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Frank Barlow (footballer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English footballer and manager

Frank Barlow
Personal information
Full nameFrank Charles Barlow
Date of birth (1946-10-15)15 October 1946 (age 79)
Place of birthMexborough, England
PositionMidfielder
Youth career
Sheffield United
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1965–1972Sheffield United121(2)
1972–1976Chesterfield140(3)
1974Boston Minutemen (loan)[1]20(0)
Managerial career
1980–1983Chesterfield
1984–1987Scunthorpe United
2006Nottingham Forest (joint caretaker)
2007Wigan Athletic (caretaker)
2011–2013Sheffield United (assistant manager)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Frank Charles Barlow (born 15 October 1946) is an English formerfootballer who moved into coaching andclub management since retiring from playing. Born inMexborough, England, he spent the bulk of his playing career atSheffield United before moving toChesterfield for a spell.

After retiring from playing he moved into management and coaching, managingChesterfield andScunthorpe United before having spells as caretaker manager with bothNottingham Forest andWigan Athletic. He is without a club after leaving his post of assistant manager at Sheffield United in April 2013.

Playing career

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Sheffield United

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Barlow was a defensivemidfielder who started his football career withSheffield United after being spotted playing for Don and Dearne Schoolboys during which time he had captained the England Schoolboys team.[2] After signing professional terms in 1965 at the age of 19 he was to remain atBramall Lane for seven years but never cemented his place in the first team during his tenure. Seen more as a squad player available to fill in when other teammates were unavailable it was only during the 1969–70 season that he played regularly inthe Football League. Despite this he went on to make over 120 appearances for the Blades during his seven-year stay.[2]

Chesterfield

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Barlow was bought byChesterfield in 1972 for a then club record fee of £15,000, where he was to remain for the remainder of his playing career. Spending four years on Chesterfield's books he made 140+ appearances, scoring three times, before a series of knee injuries forced him to retire following which he became first team coach at the age of 31.

Management and coaching

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Chesterfield

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Installed as first team coach after he retired from playing, Barlow briefly became thecaretaker manager ofChesterfield following the sacking ofJoe Shaw in 1976 before being made the full-time manager in 1980 after the departure ofArthur Cox, although he protested several times throughout his reign that he didn't want the job. He said he was always more comfortable as a coach than as a boss.

Despite this, he brought success to the club in his first season as manager, winning theAnglo-Scottish Cup (after beatingNotts County 2–1) and the divisional manager of the month award for March 1981. His refreshing honesty was heavily appreciated by the supporters and he managed to keep the club in touch with promotion, despite a worsening financial situation, which ultimately led to the club being relegated in his second season with Chesterfield. When a new board of directors came in, the whole coaching team was sacked, but Barlow was offered a place among the new setup. He declined out of loyalty to his coaching staff and thus left with his dignity and self-respect intact, without carrying much of the blame for Chesterfield's dire relegation season.

Scunthorpe United

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Barlow almost immediately returned to football, becoming the assistant manager atScunthorpe United underAllan Clarke, being promoted to manager a year later when Clarke resigned. Again he said he didn't want the job, but nevertheless he had a fair amount of success, keeping them clear of relegation in 1984 and then maintaining a respectable league position the following season.

He left Scunthorpe in 1987 and did not return to management for almost 20 years, concentrating mostly on coaching and various other back-room posts.

19 years in the shadows

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Barlow made an immediate return to football, this time a youth and reserve team coach forBarnsley. A year later he joinedSheffield Wednesday as a coach, where he remained for 7 years until 1996. Barlow then moved toBirmingham City withTrevor Francis for 2 years before returning to Sheffield Wednesday as assistant manager and then ontoBristol City. He left in 2004, joiningPaul Merson as assistant manager atWalsall but resigned in January 2005 after a 5–0 defeat at the hands ofColchester United almost cost Merson his job.

Back in the spotlight with Nottingham Forest

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In January 2005,Nottingham Forest's new managerGary Megson brought Barlow to the club as assistant manager. When Megson was unable to avoid relegation intoLeague One ofthe Football League, and then struggled to maintain a promotion push, he left the club 'by mutual consent' and Barlow was made co-caretaker manager along with Forest's reserve team coachIan McParland. It was a position Barlow hoped he would never be in again after leaving Scunthorpe almost 20 years before.

Barlow sparked a remarkable turn around on Trentside, and led Forest to an unbeaten run of 10 games, with 6 straight wins just missing out on equalling a club record of 7 straight wins when they fell to a 3–2 defeat at the hands ofHartlepool United. Frank Barlow was named joint Manager of the Month with McParland for March 2006.

WhenColin Calderwood was appointed as the new boss, Barlow and McParland reverted to coaching roles with Forest.

Hull City

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Hull City appointed Frank Barlow as caretaker manager on 28 June 2006 due to protracted negotiations in securing the release of their managerial target,Phil Parkinson, from his contract withColchester. This appointment was only to last two days as Parkinson was appointed manager on 30 June 2006, with Barlow reverting to the role of his assistant.

Barlow's role was to be short lived however, a coaching staff re-shuffle following the Tigers' disappointing start to the season saw Barlow leave the club in October 2006.[3]

Bradford City

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Following his departure from TheKC Stadium Barlow moved toBradford City as assistant to caretaker managerDavid Wetherall.[4]

Wigan Athletic

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In June 2007Wigan Athletic appointed Barlow as the assistant manager toChris Hutchings. Barlow, now 60, was taken on for his vast experience in the game, as Hutchings enthused "I need someone I can trust implicitly when it comes to football knowledge, you can't get more experience than he's got, he knows players inside-out." After Hutchings was sacked in November 2007, Barlow was named as Wigan's caretaker manager. When Steve Bruce was appointed the club's new manager and with Eric Black brought across fromBirmingham City assuming the role of assistant manager, Barlow was appointed to the position of first-team coach.

Sheffield United

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In June 2011, Barlow returned to his first clubSheffield United to become assistant manager, working underDanny Wilson.[5] The pair guided the Blades to theLeague One play-off final in their first season in charge, only to see their side beaten byHuddersfield Town on penalties.[6] United again challenged for promotion the following season, but a poor run of results after Christmas saw Barlow and Wilson sacked in April 2013.[7]

Honours

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References

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  1. ^NASL profile
  2. ^abDenis Clarebrough & Andrew Kirkham (2008).Sheffield United Who's Who. Hallamshire Press. p. 41.ISBN 978-1-874718-69-7.
  3. ^"Barlow leaves in Hull reshuffle". BBC Sport. 23 October 2006. Retrieved27 April 2012.
  4. ^"Barlow Hopes to Repeat Forest Mission".Telegraph & Argus. 13 February 2007. Retrieved27 April 2012.
  5. ^"Sheffield United name Frank Barlow as assistant manager". BBC Sport. 10 June 2011. Retrieved27 April 2012.
  6. ^"Huddersfield promoted after epic shoot-out win over Sheffield United". BBC Sport. 26 May 2012. Retrieved14 April 2013.
  7. ^"Danny Wilson leaves post as Sheffield United manager". BBC Sport. 10 April 2013. Retrieved14 April 2013.
  8. ^"Forest managers win monthly award". BBC Sport. 30 March 2006. Retrieved2 October 2022.
Chesterfield F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager
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