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| Personal information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Colin Victor Murphy[1] | ||
| Date of birth | (1944-01-21)21 January 1944[2] | ||
| Place of birth | Croydon, England[2] | ||
| Date of death | 16 September 2023(2023-09-16) (aged 79) | ||
| Senior career* | |||
| Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
| Epsom & Ewell | 41 | (0) | |
| Gravesend and Northfleet | |||
| Folkestone | |||
| Hastings United | |||
| Managerial career | |||
| 1976–1977 | Derby County | ||
| 1978–1985 | Lincoln City | ||
| 1985 | Stockport County | ||
| 1986–1987 | Stockport County | ||
| 1987–1990 | Lincoln City | ||
| 1992–1993 | Southend United | ||
| 1994–1995 | Shelbourne | ||
| 1995–1996 | Notts County | ||
| 1997–1998 | Vietnam | ||
| 2000 | Cork City | ||
| 2002–2007 | Hull City (assistant) | ||
| 2006 | Hull City (caretaker) | ||
| * Club domestic league appearances and goals | |||
Colin Victor Murphy (21 January 1944 – 16 September 2023) was an Englishfootball player and manager who took charge of numerous clubs during a long management career, includingDerby County,Lincoln City,Stockport County,Al Ittihad,Southend United,Shelbourne,Notts County,Cork City, and theVietnam andBurma national teams.
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Murphy had a brief career in semi-professional football for several non-league clubs in the 1960s and early 1970s starting at Croydon Amateurs and then moving toEpsom & Ewell in November 1962 where he remained for three seasons. Other clubs includedGravesend & Northfleet,Folkestone Town andHastings United. However, he failed to break through into professional football.
A qualified FA coach, Murphy was appointed reserve team coach atNottingham Forest in November 1972 as part of newly appointed managerDave Mackay's restructuring of his coaching staff.[3] After Mackay departed theCity Ground at the end of October 1973 to become manager ofDerby County, Murphy initially remained in post helping prepare the first team.[4] However, following the appointment ofAllan Brown as the club's new manager, Murphy departed to rejoin Mackay at theBaseball Ground as reserve team coach.[5] He was catapulted into the spotlight when Derby County surprisingly appointed him as their manager in November 1976.[1] However, he lasted only ten months in the role before being sacked in September 1977, having led Derby to just seven wins in 35 games. He was replaced by Tommy Docherty. He was not out of work long as just two weeks later he was appointed assistant manager toJimmy Sirrel atNotts County.[6]
Murphy left his role as assistant manager atNotts County to take charge of a strugglingLincoln City side[7] that was beset by financial problems and had just completed a lacklustre campaign in theFourth Division. In arguably his most successful period in management, Murphy secured Lincoln's promotion to the Third Division in the 1980–81 season with a second-place finish behindSouthend United, thanks in large measure toGordon Hobson's 21 goals. The following season was almost as successful, with the Imps knocking outFirst Division sideLeicester City in theLeague Cup, eventually losing toTottenham Hotspur, and leading the Third Division table for four months. A loss of form, possibly in part caused by a boardroom row over transfer budgets, resulted in a dramatic loss of form for Lincoln who ended the season in a disappointing sixth place.
The next two seasons were less impressive and Murphy eventually resigned in May 1985, after seven years atSincil Bank. His departure came just ten days before Lincoln playedBradford City on the final day of the season in the game where 56 spectators died in theValley Parade fire. The Murphy era is remembered fondly by the Imps faithful, with players such asSteve Thompson, Glenn Cockerill, Trevor Peake, Mick Harford, Tony Cunningham, Dave Felgate andJohn Fashanu contributing to one of the finest teams in Lincoln's history. However, his departure from the club was followed by back-to-back relegations, resulting in Lincoln becoming the first team to suffer automatic relegation from the Football League.
Murphy quickly returned to management on 8 August 1985 as manager ofStockport County, but left the club on 24 October after a disappointing start to their Fourth Division campaign. He joined Al Ittihad in Saudi Arabia as part of the coaching staff under Bob Houghton, manager of Malmo in the 1979 European Cup Final. However, Murphy returned to Stockport in November 1986. Murphy masterminded the club's dramatic escape from relegation to the Conference at the expense of Lincoln City, who were relegated in the final minutes of the season.
Just a few weeks after the end of the 1986–87 season, Murphy resigned as Stockport manager and began a second spell at Lincoln City on 26 May 1987. Over the next three years he was able to guide Lincoln back into the Football League in his first season, and secure consecutive 10th placed finishes in the Fourth Division. Despite this renewed success, Murphy left the club by mutual consent on 20 May 1990 and spent the next two years coaching for Leicester City's youth team.
Murphy returned to football as manager ofSouthend United on 8 May 1992, but resigned on 1 April 1993, taking the post as director of football and being replaced byBarry Fry. Notably, he signedStan Collymore from Crystal Palace for £150,000, and sold him for £2.65 million to Nottingham Forest. His next post in management was at theLeague of Ireland sideShelbourne from December 1994 to May 1995. He took the club from the edge of the relegation zone to a final day finish that left Shelbourne just a few points short of the title. The club were also the beaten finalists in that year'sFAI Cup.
Murphy then left to manageNotts County on 5 June 1995. Although the Magpies narrowly missed out on promotion to the second tier in his first season in charge after a 2–0 defeat to Bradford City in the playoff final at Wembley, the 1996–97 season was a disaster for Murphy and the club, with a series of heavy defeats that eventually led to his sacking on 23 December 1996.
In July 1997 he was appointed coach of theVietnam national side,[8] leading the team to a bronze medal at the1997 Southeast Asian Games. In March 1998 he was appointed director ofTottenham Hotspur's youth academy.[9] He resigned the post in July 1999 to take up the position of coach of theBurma national team withPeter Suddaby replacing him as academy director.[10] WhenDave Barry announced his intention to step down as manager ofCork City at the end of the1999–2000 League of Ireland season, Murphy emerged as the favoured candidate to succeed him.[11] He was duly appointed and led the club in their first game of the2000–01 season, aSuper Cup clash withBohemians on 30 June 2000,[12] but resigned a week later[13] to become football co-ordinator at Premiership clubLeicester City, working under their newly appointed managerPeter Taylor.[14]
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Murphy joined Hull City in 2002, as assistant manager to Peter Taylor.
With the arrival ofPhil Parkinson as manager, withFrank Barlow as his assistant, at the start of the2006–07 season, Murphy took up the new role of director of development at the club – responsible for all scouting and youth development. He reverted to assistant manager, however, when Barlow left the club in October. After Parkinson also left the club, Murphy and first team coachPhil Brown were appointed joint caretaker managers. Brown was later appointed permanent manager, and Murphy reverted to his assistant role for the remainder of the season. With the appointment ofBrian Horton, he resumed the role of director of development.
Murphy suffered a stroke in November 2007,[15] and retired from his role at Hull City in January 2009.[16] He died on 16 September 2023, at the age of 79.[17][18]