport. 30 October 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Chris Lucketti: Bury appoint Scunthorpe United assistant as new manager". BBC Sport. 22 November 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Chris Lucketti: Bury manager sacked after two months in charge". BBC Sport. 15 January 2018. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Ryan Lowe: Bury appoint caretaker boss as full-time manager". BBC Sport. 10 May 2018. Retrieved 24 February 2019.
- "Ryan Lowe: Plymouth Argyle appoint Bury manager as new boss". BBC Sport. BBC. 5 June 2019. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
- "Paul Wilkinson: Bury appoint Truro City boss as manager". BBC Sport. BBC. 2 July 2019. Retrieved 2 July 2019.
External links
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