Brian Howard Clough (/klʌf/KLUF; 21 March 1935 – 20 September 2004) was an Englishfootball player andmanager, primarily known for his successes as a manager withDerby County andNottingham Forest. He is one offour managers to have won the English league with two different clubs. He is widely regarded as one of the greatest managers of all time.[1][2][3] Charismatic, outspoken and often controversial, his achievements with Derby and Forest, two clubs with little prior history of success, are rated among the greatest in football history.[4] His teams were also noted for playing attractive football and for their good sportsmanship.[5] Despite applying several times and being a popular choice for the job, he was never appointedEngland manager and has been dubbed the "greatest managerEngland never had".[6]
Clough played as astriker for Middlesbrough and Sunderland, scoring 251 league goals in 274 matches; he remains one of theFootball League'shighest goalscorers. He won two England caps. He entered management after his playing career was ended by a serious injury at the age of 29. As a manager, Clough was closely associated withPeter Taylor, who served as his assistant manager at several clubs in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. He is also remembered for giving frequent radio and television interviews in which he made controversial remarks about players, other managers and the overall state of the game. In 1965, he took the manager's job at Fourth DivisionHartlepools United and appointedPeter Taylor as his assistant, the start of an enduring partnership that would bring them success at several clubs over the next two decades. In 1967, the duo moved on toSecond Division Derby County who, in1968–69, were promoted as Second Division champions and,three years later, crownedchampions of England for the first time in the club's history. In1973, they reached the semi-finals of theEuropean Cup. By this point, Clough's relationship with chairmanSam Longson had deteriorated; he and Taylor resigned.
An eight-month spell in charge ofThird Division clubBrighton & Hove Albion followed, before Clough (without Taylor) returned north in the summer of 1974 to become manager ofLeeds United. This was widely regarded as a surprise appointment, given his previous outspoken criticism of the Leeds players and their managerDon Revie. He was sacked after just 44 days in the job, but within months, he had joined Second Division Nottingham Forest, where he was re-united with Taylor in the summer of 1976. In 1977, Forest were promoted to the top flight and the following season won the league title (the first in the club's history), making Clough one of only four managers to have won the English league with two clubs. Forest also won two consecutive European Cups (in1979 and1980) and twoLeague Cups (1978 and1979), before Taylor retired in 1982. Clough stayed on as Forest manager for another decade and won two more League Cups (1989 and1990) and reached theFA Cup final in1991, but could not emulate his earlier successes. Forest were relegated from thePremier League in 1993, after which Clough retired from football.
Brian Howard Clough was born on Thursday, 21 March 1935[7] at 11 Valley Road, an inter-war council house inGrove Hill,Middlesbrough,North Riding of Yorkshire,[8] He was the sixth of nine children of a localsweet shop worker, later sugar boiler and then manager. The eldest, Elizabeth, died on 11 February 1927[9] ofsepticaemia at the age of three.[10] When talking of his childhood he said he "adored it in all its aspects. If anyone should be grateful for their upbringing, for their mam and dad, I'm that person. I was the kid who came from a little part of paradise." On his upbringing in Middlesbrough, Clough claimed that it was "not the most well-appointed place in the world, but to me it was heaven". "Everything I have done, everything I've achieved, everything that I can think of that has directed and affected my life – apart from the drink – stemmed from my childhood.[11] Maybe it was the constant sight of Mam, with eight children to look after, working from morning until night, working harder than you or I have ever worked."
Clough failed hisEleven-plus examination and attended Marton Grove Secondary Modern School.[12] He later admitted in his autobiography,Walking on Water, that he had neglected his lessons in favour of sport, although at school he became Head Boy. He also said that cricket, rather than football, was his first love as a youngster, and that he would have rather scored a test century atLord's than a hat-trick atWembley. He left school in 1950 without any qualifications, to work atICI[13] and did hisnational service in theRAF Regiment between 1953 and 1955.[14]
"I played with some great players and I think Cloughie was a great finisher. He was a powerful lad and both his timing and positional play were excellent. You placed him in that bracket asRoger Hunt, but in more modern terms he was very similar toMark Hughes when it came to volleying. The one thing, right or wrong, that he insisted on was that he played down the middle because, he reasoned, that was where he scored, not out wide so why should I run wide. That was his only failing. When he played for England he wanted people to play like Boro did but when you've got people around likeBobby Charlton andJimmy Greaves, you can't tell those guys I will just stop in the middle."
Clough played for Great Broughton Juniors and, while working for ICI,Billingham Synthonia (scoring three goals in four games[16]) before hisnational service in theRAF between 1953 and 1955. He combined playing football in the forces, though he was never selected for theRAF National team,[17] and playing for theBoro third team when on leave.[17]
Following this, he became a prolific striker for his home town clubMiddlesbrough since his debut in the1955–56 season and an impressive1956–57 season now as starter, scoring 204 goals in 222 league matches for Boro,[18] including 40 or more goals in four consecutive seasons, beingDivision Two topscorer in two of them:1958–59 and1959–60. However, Clough also regularly submitted transfer requests since the1957–58 season and had a tense relationship with some of his fellow players. He was especially irked by Boro's leaky defence, which conceded goals as regularly as he scored them. In the1960–61 season after a 6–6 draw againstCharlton Athletic, Clough sarcastically asked his teammates how many goals they would have to score in order to win a match.[15] He also publicly accused some of his teammates of betting against the team and deliberately letting in goals.[19] While at Middlesbrough, Clough became acquainted with goalkeeperPeter Taylor, with whom he would later form a successful managerial partnership at several clubs.
In July 1961, one of Clough's transfer requests was finally accepted and he moved to Boro'slocal rivalsSunderland for £55,000 scoring 34 goals in the1961–62 season. With Sunderland, Clough scored a total of 63 goals in 74 matches.[18] In the1962–63 season, Clough had scored 24 league goals by December as Sunderland pushed for promotion. In a match againstBury atRoker Park on 26 December 1962, in icy conditions and torrential rain, Clough was put through on goal and collided with goalkeeper,Chris Harker. Clough tore themedial andcruciate ligaments in his knee, an injury which in that era usually ended a player's career. He returned two years later, but could manage only three games and then retired from playing at the age of 29.[20]
Clough's manager at Sunderland wasAlan Brown, a disciplinarian credited as a big influence on Clough. Brown inspired fear, imposed a strict code of conduct and would fine players for minor transgressions. He once upbraided Clough for talking to a friend during a training session. Such traits would later be adopted by Clough himself when he became a manager.[21]
Of the players who have scored over 200 goals in the English leagues, Clough has the highest goals-per-game ratio of 0.916,[22] and has the second highest ratio in thelist that includes the Scottish leagues.
Clough played twice for theEngland national football team, againstWales on 17 October 1959 andSweden on 28 October 1959, without scoring, although hitting the crossbar and post against Sweden.[23]
After a short spell coaching theSunderland youth team, in October 1965, Clough was offered the manager's job atHartlepools United (from 1977 the club became known as Hartlepool United). He accepted and immediately askedPeter Taylor (then managing non-leagueBurton Albion) to join him as his assistant. At the age of 30, Clough was then the youngest manager in the league. Hartlepools were perennial strugglers and had repeatedly had to apply for re-election to the Football League, having finished in the bottom two of the Fourth Division five times in the past six seasons. Such was the club's perilous financial state in the1965–66 season, Clough had to tour local pubs raising money to keep the club afloat and even applied for a coach driver's licence to drive the team to away matches.
On 15 November 1966, the then chairman, Ernest Ord, who was known for playing mind games with managers, sacked Clough's assistant Peter Taylor, claiming he could not afford to pay him anymore. Clough refused to accept it so Ord sacked him as well. However, there was a boardroomcoup where the other board members refused to ratify the two sackings and which instead saw Ord ousted as chairman. Both Clough and Taylor were reinstated. Hartlepools' fortunes gradually improved and the club finished in a creditable eighth place in1966–67. Their Hartlepools team featured three players who would play for Clough and Taylor at other clubs in the future:Les Green, who would be goalkeeper in Derby's promotion-winning side of 1969,Tony Parry who Clough signed for Derby in 1972 in what is seen as a helpful gesture to his former club who needed funds from transfers and a 16-year-oldJohn McGovern, who would later be signed by Clough at Derby County, Leeds United and Nottingham Forest, winning several major trophies in the process. On 14 May 1967, the two men then joinedSecond Division sideDerby County as manager and assistant manager. They took charge on 1 June 1967. In the following season, Hartlepools were promoted for the first time in their history.
Brian Clough and Peter Taylor Statue at Pride Park
Derby County had been rooted in theSecond Division for a decade before Clough's arrival, and had been outside the top flight for a further five years, their only major trophy being theFA Cup in 1946.
In Clough'sfirst season, the club finished one place lower than in the previous season, but he had started to lay the foundations for his future success by signing several new players, among themRoy McFarland,John O'Hare,John McGovern,Alan Hinton and Les Green. Of the inherited squad, 11 players departed and only four were retained:Kevin Hector,Alan Durban,Ron Webster andColin Boulton. Clough also sacked the club secretary, the groundsman and the chief scout, along with two tea ladies he caught laughing after a Derby defeat.[24] With the additional signings ofDave Mackay andWillie Carlin in1968–69, Clough and Taylor's management led Derby to become champions of theSecond Division, establishing the club record of 22 matches without defeat on the way and the team was promoted to theFirst Division for the1969–70 season.
Clough was universally seen as a hard but fair manager, who insisted on clean play from his players and brooked no stupid questions from the press. He insisted on being called "Boss" and earned great respect from his peers for his ability to turn a game to his and his team's advantage. Derby's first season back in theFirst Division saw them finish fourth, their best league finish for over twenty years, but, due to financial irregularities, the club was banned from Europe the following season and fined £10,000.[citation needed]
In1970–71, the club finished ninth. In February 1971, Clough bolstered his squad by signingColin Todd for a British record £175,000 on the same day Clough had denied that Derby were about to buy Todd. In the1971–72 season, after tussling withLiverpool,Leeds United andManchester City for the title, Derby finally topped the league table by one point after playing their final match, a 1–0 win over Liverpool.Manchester City did temporarily top the league after playing their last match, but had a slim chance of winning the title due to outstanding fixtures between the clubs directly below them. Peter Taylor took the players on holiday toMajorca as the clubs beneath them played their final matches. Clough was not with the squad, instead holidaying in theIsles of Scilly with his family and elderly parents. Both Liverpool and Leeds United had a chance to overtake Derby by winning their final matches (played a week later due to fixture congestion) but Leeds lost toWolves and Liverpool drew atArsenal, meaning Derby were league champions for the first time in their 88-year history. The team and management were on holiday when receiving the news they were champions.
On 27 April 1972, less than two weeks before taking Derby to the league title, Clough and Taylor had briefly resigned for a few hours to manageCoventry City before changing their minds after Longson offered them more money.
In August 1972, Clough refused to go on an arranged pre-season tour of the Netherlands andWest Germany unless he could take his family with him. Derby chairman Sam Longson told him that it was a working trip and not a holiday, so Clough put Taylor in charge of the tour instead and refused to go. The club did not contest theFA Charity Shield that year.
On 24 August 1972, Clough and Taylor signedDavid Nish fromLeicester City for a then-record transfer fee of £225,000, without consulting the Derby board.[25] Afterwards, Jack Kirkland, a director, warned Clough and Taylor there would be no more expensive buys like Nish. Then, in early September 1972, after the team had defeatedLiverpool 2–1 at theBaseball Ground, Clough criticised the Derby County fans, stating that "They started chanting only near the end when we were a goal in front. I want to hear them when we are losing. They are a disgraceful lot". In the same interview, Clough also verbally attacked the club's board of directors for their policies. The following day, board chairman Sam Longson apologised to the fans and dissociated himself from Clough's remarks.
That1972–73 season, Derby failed to retain their title, finishing seventh, but reached the semi-finals of theEuropean Cup in April 1973, when they were knocked out byJuventus 3–1 on aggregate.[26] During the first leg inTurin, Clough was aggrieved by the performance of the match referee, whom he believed had been influenced and possibly bribed to favour the Italian side.[27] After the game, Clough refused to speak to the Italian reporters, saying: "No cheating bastards do I talk to. I will not talk to any cheating bastards". He instructedBrian Glanville to translate what he had said to them[28] and questioned the Italian nation's courage in theSecond World War.[29]
It was these sorts of frequent, outspoken comments – particularly against football's establishment, such as theFA and club directors, and figures in the game such asMatt Busby,Alan Hardaker,Alf Ramsey,Don Revie and Len Shipman, along with players such asBilly Bremner,Norman Hunter andPeter Lorimer – combined with Clough's increased media profile, that eventually led to his falling out with the Rams' chairman, Sam Longson, and the Derby County board of directors.
On 5 August 1973, Clough put his name to an article in theSunday Express headlined "I Would Put Leeds in Division Two – Brian Clough lashes Soccer's bosses for letting off Don Revie's 'bad boys,'"[30] which savagedLeeds United's disciplinary record, stating that Revie should be fined for encouraging his players in their unsporting behaviour and Leeds relegated to the Second Division. Clough also said that "The men who run football have missed the most marvellous chance of cleaning up the game in one swoop" and went on to say "The trouble with football's disciplinary system is that those who sat in judgement being officials of other clubs might well have a vested interest."
Days afterwards, Clough was charged with bringing the game into disrepute, but he was cleared on 14 November after he had later resigned from Derby. In September 1973, Clough travelled toWest Ham United'sUpton Park and personally made a £400,000 bid forBobby Moore, a player he long admired, andTrevor Brooking. West Ham managerRon Greenwood informed Clough that neither was available but that he would pass his offer onto the West Ham board of directors anyway. Clough never told Derby's chairman, secretary or any other board members at Derby about the bid. Longson found out four months later during a chance conversation with Eddie Chapman, West Ham's secretary at the time, but by then Clough was no longer the Derby County manager.
During the1973–74 season, on 11 October 1973, Longson called for the sackings of both Clough and Taylor at a board meeting, but did not gain the support that was needed. Earlier that week, Longson had demanded that Clough stop writing newspaper articles and making television appearances, and prohibited both Clough and Taylor drinking alcohol on Derby County premises. Two days later, following a 1–0 win againstManchester United atOld Trafford, club director Jack Kirkland demanded to know what Taylor's exact role within the club was, and instructed Taylor to meet him at the ground two days later to explain. On the same day, Longson accused Clough of making aV-sign at Matt Busby and chairmanLouis Edwards and demanded that he apologise. Clough refused, and admitted later that he did make a V-sign, but it was aimed at Longson, not Busby or Edwards: he blamed Longson for providing too few tickets and seating for players' and staff's wives, including his own and Taylor's.
Clough and Taylor hoped to oust Longson as chairman, as they had done with Ord seven years earlier, but failed. Both Clough and Taylor resigned on the evening of 15 October 1973, and the resignation was accepted by Sam Longson the following morning, to widespread uproar from Rams fans, who demanded the board's resignation along with Clough and Taylor's reinstatement at the following home game against Leicester City four days later. That evening, Clough appeared onParkinson and attacked football directors for their apparent "lack of knowledge" of football.
That week, Clough, as a television football pundit, memorably calledPoland goalkeeperJan Tomaszewski a "circus clown in gloves" before the crucialWorld Cup qualifier with England at Wembley.[31] The match, which England had to win in order to qualify for the1974 World Cup finals, ended 1–1, and Tomaszewski made numerous magnificent saves, some of them unconventionally, to ensure his nation qualified for the finals at England's expense. When commentatorBrian Moore said "You call him a clown, Brian, but he saved his side", Clough insisted "Would you want him in your team every week?"[citation needed]
The six years at Derby County had brought Clough to the attention of the wider football world. According to James Lawton, "Derby was the wild making of Brian Clough. He went there a young and urgent manager who had done impressive work deep in his own little corner of the world at Hartlepools. He left surrounded by fascination and great celebrity: abrasive, infuriating, but plugged, immovably, into a vein of the nation."[32]
Such was the loyalty to Clough that, along with himself and Taylor, scouts and backroom staff completed the walk out, following the pair for their brief spell withBrighton & Hove Albion.[33] He proved less successful on the south coast than with his previous club, winning only 12 of his 32 games in charge of theThird Division side. Whereas nineteen months earlier he led Derby County to the league title and eight months earlier Clough was managing a team playing Juventus in the European Cup, he was now managing a club who, just after his appointment as manager, lost to non-leagueWalton & Hersham 4–0 at home in an FA Cup replay. On 1 December 1973, his side lost 8–2 at home toBristol Rovers. Brighton eventually finished in 19th place that1973–74 season.
Clough left Brighton less than a year after his appointment, in July 1974, to become manager ofLeeds United, followingDon Revie's departure to become manager ofEngland, though this time Taylor did not join him. Clough's move was very surprising given his previous outspoken criticism of both Revie, for whom Clough made no secret of his deep disdain, and the successful Leeds team's playing style, which Clough had publicly branded "dirty" and "cheating".[34] Furthermore, he had called for Leeds to be demoted to the Second Division as a punishment for their poor disciplinary record.
He lasted in the job only 44 days before he was sacked by the Leeds directors on 12 September 1974, after alienating many of Leeds' star players.[35] During one of the first training sessions he took for Leeds United, he reportedly said "You can all throw your medals in the bin because they were not won fairly."[36] UntilDarko Milanič's winless six games in 2014,[37] he had the unenviable record of being Leeds United's least successful permanent manager, winning only one match from six games. Leeds were fourth from bottom in 19th position with only four points from a possible twelve, their worst start since their last relegation campaign fifteen years earlier. His pay-off was estimated at £98,000, a huge amount at the time.[38]
On the evening of his dismissal, Clough discussed his short reign atElland Road withYorkshire Television'sCalendar news programme. Revie also participated in the live broadcast, the two ex-managers spending as much time debating management practice with each other as with the hostAustin Mitchell.[39][40] Describing this televised interview as the culmination of the bitter rivalry between the two men, journalist Roger Hermiston stated: "It was like watching a bickering couple about to get a divorce."[41]
Clough replacedAllan Brown as manager of Nottingham Forest on 6 January 1975, just over sixteen weeks after the end of his 44-day tenure as manager of Leeds United.[42] Clough broughtJimmy Gordon to be his club trainer, as Gordon had been for him at Derby and Leeds.[43] Forest won Clough's first game in charge, an FA Cup third round replay against Tottenham Hotspur, with Scottish centre-forwardNeil Martin scoring the only goal.[44]
Ian Bowyer was already at Forest and had won domestic and European trophies withManchester City. Clough signed Scottish duoJohn McGovern andJohn O'Hare in February from Leeds United, having been bought by Clough the previous year during his ill-fated 44-day managerial stint there; both players had been part of Clough'stitle-winning team at Derby. He then broughtJohn Robertson andMartin O'Neill back into the fold after they had requested transfers under Brown.[45]Viv Anderson had previously made his debut for the first team and became a regular under Clough.[46]Tony Woodcock, early in his career, was at Forest but was then unrated by Clough and was to be loaned toLincoln City.[47] Forest were 13th in English football's second tier when Clough joined. They finished 16th at the end of theseason. Forest signedFrank Clark in July 1975 on a free transfer.[48] The following1975–76 season, Forest finished eighth in Clough'sfirst full season in charge.[42] It was in this season Clough made McGovern long standing club captain, taking over from a game in whichBob Chapman andLiam O'Kane were both injured.[49]
On 16 July 1976,Peter Taylor re-joined Clough as his Assistant Manager, which he had been when winning the league at Derby.[42] Taylor included being the club's talent spotter in his role. After assessing the players Taylor told Clough "that was a feat by you to finish eighth in the Second Division because some of them are only Third Division players".[50] Taylor beratedJohn Robertson for allowing himself to become overweight and disillusioned. He got Robertson on a diet and training regime that would help him become a European Cup winner.[51] Taylor turned Woodcock from a reserve midfielder into a 42-cap England striker.[52] In September 1976, he bought strikerPeter Withe to Forest for £43,000, selling him toNewcastle United for £250,000 two years later.[53] Withe was eventually replaced in the starting team byGarry Birtles who Taylor had scouted playing for non-leagueLong Eaton United. Birtles also went on to represent England.[54] In October 1976, Clough, acting on Peter Taylor's advice, signedLarry Lloyd for £60,000 after an initial loan period.
Together Clough and Taylor took Forest to new heights. The first trophy of the Clough and Taylor reign was the1976–77 Anglo-Scottish Cup. Forest defeatedOrient 5–1 on aggregate in the two-legged final played in December 1976.[42] Clough valued winning a derided trophy as the club's first silverware since 1959. He said, "Those who said it was a nothing trophy were absolutely crackers. We'd won something, and it made all the difference."[55]
On 7 May, Alan Moore's own goal meant Forest in their last league game of the season defeatedMillwall 1–0 at the City Ground.[56] This kept Forest in the third promotion spot in the league table and dependent onBolton Wanderers dropping points in three games in hand in the fight for third place.[57] On 14 MayKenny Hibbitt's goal from his rehearsed free kick routine withWillie Carr gave Wolves a 1–0 win at Bolton.[49][58] Bolton's defeat reached the Forest team mid-air en route to an end of1976–77 season break inMallorca.[49] Forest's third place promotion from the Second Division was the fifth-lowest points tally of any promoted team in history, 52[42][45] (two points for a win in England until 1981).
Taylor secretly followedKenny Burns and concluded Burns' reputation as a hard drinker and gambler was exaggerated. Taylor sanctioned his £150,000 July signing. Burns becameFWA Footballer of the Year in1977–78 after being moved from centre-forward to centre-back.[59][60] Forest started their return to the top league campaign with a 3–1 win atEverton. Three further wins in league and cup followed without conceding a goal. Then came five early September goals conceded in losing 3–0 atArsenal and defeating Wolves 3–2 at home.[61]Peter Shilton then signed for a record fee for a goalkeeper of £325,000. Taylor reasoned: "Shilton wins you matches."[62] 20 year oldJohn Middleton was first team goalkeeper pre-Shilton. Middleton later in the month went in part exchange with £25,000 to Derby County forArchie Gemmill transferring to Forest.[63] Gemmill was another Scottish former 1972 Derby title winner.[59][64]
Forest lost only three of their first sixteen league games, the last of which was at Leeds United on 19 November 1977. They lost only one further game all season, an 11 March FA Cup sixth round defeat atWest Bromwich Albion.[61] Forest won the1977–78 Football League, seven points ahead of runners-upLiverpool. Forest became one of the few teams (and the most recent team to date) to win the First Division title the season after winning promotion from the Second Division.[nb 1] This made Clough the third of four managers to win theEnglish league championship with two different clubs.[notes 1] Forest conceded just 24 goals in 42 league games.[62] They defeated Liverpool 1–0 in the1978 Football League Cup Final replay, despite cup-tied Shilton, Gemmill and December signingDavid Needham not playing.[65]Chris Woods chalked up two clean sheets in the final covering Shilton's league cup absence. McGovern missed the replay through injury, and Burns lifted the trophy as the stand-in captain. Robertson's penalty was the only goal of the game.[55][66]
Forest started season1978–79 by defeatingIpswich Town 5–0 for anFA Community Shield record win.[42] In the1978–79 European Cup they were drawn to play the trophy winners of the two previous seasons, Liverpool. Home goals by Birtles andColin Barrett put Forest through 2–0 on aggregate.[67] On 9 December 1978 Liverpool ended Forest's 42 match undefeated league run dating back to the November the year before.[42] The undefeated run was the equivalent of a whole season, surpassing the previous record of 35 games held byBurnley in 1920–21.[68] The record stood until it was surpassed by Arsenal in August 2004, a month before Clough's death.Arsenal played49 league games without defeat.[69]
In February 1979, Taylor authorised the English game's first £1 million transfer, signingTrevor Francis fromBirmingham City.[70] In the April European Cup semi final home first leg against1. FC Köln, Forest were two goals behind after twenty minutes. Forest scored three to edge ahead, but Köln equalised. Thus the German side started the second leg ahead on the away goals rule.Ian Bowyer's goal, the only one of the game, put Forest through.Günter Netzer asked afterwards, "Who is this McGovern? I have never heard of him, yet he ran the game." Forest defeatedMalmö 1–0 in Munich'sOlympiastadion in the1979 European Cup Final. Francis on his European debut scored with a back post header from Robertson's cross. In addition, Forest defeatedSouthampton in the final 3–2 to retain the League Cup. Birtles scored twice, and Woodcock once. Forest finished second in the1978–79 Football League, eight points behind Liverpool.
The next1980–81 season in theEuropean Cup first round, Forest lost 2–0 on aggregate, losing 1–0 both at home and away to CSKA Sofia.[74] McGovern subsequently said the double defeat by CSKA affected the team's self-confidence, in that they had lost out to "modestly talented" opponents.[49] Forest lost the1980 European Super Cup on away goals after a 2–2 aggregate draw againstValencia, with Bowyer scoring both Forest goals in the home first leg.[75] On 11 February 1981, Forest lost 1–0 in the1980 Intercontinental Cup against Uruguayan sideClub Nacional de Football. The match was played for the first time at the neutral venueNational Stadium inTokyo before 62,000 fans.[76]
The League and European Cup winning squad was broken up to capitalise on player sale value. Clough and Taylor both later said this was a mistake.[43] The rebuilt side, comprising youngsters and signings such asIan Wallace,Raimondo Ponte andJustin Fashanu, did not challenge for trophies. Taylor said in1982,[77]
"For many weeks now I don't believe I've been doing justice to the partnership and I certainly haven't been doing justice to Nottingham Forest the way I felt. And consequently after a great deal of thought, there was no option. I wanted to take an early retirement. That's exactly what I've done."
Jimmy Gordon retired in the same close season.[43]
After clinching a decent fifth place in the1982–83 season, the next campaign1983–84 the club -returning to the continental competitions after two years- was defeated byAnderlecht in theUEFA Cup semi finals in controversial circumstances. Several contentious refereeing decisions went against Forest. Over a decade later it emerged that before the match the referee Guruceta Muro received a £27,000 "loan" from Anderlecht's chairmanConstant Vanden Stock.[78] In 1997 UEFA subsequently banned Anderlecht for one year from European competition. Muro died in a car crash in 1987.[79]
On 18 January 1989, Clough joined the fray of a City Ground pitch invasion by hitting two of his own team's fans when on the pitch. The football authorities fined Clough and issued him with a touchline ban.[81] Forest defeated QPR 5–2 in that1988–89 Football League Cup tie.[82]
Forest defeated Everton 4–3 after extra time in the 1989Full Members Cup final. They came back to defeat Luton Town 3–1 in theLeague Cup final.Nigel Clough scored two andNeil Webb one. Forest chased a unique cup treble in the1988–89 season, but tragedy struck a week after the League Cup win. Forest and Liverpool met for the second season in a row in the FA Cup semi-finals. TheHillsborough disaster claimed the lives of 97 Liverpool fans, and the match was abandoned after six minutes. When the rescheduled game took place, Forest struggled and Liverpool won 3–1. Forest finished third in the First Division for a second successive year. However, they were unable to compete in theUEFA Cup as English clubs were still banned from European competitions following theHeysel Stadium Disaster.Des Walker won the first of his four successive selections for the PFA Team of the Year.
Nigel Jemson scored as Forest defeatedOldham Athletic 1–0 to retain the League Cup in 1990. Clough reached his onlyFA Cup final in 1991. Pearce put Forest ahead after sixteen minutes, direct from a free kick against Tottenham Hotspur atWembley. Spurs won 2–1 after an extra-time own goal by Walker.Roy Keane declared himself fit to play in the final and was selected in preference toSteve Hodge. Keane later admitted he was not fit to play and that was why he had such an insignificant role in the final.[83] English clubs were re-admitted to Europe for the1990–91 season. English places in the competition were initially limited. 1990 League Cup winners Forest were not included. The onlyUEFA Cup place that season went to league runners-upAston Villa.
In the summer of 1991,Millwall's league top scorerTeddy Sheringham set Forest's record signing fee at £2.1 million. In that1991–92 season Forest defeated Southampton 3–2 after extra time in the Full Members Cup Final.Brian McClair's solitary Manchester United goal defeated Forest in the1992 Football League Cup Final. Forest had played in seven domestic cup finals at Wembley in five seasons, winning five. Forest finished eighth in the league that season to earn a place in the newFA Premier League.
Walker transferred in the summer 1992 to Italian sideSampdoria. On 16 August 1992, Forest defeated Liverpool 1–0 at home in the first ever televised live Premier League game. Sheringham scored the only goal against Liverpool. Only one week later, Sheringham transferred to Tottenham. Forest's form slumped, meaning Clough's 18-year managerial reign ended in May 1993 with Forest relegated from the inaugural Premier League.[84] In the final game of the season away toIpswich, Forest lost 2–1, with Clough's son,Nigel, scoring the last goal of the Brian Clough era at Nottingham Forest.[45] Relegation was followed by Keane's £3.75 million then-British record fee transfer to Manchester United.
Clough was a popular choice to be appointedEngland manager throughout the 1970s and 1980s. However, it was widely felt that the FA were unwilling to consider appointing him on account of his numerous outspoken comments about the English football authorities. He was interviewed for the job twice, in 1977 and 1982, but lost out toRon Greenwood andBobby Robson respectively. Such was the demand for Clough to be given the job that incumbent manager Robson told then-FA chairman SirBert Millichip: 'I'm having a rough time and everybody wants Brian – give the job to him. If he's successful, everybody's happy. If he fails, that's the end of the clamour for Brian Clough to be England manager'."[85]
Clough was still a popular choice to be given the job of England manager beforeGraham Taylor's appointment in 1990.[86] Clough himself quipped: "I'm sure the England selectors thought, if they took me on and gave me the job, I'd want to run the show. They were shrewd because that's exactly what I would have done."[87] He has been called the "greatest manager England never had."[6] In 1977, Clough was reportedly interested in theEverton manager's job, butGordon Lee was appointed instead.[88]
FollowingMike England's dismissal as manager ofWales in February 1988, Clough was offered the position as manager of Wales on a part-time basis, something later done withJohn Toshack. Clough was keen on the chance to become an international manager, but the directors of Nottingham Forest refused to let him split his loyalties.[86] According to Hamish Woodward writing inAtletifo Sports, Clough used the Wales job to earn himself an improved contract with Nottingham Forest.[89] In April 1986, Clough had declared that he intended to spend the rest of his managerial career with Nottingham Forest.[90] In June 1986, Clough was linked with the job of Scotland manager, but the vacancy was filled byAndy Roxburgh (a long-serving member of the Scotland coaching set-up) instead. Clough had also been linked with theRepublic of Ireland job the previous year, before it was filled by fellow EnglishmanJack Charlton.[91]
Peter Taylor, Clough's friend and long-time assistant at Hartlepools, Derby, Brighton and Forest, retired from football in 1982, bringing to an end their partnership. Several events had strained their friendship in the past: while at Derby, Taylor was riled when he learned that Clough had accepted a pay rise from Sam Longson without telling him; Taylor did not get one. Then, in 1980, Taylor released a book,With Clough, By Taylor, which detailed their partnership, but he had not told Clough that he was writing the book.[92] Six months after retiring, Taylor was appointed Derby County manager. When their teams met in the FA Cup third round on 8 January 1983 at the Baseball Ground, the two managers ignored each other and did not speak. Derby County won the match 2–0.
When Taylor signedJohn Robertson from Forest without informing Clough on 21 May 1983, it was, according to Robertson, "the straw that broke the camel's back"[93] and the two men would never speak again. In a tabloid article, Clough called Taylor a "snake in the grass" and declared that "if his car broke down and I saw him thumbing a lift, I wouldn't pick him up, I'd run him over."[94] Taylor retorted that Clough's outbursts were "the sort of thing I have come to expect from a person I now regard with great distaste."[95]
The rift had not been repaired by the time Taylor died in October 1990, but Clough and his family attended Taylor's funeral. According to Taylor's daughter Wendy, Clough was "deeply upset" by Taylor's death and telephoned her when he heard the news.[96] Clough dedicated his autobiography in 1994 to Taylor, and he also paid tribute to him when he was given the freedom of Nottingham, as he did in September 1999 when a bust was unveiled of Clough at theCity Ground.
Clough was implicated in the 1990s "bungs" scandal inEnglish football. A "bung" was a euphemism for illicit payments made between parties to ensure player transfer deals went through.[97] In 1995George Graham, thenArsenal manager, lost his job over payments during the transfer of two Scandinavian players in 1992.[98]
Clough became involved in the scandal in June 1993 when he wasnamed in court byAlan Sugar, then chairman ofTottenham Hotspur. Sugar, who was the club's major shareholder, was taking legal action to sackTerry Venables, the club's chief executive. Sugar testified in court that during the 1992 transfer ofTeddy Sheringham from Nottingham Forest to Tottenham, Venables had told him that Clough "liked a bung".[99] Sugar said he sanctioned a cash payment of £58,750, which he believed would be paid to an agent, but instead was handed over toRonnie Fenton, Clough's assistant at Forest.[100]
After an inquiry by the FA, Clough was charged with misconduct but the case was dropped due to his ill health. Former Premier League chief executiveRick Parry, who led the investigation into Clough, said: "On the balance of evidence, we felt he was guilty of taking bungs. The evidence was pretty strong."[100] A former Forest chief scout Alan Hill confirmed Clough had made illegal payments to players and backroom staff in breach ofFA rules.[100][101] Clough always denied the allegations, saying "Asking me what it's like to make money out of transfers is like asking 'What's it like to haveVD?' I don't know, I've never had it."[100]
A statue of Clough in Nottingham. The statue was funded by fans of Nottingham Forest and unveiled in 2008.
Much of Clough's retirement was spent concentrating on his fight againstalcoholism, ill-health and corruption allegations. His battle with alcoholism dated back to the 1970s and was chronicled in part byDuncan Hamilton in his award-winning bookProvided You Don't Kiss Me: 20 Years With Brian Clough.[102][103] He considered applying for the job as manager ofWolverhampton Wanderers on the sacking ofGraham Taylor on 13 November 1995. Nothing came of it, however, and Clough's managerial career was over.
In November 1994, Clough caused controversy over comments he made about theHillsborough disaster. He wrote in his autobiography: "I will always remain convinced that those Liverpool fans who died were killed by Liverpool people. They brought the tragedy on themselves—they were drunk, unruly and disorderly." He defended the comments in an interview withClive Anderson. In 2001, he said: "I now accept the investigations have made me realise I was misinformed. I wasn't trying to be vindictive or unsympathetic, but my opinion has altered over the years. It was never my intention to hurt anyone."[104]
Nottingham Forest honoured him by renaming theCity Ground's largest stand, the Executive Stand, the Brian Clough Stand. Clough was made an inaugural inductee of theEnglish Football Hall of Fame in 2002 in recognition of his success and influence as a manager. In 1993, he was awarded thefreedom of the city ofNottingham.[105] In 2003, the city ofDerby followed suit.[106] He wrote a column forFourFourTwo magazine up until his death.
Clough was a lifelongsocialist,[107][108] often appearing onminers' picket lines, donating large sums to trade union causes, canvassing for his local MP, and being the chairman of theAnti-Nazi League.[109] On two occasions, he was approached by theLabour Party to stand as a parliamentary candidate in general elections, but he declined in order to continue his managerial career in football.[110] To accusations that he was achampagne socialist, Clough responded: "Of course I'm a champagne socialist. The difference between me and a goodTory is he keeps his money while I share mine."[111]
On 4 April 1959, Clough married Barbara Glasgow in Middlesbrough; he later said that marrying Barbara was "the best thing I ever did". They went on to have three children: Simon, born on 15 June 1964,Nigel, born on 19 March 1966, and Elizabeth, born on 31 May 1967. During the 1980s the Clough family went on to mentor a couple of underprivileged youngsters from Sunderland, brothers Craig and Aaron Bromfield after a chance encounter in the North East prior to a Forest fixture. Craig at one point ended up living with the Cloughs for a significant period of time, coming to see Brian as a second father—the arrangement ending when Craig was found to have been stealing from the family. Craig, who later published a book on his experience, seems genuinely appreciative to the family and, to his credit, full of regret for the way the situation came to a conclusion.[112] Nigel also became a professional footballer and played under his father at Forest in the 1980s and 1990s. He then moved into management and, in January 2009, followed in his father's footsteps when he was appointed manager of Derby County.[113]
In 2011, his family and friends contributed memories to a book entitledThe Day I Met Brian Clough, which also included recollections from fans and journalists.[114]His widow, Barbara, died on 20 July 2013 at the age of 75. Her death was revealed to have been the result of a head injury sustained when she fell over in a car park of a hospital where she was being treated for cancer.[115]
Clough died ofstomach cancer on 20 September 2004, on Ward 30,[118] inDerby City Hospital, at the age of 69, having been admitted a few days earlier.[118] Such was his popularity, fans of Derby County and Nottingham Forest, usually fierce rivals, mourned together following his death. A memorial service was held at Derby'sPride Park Stadium on 21 October 2004 which was attended by more than 14,000 people. It was originally to have been held atDerby Cathedral, but had to be moved because of demand for tickets.[119]
In August 2005, the stretch of theA52 linking Nottingham and Derby was renamedBrian Clough Way.[120] His widow Barbara expressed her gratitude to Nottingham City Council, saying: "Brian would have been amazed but genuinely appreciative". Since the opening of theNottingham Express Transit system, tram No. 215 has been namedBrian Clough.[121]
After a long process of fundraising, Clough's home town of Middlesbrough commissioned a statue of him, which was unveiled on 16 May 2007.[122] Although there was a movement to erect a statue in his birthplace atGrove Hill, the site chosen was the town'sAlbert Park, through which he usually walked on his way from home toAyresome Park, Middlesbrough's former stadium.[123]
In August 2008, a tribute website was set up in honour of Clough with the backing of his family. This helped to raise money for a statue of Clough, which was erected in Nottingham's Old Market Square on 6 November 2008.[124] In December 2006, the Brian Clough Statue Fund in Nottingham announced it had raised £69,000 in just 18 months for a statue of Clough in the city. The winning statue was selected from a choice of three designs in January 2008. The site chosen for the statue was at the junction of King Street and Queen Street in the centre of Nottingham. On 6 November 2008, the statue was unveiled by Clough's widow Barbara, in front of a crowd of more than 5,000 people.[125][126]The tribute website brianclough.com is still attracting visitors from around the world and was praised by Barbara Clough on its tenth anniversary in 2010. Barbara Clough said she hoped it would "continue to be a success for many years".[127][128]In 2007 and 2008, a redevelopment scheme building new houses on the old Middlesbrough General Hospital site named roads after famous former Middlesbrough F.C. players, includingWillie Maddren,George Camsell and Clough.
Derby County and Nottingham Forest competed for the inauguralBrian Clough Trophy at Pride Park on 31 July 2007.[129] In future, any league, cup or friendly game played between Derby and Forest will automatically become a Brian Clough Trophy game. Proceeds from the games will go to charities in theEast Midlands.[130][131]
The Brian Clough Stand, City Ground. Named after Brian Clough.
In April 2009, Derby County announced that they would erect a statue of Clough and Peter Taylor atPride Park, with sculptorAndy Edwards, who previously produced theSteve Bloomer bust already in the stadium, commissioned for the statue.[132] The Brian Clough and Peter Taylor Monument was officially unveiled in a family service on 27 August 2010 and publicly on 28 August 2010.[133]
The story of Clough's turbulent 44-day spell in charge of Leeds United was the subject of a novel byDavid Peace titledThe Damned Utd, published in 2006, which focuses on the rivalry between Clough and Don Revie. Despite critical acclaim, the novel was also the subject of controversy for its perceived negative portrayal of Clough as an obsessive, and for some historical inaccuracies. The publishers of the novel were successfully sued by Irish midfielder and former Leeds playerJohnny Giles. He wrote: "Many of the things Peace talks about in the book never happened and, for that reason, I felt it necessary to go to the courts to establish that this was fiction based on fact and nothing more".[134][135] The Clough family expressed disappointment at the publication of the book.[136] It includes a scene with Clough in the Elland Road car park burning Revie's old desk, for which there is no factual source.[137]
The book was later adapted into a film calledThe Damned United, starringMichael Sheen and released in 2009. It too was successfully sued for defamation, this time by Dave Mackay, who in 2010 received an apology and an undisclosed sum from the producers. The Clough family declined to co-operate with the film, despite efforts by the film-makers to lighten the dark tone of the novel.[137]
In 2018, a book chronicling Clough and Taylor's hitherto unwritten time in management at Brighton & Hove Albion, 'Bloody Southerners: Clough and Taylor's Brighton & Hove Albion Odyssey', was written by Spencer Vignes and published byBiteback Publishing. Clough and Taylor had joined Brighton in November 1973, and Vignes speaks to the Brighton players who played under them. Clough himself only stayed for a few months, before heading to Leeds United at the end of the season. Taylor, meanwhile, chose to honour his contract with club chairmanMike Bamber, and stayed on as sole manager until the end of the 1975/76 season.[138]
^The others wereLiverpool in 1906,Everton in 1932, Tottenham Hotspur in 1951 andIpswich Town in 1962. Forest remain the only club to achieve this feat having not been promoted as champions.