Terry Butcher

Terence Ian Butcher (born 28 December 1958) is an English former professional footballer and manager. He is currently working as a defensive coach for Chinese club Guangzhou R&F.

Terry Butcher
Butcher as Inverness Caledonian Thistle manager in 2010
Personal information
Full name Terence Ian Butcher[1]
Date of birth (1958-12-28) 28 December 1958[1]
Place of birth Singapore[1]
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)[2]
Playing position(s) Centre back, Sweeper
Club information
Current team
Guangzhou R&F (defensive coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1976–1986 Ipswich Town 271 (16)
1986–1990 Rangers 127 (8)
1990–1992 Coventry City 6 (0)
1992–1993 Sunderland 38 (0)
1993 Clydebank 3 (0)
Total 445 (24)
National team
1979–1980 England U21 7 (0)
1980–1990 England 77 (3)
Teams managed
1990–1992 Coventry City
1993 Sunderland
2002–2006 Motherwell
2006–2007 Sydney FC
2007 Partick Thistle (Caretaker)
2007 Brentford
2009–2013 Inverness Caledonian Thistle
2013–2014 Hibernian
2015 Newport County
2018 Philippines
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

During his playing career as a defender, Butcher captained the England national team, winning 77 caps in a ten-year international career that featured three FIFA World Cups. Butcher also enjoyed success in his club career, particularly with Ipswich Town and Rangers. He has subsequently managed clubs in England, Scotland, Australia and Wales, and also had a brief spell in charge of the Philippines national team.

Early life

Born in Singapore, where his father was commissioned with the Royal Navy, Butcher spent most of his childhood in Lowestoft, Suffolk, where he attended Lowestoft Grammar School.[3] He turned down the chance to join the Norwich City youth team, as he was a fan of East Anglian rivals Ipswich Town. He joined the Portman Road club in August 1976 after a three-week trial.[4][5]

Club career

Ipswich Town

Butcher made his debut for Ipswich Town against Everton in the First Division on 15 April 1978 and over the next eight seasons would establish himself as the club's top central defender, combining leadership with great aerial ability and courage. This was soon noticed by England manager Ron Greenwood who gave him his debut in a friendly against Australia in 1980.[6]

In 1981, Butcher was part of the Ipswich side that won the UEFA Cup under Bobby Robson and came close to their first League title since 1962, though they were pipped at the post by Aston Villa.

Rangers

In 1986, Butcher left Ipswich when they were relegated, and became one of the first 'English invasion' players to join Scottish club Rangers following the appointment of Graeme Souness as manager. Souness, the former Liverpool player, paid Ipswich £725,000 for him in July 1986.[7] As captain, he led them to three League titles in four seasons, plus two Scottish League Cups.[8]

In November 1987 he broke his leg during a Scottish Premier Division fixture against Aberdeen, which ruled him out for the rest of the season.[8] Before he was injured, Butcher was close to signing a £1million return to England with Manchester United, but his injury saw the transfer cancelled and United manager Alex Ferguson signed Norwich City's Steve Bruce instead.[8]

In April 1988 Butcher was convicted of disorderly conduct and breach of the peace due to his behaviour in an Old Firm match in November 1987.[9] He was fined £250.[10] In October 1988 Butcher was the subject of a police investigation when he kicked the referee's room door off its hinges after a match at Pittodrie. No criminal charges were brought, but the SFA fined Butcher £1500.[10]

His last Rangers game came in September 1990, in a 2–1 league defeat against Dundee United. He was partly responsible for both of the opposition's goals, leading to him being dropped from the side. In November 1990, he was approached by Leeds United, and came close to signing for the Elland Road club, but was then offered job as player-manager of Coventry City.[11]

Coventry City

Leeds United manager Howard Wilkinson was soon in talks with Graeme Souness about bringing Butcher back south of the border, but when Butcher did depart from Ibrox it was in a £400,000 deal to become player-manager of Coventry City on 15 November 1990.[8] One of his first games as Coventry manager was against the Leeds side he had come close to signing for, holding them to a 1–1 league draw at Highfield Road on 24 November.[12] Other promising early results included a thrilling 5–4 home win over cup holders Nottingham Forest in the Football League Cup fourth round on 28 November. However, their quest for the League Cup ended in the quarter-finals on 23 January 1991 when they were beaten 1–0 at home by eventual winners Sheffield Wednesday. Six days later their FA Cup was ended in a fourth round replay defeat by Southampton[13]

Butcher made six league appearances for the Sky Blues as they finished 16th in the 1990–91 First Division and then retired as a player. In the 1991–92 season, Coventry defeated Luton Town 5–0 in their second league game and achieved a surprise 2–1 away win over defending league champions Arsenal, as well as a 1–0 home win over local rivals Aston Villa-[14] to occupy sixth place in the league by the end of September, putting them ahead of more fancied teams including Liverpool and Everton.[15] However, their form dropped over the next two months, and by the end of November they had fallen to 13th place.[16] A 2–1 home defeat by Tottenham Hotspur on New Year's Day 1992 saw them enter the new year in 15th place, six points clear of the relegation zone.[17]

Butcher was dismissed on 6 January 1992 after just over a year as Coventry City manager, being replaced by his recently appointed assistant Don Howe.

Later career

Butcher re-registered himself as a player in August 1992, when he signed for Sunderland – founder members of the new Division One, which was the second tier of English football following the creation of the new FA Premier League. He played 38 times for the Wearside club in 1992–93, becoming player-manager following the dismissal of manager Malcolm Crosby in January 1993 and securing their Division One survival by a single place. He never played again for the club and was sacked on 26 November 1993 after a disappointing start to the 1993–94 season saw them battling relegation once again – with the battle being won under Butcher's successor Mick Buxton.[18]

Butcher then played three games for Clydebank before retiring as a player.

International career

Butcher (left; wearing No.6) is dejected as Diego Maradona celebrates his second goal (considered one of the best goals in World Cup history) during the 1986 World Cup

Butcher's performances for Ipswich were noticed by England manager Ron Greenwood, who gave him his debut in a friendly against Australia on 31 May 1980, when he was 21 years old. He won his second cap 10 months later in a 2–1 defeat against Spain (also a friendly).

In 1982, Butcher was the youngest member of the back four that featured at the World Cup in Spain. He became a regular member of the national side at this stage and remained England's first choice centre-back for the rest of the decade, playing in the 1986 World Cup. In that tournament he played in the match against Argentina in which Diego Maradona passed five English players before scoring, a goal sometimes described as the 'goal of the century'.[19]

A broken leg meant that Butcher was not in the England side that exited at the group stage of the 1988 European Championship while manager Robson was forced to rely on an inexperienced defensive partnership of Tony Adams and Mark Wright.

While playing for England in a vital World Cup qualifier in Sweden in September 1989, Butcher suffered a deep cut to his forehead early in the game. Butcher had some impromptu stitches inserted by the physiotherapist and, swathed in bandages, continued playing.[20] His constant heading of the ball – unavoidable when playing in the centre of defence – disintegrated the bandages and reopened the cut to the extent that his white England shirt was red with blood by the end of the game.[21] The image is regarded as iconic.[22][23]

England made the semi-finals of the 1990 World Cup with Butcher at the helm of a more-cautious back five (Butcher with Wright and Des Walker in the centre, plus full-backs Stuart Pearce and – initially – Gary Stevens, later Paul Parker); he also took over the captaincy after an injury ended Bryan Robson's tournament prematurely. After the World Cup, Butcher retired from international football with 77 caps and three goals to his name over a period of 10 years,[24] during which he had appeared in most senior English national games.

Managerial career

Coventry City

Butcher left Rangers on 15 November 1990 to become player-manager of Coventry City (as successor to John Sillett). At one month short of 32 he was the youngest manager in the Football League on his appointment.

Under Sillett, Coventry had won the FA Cup in 1987 and finished as high as seventh in the First Division in 1989, but a dismal start to the 1990–91 season had seen Coventry fall back into the relegation battle that had been all too familiar occurrence at Highfield Road since Coventry first reached the top flight in 1967. With Butcher's appointment as manager, Coventry were intent on returning to their winning ways. Butcher steered Coventry to 16th place and safety in 1990–91, and they entered 1992 in 13th place, but he was sacked as manager on 6 January 1992.

Butcher had played six league games for Coventry in the 1990–91 season before announcing his retirement as a player.

Sunderland

In February 1993, Butcher was named manager of Sunderland, re-registering himself as a player two years after his last game. He achieved survival at the end of the 1992–93 season, but was sacked the following December.

Motherwell

In October 2001, Butcher became assistant to Eric Black at Motherwell in the Scottish Premier League, taking over from Black a year later as the club was forced to deal with severe financial difficulties, and Butcher has been praised by the club's supporters and media for his performance under those difficult circumstances. Motherwell reached the 2005 Scottish League Cup Final, where his old team Rangers defeated them 5–1.

Sydney

After being linked for several weeks with a possible move to Sydney FC, Butcher was announced as their new head coach on 17 May 2006,[25] signing a two-year contract. On 7 February 2007, he was sacked after the club were knocked out of the finals series with a 3–2 aggregate loss to the Newcastle Jets.[26]

Brentford

On 30 March 2007, Butcher was appointed as assistant coach at Partick Thistle.[27] However, this was a short lived appointment as he became the manager of Brentford on 24 April 2007[28] (he officially took up the role on 7 May 2007).

After a poor run of results, including only 5 wins in 23 matches, and under increasing pressure from the fans who had been chanting the name of former boss Martin Allen, he left Brentford on 11 December 2007.[29]

Scotland national team

Butcher was named as George Burley's assistant in 2008 during Scotland's World Cup 2010 qualifying campaign. Butcher still harboured resentment for Maradona's Hand of God goal against England 22 years earlier. So in the days leading up to a friendly against Argentina, managed by Diego Maradona, Butcher's views on Maradona were a talking point in the media. Butcher said in interviews that Maradona was a cheat and a liar, and he would be happy to see him lose. Scotland lost the game 1–0. When Maradona was asked about what Butcher had said about him, he replied "Who is Butcher?"[30]

In November 2009 George Burley was sacked as Scotland manager and at the same time Butcher left by mutual consent.

Inverness

The Inverness team celebrate winning the First Division title in May 2010 at the Caledonian Stadium (Butcher is to the left of the stage)

On 27 January 2009, Butcher was appointed manager of Inverness Caledonian Thistle, signing an 18-month contract.[31] Butcher was joined in Inverness by Maurice Malpas as his assistant manager. In May 2009, Inverness were relegated from the Scottish Premier League. After a bad start to the 2009–10 First Division league campaign, Butcher managed to turn things around for Inverness. By the end of March, Butcher had guided his club from 16 points behind league leaders Dundee, to four points ahead and top of the Scottish First Division. He was awarded the "Irn Bru Phenomenal" manager of the month award for March.[32] Inverness won the Irn Bru First Division on 21 April after Dundee were beaten 1–0 by Raith Rovers clinching Inverness's return to the Scottish Premier League.

As part of the push for promotion in 2009–10, ICT went on an unbeaten away run in the league that continued through the entire 2010 calendar year, culminating in a 1–1 draw against Hearts at Tynecastle on 18 December.[33] In April 2010 his contract was extended to the end of the 2011–12 season.[34] In the SPL 2010–11 season, the club finished seventh, only narrowly missing out on a top six finish. Butcher was inducted to the Scottish Football Hall of Fame in November 2011.[35]

In the 2012–13 season Butcher received a Manager of a month award for a second time in November, along with two Inverness players Aaron Doran and Billy McKay,[36] having receiving it for October in the 2010–11 season.[37] This was explained due to winning three matches (including away to Celtic)[38] and drawing another, despite the other fixture in the month being a 5–1 defeat to Motherwell[39] and he led the club into second place by the end of 2012. Butcher expressed his delight with the club staying in second place and also his pleasure with the defenders, who were becoming more prominent than his free-scoring forward line.[40]

In January 2013, Butcher rejected an offer to manage Barnsley,[41] having been linked to succeed Keith Hill.[42] After rejecting Barnsley, Butcher explained that one of his reasons for staying was his belief that the club could make history[43] and that he was happy to continue his stay in Scotland.[44] His decision to stay was greeted with relief by defender Daniel Devine, who had signed for the club earlier that month.[45]

Butcher's efforts in guiding Inverness to their top six finish were recognised when he was nominated in the four-man shortlist for PFA Scotland Manager of the Year.[46]

Hibernian

On 5 November 2013, Inverness confirmed that they had received an official approach from fellow Premiership side Hibernian to replace former manager Pat Fenlon with Butcher.[47] On 11 November, Hibernian reached a compensation deal with Inverness for Terry Butcher to move to the club, alongside assistant manager Maurice Malpas.[48] Butcher agreed to a three-year contract, and his appointment was confirmed by the club on 12 November.[49]

A week after Butcher's departure, Inverness supporters responded to his departure with "Terry who?" in the match against St Johnstone.[50] On 2 January 2014, Butcher won the first Edinburgh derby of his managerial career, as they won 2–1.[51] Butcher failed to sign any players in mid-January until signing Daniel Boateng, Danny Haynes and Duncan Watmore on the last day of the transfer window.[52][53]

As the months progressed, Hibernian's results went badly. His predecessor, Pat Fenlon, had left the team in a mid-table position, but a series of bad performances led to Butcher apologising and supporters describing his tactics as "gutless", "passionless" and "clueless".[54][55] Hibernian dropped to the bottom half in the league, putting them at risk of relegation.[56] Defeats in the bottom half for Hibernian led Butcher to cancel players' day-off.[57] Further defeats to Ross County and Kilmarnock placed Hibernian eleventh place and facing the play-offs to keep their Premiership place.[58]

On 25 May 2014 Hibernian were relegated to the Scottish Championship, losing a two-leg playoff against Hamilton Academical.[59] After the match, Butcher described Hibernian relegation as his "darkest day in football".[60] Butcher was criticised by James McPake, who Butcher replaced as captain with Liam Craig, for not selecting him to play despite being fit.[61][62] After a meeting with new chief executive Leeann Dempster to discuss Hibs' future plans, Butcher was sacked by the club on 10 June 2014.[63] There were also rumours of Butcher losing the dressing room and then asking players to leave the club in the January transfer window, only to use them to help the club survive relegation.[64]

Butcher interviewed for the vacant managerial position at Motherwell in December 2014, but then asked not to be considered for the position.[65]

Newport County

On 30 April 2015 Butcher was appointed manager of Welsh club Newport County in League Two on a two-year contract.[66] He took up the role at the end of the 2014–15 season in preparation for the following season, but was sacked on 1 October 2015 with Newport bottom of League Two after gaining just five points from the first ten matches of the season.[67]

Philippines

On 14 June 2018, Butcher was announced as the new head coach of the Philippines.[68] In 2016, he almost got appointed as head coach of Global Cebu which was set to play in the inaugural edition of the Philippines Football League, but the club favoured Japanese coach Toshiaki Imai instead.[69] He was due to lead the Philippines national team in the 2019 AFC Asian Cup,[70] but on 2 August 2018, he announced that he will not take the role as head coach of the national team because he did not believe the system is in place for his time in charge of the Philippines to be successful.[71] His assistant coach, Scott Cooper took over his post and take charge of the team's 2019 Asian Cup preparations.[72]

Guangzhou R&F

On 26 July 2019 it was confirmed, that Butcher had joined the coaching staff of Chinese club Guangzhou R&F to help fix the teams leaky defence. He was hired as a defensive coach.[73]

Media career

While living in Suffolk Butcher had a chain of insurance brokers which were later acquired by the Norwich and Peterborough Building Society. Butcher has appeared as a pundit for England matches on BBC Radio Five Live, Europa League matches on Five and on Setanta Sports' SPL coverage. Butcher also worked for BBC Sport during the 2006 World Cup.

Butcher consistently raised concerns over the sum impact of David Beckham's performances for and involvement with the England national football team, most notably during discussions concerning team and squad selection questions for the 2006 World Cup and Euro 2008 qualification campaign.[74][75]

Personal life

Butcher was married in 1980 and has a house in Bawdsey. His parents, as well as wife Rita's, still live in Suffolk.[76][5] Of his three sons, Christopher served in the Royal Artillery in Afghanistan.[77] Christopher died in October 2017, aged 35.[77] Butcher is a cousin of the Scottish retired footballer Pat Nevin.[78]

Butcher is a fan of heavy metal band Iron Maiden[79] and is friends with bassist and founding member Steve Harris. He is a supporter of the Conservative Party.[76]

Career statistics

Playing

Club

[80][81]

Club performance League Cup League Cup Continental Total
ClubLeague Season AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals AppsGoals
England League FA Cup League Cup Europe Total
Ipswich TownFirst Division 1977–783030
1978–792121020242
1979–80362402040462
1980–814047050122646
1981–82271106020361
1982–83420302021491
1983–843412040401
1984–854225090562
1985–862745022346
Scotland League Scottish Cup League Cup Europe Total
RangersPremier Division 1986–87432105060552
1987–88111003040181
1988–89342805041513
1989–90343205020433
1990–915000311091
England League FA Cup League Cup Europe Total
Coventry CityFirst Division 1990–9160
1991–9200
SunderlandFirst Division 1992–93380
Scotland League Scottish Cup League Cup Europe Total
ClydebankFirst Division 1993–9430
Total England 31616
Scotland 1308
Career total 44624

Managerial

As of 29 September 2015
Team League (s) From To Record
G W D L Win %
Coventry City English Division One 14 November 1990 6 January 1992 60 20 14 26 033.33
Sunderland Premier League 5 February 1993 26 November 1993 43 13 8 22 030.23
Motherwell Scottish Premier League 24 April 2002 17 May 2006 175 60 37 78 034.29
Sydney Australian A-League 17 May 2006 8 February 2007 23 9 8 6 039.13
Brentford English League Two 7 May 2007 11 December 2007 23 5 5 13 021.74
Inverness CT Scottish First Division
Scottish Premier Division/Premiership
27 January 2009 11 November 2013 208 86 57 65 041.35
Hibernian Scottish Premiership 12 November 2013 10 June 2014 29 6 8 15 020.69
Newport County English League Two 2 May 2015 1 October 2015 12 1 3 8 008.33
Total 571 200 140 231 035.03

Honours

Player

Ipswich Town

Rangers[8]

Manager

Inverness Caledonian Thistle

Individual

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gollark: That's against the rules.
gollark: Terrariola: are you *really* AFK?
gollark: That would be a feature request, would it not?
gollark: To get squiddev to do something, you have to kill some of his family, I guess.

See also

References

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  2. "Player profile of Terry Butcher". eurosport.co.uk. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  3. Boggis, Mark (9 March 2018). "Former Ipswich and England legend offers backing to boost the Blues". Lowestoft Journal. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  4. Majumdar, Amlan (8 May 2014). "[Exclusive] Terry Butcher On England's World Cup Hopes, Team Selection And Why Carrick Is Likely To Miss Out". TheHardTackle.com. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  5. "Terry Butcher". England Football Online. 10 July 2014. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
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  7. "Terry Butcher - Rangers FC". Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
  8. "Terry Butcher - Rangers FC". Sporting-heroes.net. Retrieved 21 August 2010.
  9. Old Firm old boys prove popular BBC News, 16 January 2001
  10. Crimes of unsporting passion The Herald, 11 May 1995
  11. "'Should I have gone to Leeds United?' asks Terry Butcher". Yorkshire Post. 5 June 2016.
  12. "Coventry City archive: Sky Blues 1 Leeds United 1 – November 1990 – Coventry City history – Coventry City FC". Coventry Telegraph. Retrieved 26 May 2012.
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  69. Estrada, Kevin (14 June 2018). "England legend Terry Butcher to become Azkals gaffer". Dugout Philippines. Retrieved 14 June 2018.
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  • Butcher, Terry; Harris, Bob (2005). Butcher: My Autobiography. Highdown. ISBN 1-905156-00-6.
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