Herbert Chapman Part Four

Herbert Chapman became become Northampton Town’s secretary-manager in 1907, ending his playing career just as the development of football in Britain took on a second wind. The number of clubs administered by the Football Association went from 50 in 1871 to 10,000 in 1905, and five million fans passed through the nation’s football turnstiles in…

Training Young Players

From today’s Times: Ask Guus Hiddink, another former Holland coach, for his three priorities in developing players and his list is simple. “Technique, technique, technique,” he said. “You have to be boss of the ball,” De Haan elaborated. “It’s very important, the technical skills. If you are not the boss of the ball, you cannot…

Herbert Chapman Part Three

When the nineteen year old Herbert Chapman signed amateur forms for Stalybridge in 1897, the FA Cup was a quarter of a century old, professional football was twelve years old and the Football League itself nine. Not that Stalybridge had a great deal to do with the likes of Aston Villa, Sunderland or Newcastle. But…

Herbert Chapman Part Two

Football grows in young soil and greenfield sites. England’s ancient cities – Norwich, Bath, Durham, Chester, Canterbury, Westminster, Gloucester, Hereford, Lincoln, Oxford, Cambridge, Lancaster, Salisbury, Chichester, York, Ripon, Shrewsbury and the rest – aren’t football hotbeds and never have been. Football was an emergent phenomenon of industrialization. It still grows in relatively new places today…

Herbert Chapman Part One

Queen Victoria died in January 1901. A matter of months later came the first significant footballing appearance of the name Chapman. “Chapman H.”, once of Worksop, had trialled for Grimsby Town in 1898, but it was the inclusion of that name on a list of triallists at Sheffield Wednesday that marked his break into the…

Brian Clough Part Seven

Thanks are due to Dave Heasman for pointing out my mistake in the last article in this series. Chelsea beat Sunderland to promotion in 1962-3, Clough’s second full season at Roker Park, on GOAL AVERAGE, not goal difference. Goal average – the number of goals scored by a team over a season divided by the…

Brian Clough Part Six

The irony behind Brian Clough’s transfer to Sunderland is that, according to the tables at least, Middlesbrough were marginally the better side. In season 1960-61, Middlesbrough finished fifth, one place above Sunderland. But the story is stranger than that narrow gap would indicate. Middlesbrough enjoyed a fine season at home, winning thirteen of their 21…

Passion and Commitment

Thanks to Gary for pointing this one out to me – it’s another half-time team talk of the Churchillian variety. Watch the faces of the players. (You’ll have to follow the link, but it’s well worth it..)