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Dave Jones (footballer, born 1956)

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English footballer and manager

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Dave Jones
Jones as manager ofCardiff City in 2010
Personal information
Full nameDavid Ronald Jones[1]
Date of birth (1956-08-17)17 August 1956 (age 69)[1]
Place of birthLiverpool, England
PositionDefender
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1974–1979Everton86(1)
1979–1982Coventry City11(0)
1981Seiko (loan)
1982–1983Seiko
1983–1984Preston North End50(1)
Total147(2)
International career
1975England Youth1(0)
1976England U211(0)
Managerial career
1995–1997Stockport County
1997–2000Southampton
2001–2004Wolverhampton Wanderers
2005–2011Cardiff City
2012–2013Sheffield Wednesday
2017Hartlepool United
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

David Ronald Jones (born 17 August 1956) is an English formerfootballer and manager who was most recently the manager ofHartlepool United.

Jones played forEverton,Coventry andPreston North End as adefender. In 1995, he became the manager ofStockport County, guiding the team to a League Cup semi-final and automatic promotion to the second tier of English football in 1997.

He left Stockport to become the manager ofSouthampton in thePremier League, where he stayed for over 100 games until he was suspended by the club in January 2000, after his arrest on charges ofchild abuse. When the case came to court in December 2000, the judge recorded a not guilty verdict. Jones later spoke of his bitterness about the handling of the case and claimed it was the cause of his father's death, who had died shortly after the allegations became public.[2]

In 2001, Jones became the manager ofWolverhampton Wanderers, guiding the club to promotion to the Premier League in the 2002–03 season, though they were relegated the following season and he was dismissed by Wolves in November 2004.

Jones had a six-year spell in charge ofCardiff City between 2005 and 2011. They reached theFA Cup final in 2008, losing 1–0 toPortsmouth. Cardiff lost the2010 Championship Play-off Final 3–2 againstBlackpool. After failing to achieve promotion with Cardiff, losing toReading the following season in a play-off semi-final, Jones was dismissed by the club on 30 May 2011.

He was appointed manager of Sheffield Wednesday on 1 March 2012, guiding the club to finishing second in League One, thus gaining automatic promotion to theChampionship. Jones was dismissed by Wednesday in December 2013. After a three-year absence from management, he was appointed manager at Hartlepool United in January 2017.

Playing career

[edit]

Jones started his professional career withEverton in his home city of Liverpool. He played as adefender with the team for seven years, during which time he represented England at youth and under-21 level.

He left Everton to play forCoventry City in 1979 for a transfer fee of £250,000 – after three seasons he picked up a knee injury which threatened to end his football career.

After recovering from this injury, he played two further seasons forSeiko in Hong Kong and one season forPreston North End before retiring. Jones first went to Hong Kong on 2 April 1981 on loan from Coventry City for the remainder of the season, teammateJim Hagan had already settled in the squad. At the end of the season, Seiko won theleague championship for the third time in a row as well as theHong Kong FA Cup.

After his release from Coventry City, Jones joined Seiko on a permanent basis at the start of the 1982–83 season, playing 22 games for Seiko during the season, including a friendly with a "Brazil Stars Team" on 12 December 1982, the game ended 0–0 and was decided by penalties. Jones took and scored a penalty, but Seiko went on to lose 3–2. He was also selected in the squad ofHong Kong League XI, led by Dutch coachGeorge Knobel, to face French sideMonaco on 9 January 1982, which ended in a 1–0 win for the Hong Kong League XI.

After retiring from professional football he went on to become assistant manager to Bryan Griffiths atSouthport, where he also made two appearances as a player, before they both left and took up identical roles atMossley for the 1988–89 season. He made two appearances for Mossley whilst at the club.[3]

Managerial career

[edit]

Stockport County

[edit]

In July 1990, he joinedStockport County as a manager for their youth team and took over as first-team manager fromDanny Bergara in March 1995. He took the team into theFirst Division from an automatic promotion place in 1997. He also took the club to the semi-finals of the League Cup where they were narrowly defeated 2–1 on aggregate byMiddlesbrough despite an impressive win at theRiverside Stadium. During the same cup run, Stockport also defeatedSheffield United,Blackburn Rovers,Southampton andWest Ham United, all of whom were in higher divisions than the club at the time.

Southampton

[edit]

This promotion brought him to the attention of Southampton, who offered him a contract to manage theirPremier League team. His reign during the 1999–2000 season was rocked by his arrest on charges ofchild abuse during his employment as a care worker in the late 1980s.

The case put tremendous strain on Jones, who was forced to defend his case onMerseyside whilst managing a team based over 200 miles away on the south coast. In January 2000, Southampton decided to suspend him on full pay until the case was resolved, withGlenn Hoddle taking over his managerial duties.

When the case eventually came to court, it was thrown out in its first week, with the judge recording a not guilty verdict and commenting that the case "should have never reached the trial stage".[4] Southampton paid off the remainder of Jones' contract and he left the club. Jones contended that this amounted to unfair dismissal and took the case to industrial tribunal, but Southampton's decision was upheld.[2]

Wolverhampton Wanderers

[edit]

Jones took over atWolverhampton Wanderers, signing a three-year contract on 3 January 2001. The side were then sitting 12th in theFirst Division, after a poor first half to the season underColin Lee. Results continued to remain indifferent though and the side eventually finished 12th.

The summer of 2001 saw Jones undertake a large overhaul of the playing squad in the pursuit of promotion. He spent over £7 million – the largest spending in the club's history in one transfer period – bringing in the likes ofNathan Blake,Colin Cameron,Mark Kennedy,Alex Rae andShaun Newton. Additional firepower was also later purchased inKenny Miller and a cut-priceDean Sturridge.

The only major disappointment from the players Jones signed as he rejuvenated Wolves was Belgian strikerCédric Roussel, a £1.5million signing fromCoventry City in February 2001. Roussel was one of the most expensive players ever signed by Wolves but he played just 27 times and scored twice in 18 months.[5]

Jones's new-look team quickly made an impact, hitting the top of the league by late September, and remaining in the automatic promotion spots over the following months. He won the Division OneManager of the Month Award in February 2002,[6] as part of a sequence of ten wins from eleven games. By mid-March, they sat in second place, with an eleven point lead over their arch-rivals and nearest challengersWest Bromwich Albion.[7]

However, the final nine games saw Wolves take just ten points from 27 available, while Albion, in contrast, won eight of their final ten fixtures to overtake their rivals and pip them to promotion on the final day of the season. Jones suffered more disappointment when his side compounded their poor end to the campaign by losing theirplay-off semi-final toNorwich City.

The following season proved a similar rollercoaster ride for Jones. Inconsistent early form left them well off the pace for automatic promotion and a dismal Christmas period saw him under increasing pressure as they weren't even in the playoff zone. AnFA Cup win over top flightNewcastle United seemed to reverse fortunes though, and his side lost just two of their remaining twenty games to finish fifth, in the play-off zone. The FA Cup run lasted until the quarter-finals.

They overcameReading in the semi-finals and 3–0 victory overSheffield United in the final atMillennium Stadium,Cardiff, saw Jones become the manager who returned Wolves to the top level of English football for the first time since 1984, and the man who achieved the chairmanJack Hayward's ambition of Premier League football after eleven years, millions of pounds spent on players and four previous managers.

Jones had just £4 million to spend in the summer preparing for Premier League football. However, the team was significantly weakened by long-term injuries toJoleon Lescott andMatt Murray, and began the season missing several other key components of their promotion campaign. The side endured a very poor start to the campaign, shipping nine goals in two games, and remaining winless until their eighth match. Although, he oversaw several impressive results – most notably defeating a full strengthManchester United 1–0 in the league on 17 January 2004 – his side was mired in the relegation zone for almost all the season and was duly relegated in 20th place with 33 points. They only won eight league games all season, and failed to win a single away game.

Their relegation was effectively confirmed on 1 May despite an impressive win overEverton, which left them needing a mathematical miracle to finish outside the bottom three, and the following weekend their survival became mathematically impossible.

Jones aimed for an immediate return to the Premier League in2004–05, but had to begin the season once again under a cloud of injuries. His squad was now ageing, with most of the players bought as experienced pros in 2001 still forming the core. The side failed to live up to expectations and managed just four wins from the first fifteen games, leaving them 17th. As pressure mounted, he was sacked on 1 November 2004, after a final loss against aGillingham side reduced to ten men, a side who had been on the receiving end of a 6–0 Wolves victory in their previous meeting just before the promotion 18 months earlier.

Cardiff City

[edit]

During Jones' first season in charge of Cardiff City, they achieved a respectable 11th place in the Championship. Re-building over the summer of 2006, Jones forged a talented side who found themselves at the top of theChampionship. However, after a strong start, poor form later in the season led to Cardiff City finishing the season in 13th.

On 29 September 2007, Jones was sent to the stands during a league match againstBarnsley after criticising refereePhil Dowd over a penalty decision. He was formally charged with misconduct on 2 October. Jones countered by claiming: "I was angry with the referee because I think he was the only person in the stadium that didn't think it was a penalty. He didn't make a big call."

He also complained that Dowd ordered him into a section of the stadium containing Barnsley fans and feared that his safety had been put at risk. He faced anFAW hearing about the incident and was found guilty, resulting in a two-match touchline ban, which he served in theChampionship match againstPlymouth Argyle and the third roundFA Cup tie againstChasetown.[8][9]

On 9 March 2008, Jones led Cardiff to their firstFA Cup semi-final tie since 1927 after beatingPremier League sideMiddlesbrough 2–0 in the quarter-finals. On 6 April, Cardiff City beatBarnsley 1–0 atWembley to book anFA Cup Final place againstPortsmouth. Cardiff City lost the final, played on 17 May 2008, with the only goal of the game being scored byNwankwo Kanu for Portsmouth after 37 minutes.

The start of the 2008–09 season saw veteransJimmy Floyd Hasselbaink,Robbie Fowler andTrevor Sinclair released and the sales of some of the team's biggest assets inGlenn Loovens andAaron Ramsey. Despite this, Jones brought in several new faces and by November Cardiff found themselves in a play-off spot, earning Jones the Championship manager of the month for October.[10] However, after spending the majority of the season in a play-off position, the side missed out on the final day of the season after suffering a 1–0 defeat againstSheffield Wednesday. Despite missing out on the play-offs, Jones had led Cardiff to their highest league position for 38 years.

The start of the 2009–10 season saw Cardiff in top form, beatingScunthorpe United 4–0 putting them top. In the first five games, Cardiff were only in the top two until a 1–0 defeat againstNewcastle United which put Cardiff eighth. On 7 November 2009, Jones earned the Championship Manager of the Month for October, the same day Cardiff lost the firstSouth Wales derby 3–2 atLiberty Stadium. At the end of the season, Jones took Cardiff to their highest finish in the league in 39 years, fourth place, meaning they would take part in the play-offs. Cardiff beat Leicester at theWalkers Stadium 1–0, thanks toPeter Whittingham's free kick but lost the second leg 3–2, resulting in extra time. The match eventually went to penalties with Cardiff winning 4–3. In thePlay-off Final at Wembley, Cardiff suffered a 3–2 defeat toBlackpool.

In the 2010–11 season, Cardiff started the season with four wins out of five games. By the end of October, Cardiff had only lost two games and Jones received the October Championship Manager of the Month, whilst leading scorerJay Bothroyd won Player of the Month. The club suffered a big loss of form in November and December, with only two wins out of nine games. They finished the season in fourth place behind rivalsSwansea City. Cardiff then faced fifth placedReading in the play-off semi-final, where they lost 3–0 on aggregate.

Jones was later sacked from Cardiff City on 30 May 2011.[11]

Sheffield Wednesday

[edit]

Jones was appointedSheffield Wednesday boss on 1 March 2012, replacingGary Megson who was sacked the day before.[12]

His first official game in charge was againstBury and Wednesday came out 4–1 winners, the following game ended with a 3–0 win after three goals in the first ten minutes. After leading Wednesday to five wins and a draw during his first month in charge, Jones was awardedLeague One Manager of the Month for March 2012. Jones then led Wednesday to another five wins and a draw during his second month in charge and was awarded the Manager of the Month award for April 2012. On 5 May 2012, Jones led Wednesday to promotion from Football League One to the Championship after beatingWycombe Wanderers 2–0.

Jones' first game in charge of Sheffield Wednesday in the Championship was a 2–2 draw away toDerby on 18 August 2012.[13] Two home wins in the next two matches and aLeague Cup victory overPremier League sideFulham saw Jones stretch his unbeaten start as Sheffield Wednesday manager to eighteen matches. Jones' first defeat eventually came on 1 September 2012 after eighteen games unbeaten, a 2–1 loss away toCrystal Palace.[14] Jones returned to his former side Cardiff for the first time as Sheffield Wednesday manager on 2 December 2012, losing 1–0.[15]

In February 2013, Jones was fined £2,000 and given a one-match touchline ban by theFA for misconduct after a fracas on the touchline withBrighton & Hove Albion coachCharlie Oatway during Wednesday's 3–1 victory over Brighton. Jones later said that he disagreed with his fine and described Oatway as a "nobody".

Jones was dismissed on 1 December 2013,[16] with the club second from bottom in the Championship, having won only one league match all season.[17]

Hartlepool United

[edit]

On 18 January 2017, Jones returned to football management when he joinedHartlepool United of League Two.[18] Jones joined with the North-East club 19th in the table and four points clear of the relegation zone.[18] Jones lost his first game as Pools manager 3–1 to bottom of the table sideNewport County.[19] Hartlepool's form deteriorated further, winning only 13 points from a potential 51, and left the club by mutual consent on 24 April 2017.[20]

During Jones' last match in charge of Hartlepool, club presidentJeff Stelling urged him to quit, in an impassioned speech onSoccer Saturday, following a home defeat toBarnet which had placed Hartlepool in the bottom two.[21] Notified of this public criticism afterwards, Jones told reporters that Stelling showed a "lack of respect" and accused him of being "hypocritical", having been in his office when Hartlepool had gone five games without a loss.[22]

Upon Jones' departure, Hartlepool strikerBilly Paynter criticised the manager's tactics.[23] Despite Hartlepool winning their final game of the season againstDoncaster Rovers, a late goal from Newport consigned Pools to relegation from the Football League for the first time after joining in 1921.[24]

Post-Hartlepool

[edit]

In April 2018, Jones applied for the role of head coach of theMalaysian national team but was unsuccessful.[25]

Jones began working as a consultant atBury in July 2019.[26] His first task with the club was helping them to appointPaul Wilkinson as manager.[27] Jones left Bury following the club's expulsion from the Football League in August 2019.

Acquittal of child abuse

[edit]

In June 1999, Jones was formally questioned by police over allegedsexual abuse at St George's School inFormby, Merseyside, a home for children with educational and behavioural problems, where he had been employed as a care worker from 1986 to 1990.[28] After voluntarily attending the police station, he was arrested then questioned, before being released on bail without charge.[29]

He was subsequently charged on 27 September with nine offences against young boys of indecent assault and child cruelty. He denied all the allegations and stated he was "confident that [his] innocence will be established in due course".[29] He appeared before Merseyside Magistrates Court on 2 November 1999, where he formally pleaded not guilty to all charges and was granted bail.[30]

The case reached Liverpool Crown Court in December 2000, by which time Jones had left Southampton. He stood trial on an eventual 21 charges, which was swiftly reduced to 14, after two other alleged victims pulled out of proceedings on the eve of the trial.[28] After a further alleged victim declined to appear or refused to give evidence, the judge directed the jury during the fourth day of proceedings to return a formal not guilty verdict on four charges relating to the absent party.[28] After decreeing a retrial would not be "just" on the remaining charges, the judge recorded not guilty verdicts on the remaining ten charges.[4] Jones was cleared of all allegations.

One of the key alleged victims was later found to have fabricated their claim of abuse in Jones' and other cases brought fromOperation Care – the police investigation into child abuse – to win compensation.[31] Jones himself later spoke bitterly of the handling of the case and claimed it was the cause of his father's death, who had died shortly after the allegations became public.[2]

Career statistics

[edit]

Playing statistics

[edit]

Source:[32]

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Everton1975–76First Division1300000130
1976–77First Division2814170392
1977–78First Division3401050400
1978–79First Division1100000110
Total861511201032
Coventry City1979–80First Division70000070
1980–81First Division40001050
Total1100010120
Preston North End1983–84Third Division3711080461
1984–85Third Division1301020160
Total50120120641
Career total1472712301773

Managerial statistics

[edit]

Source:[32]

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Stockport County31 March 199523 June 1997131633632048.1
Southampton23 June 199727 January 2000113372254032.7
Wolverhampton Wanderers3 January 20011 November 2004187755260040.1
Cardiff City25 May 200530 May 20113151328499041.9
Sheffield Wednesday5 March 20121 December 201379292129036.7
Hartlepool United[33]23 January 201724 April 2017173410017.6
Total842339219284040.3

Honours

[edit]

As a player

[edit]

Everton

Seiko SA

As a manager

[edit]

Stockport County

Wolverhampton Wanderers

Cardiff City

Sheffield Wednesday

Individual

References

[edit]
General
Specific
  1. ^abHugman, Barry J., ed. (2005).The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–2005. Queen Anne Press. p. 330.ISBN 978-1-85291-665-7.
  2. ^abc"Dave Jones: They killed my father, I honestly believe it".The Independent. London. 20 March 2002. Archived fromthe original on 26 July 2009. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  3. ^"Complete A-Z of Mossley Players".Mossley Web. Archived fromthe original on 24 July 2008. Retrieved20 November 2019.
  4. ^ab"Ex-football manager cleared". BBC Sport. 15 February 2005. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  5. ^Cedric Roussel | Football Stats | No Club | Age 34 | 1998Archived 8 September 2009 at theWayback Machine. Soccer Base. Retrieved on 17 February 2012.
  6. ^"Jones wins boss award". BBC Sport. 1 March 2002. Retrieved10 November 2007.
  7. ^What a Season that was (DVD). ILC Sport. 2002. DVD2255.
  8. ^"Jones hit with misconduct charge".BBC Sport. 2 October 2007. Retrieved22 September 2016.
  9. ^"In-demand Ledley earns points again"South Wales Echo Retrieved on 6 January 2008
  10. ^"Dave Jones named top manager for October".Wales Online. 6 November 2008. Retrieved22 September 2016.
  11. ^"Cardiff City part with manager Dave Jones". BBC Sport. 30 May 2011. Retrieved30 May 2011.
  12. ^"Dave Jones to manage Sheffield Wednesday".BBC Sport. 1 March 2012. Retrieved1 March 2012.
  13. ^"Derby 2–2 Sheffield Wed".BBC Sport. 18 August 2012. Retrieved22 September 2016.
  14. ^"Crystal Palace 2–1 Sheffield Wed".BBC Sport. 1 September 2012. Retrieved22 September 2016.
  15. ^"Cardiff 1–0 Sheffield Wed".BBC Sport. 2 December 2012. Retrieved22 September 2016.
  16. ^"Dave Jones: Sheffield Wednesday sack manager". BBC Sport. 1 December 2013. Retrieved3 December 2013.
  17. ^"Sheffield Wednesday results forced decision – Milan Mandaric". BBC Sport. 2 December 2013. Retrieved3 December 2013.
  18. ^ab"Dave Jones: Hartlepool name ex-Wolves, Cardiff and Wednesday boss as manager". BBC Sport. 18 January 2017. Retrieved11 February 2017.
  19. ^"Newport County 3–1 Hartlepool United - BBC Sport".BBC Sport.
  20. ^"Dave Jones: Hartlepool United part company with manager". BBC Sport. 24 April 2017. Retrieved27 April 2017.
  21. ^"Jeff Stelling: Dave Jones urged to quit as Hartlepool United manager". BBC Sport. 22 April 2017. Retrieved27 April 2017.This isn't personal to Dave Jones but for the good of the club, walk now. Pam Duxbury, chairman Gary Coxall, if it means sacking him, do so.
  22. ^"Jeff Stelling gets his way: Dave Jones leaves Hartlepool".The Daily Telegraph Sport. 22 April 2017. Retrieved27 April 2017.It's OK Jeff Stelling saying it in his comfy chair. He doesn't know. In fact it's a lack of respect for me. Why should he say that? He's such a big hero, but I'll go up against him...a few weeks ago he's sat in my office crowing about us going five games without losing, how we've changed it around. What's changed? I haven't changed or has he forgotten that? I'm fighting for my life, how about a bit of support Jeff, rather than the rubbish you are giving out?
  23. ^"Billy Paynter: I don't know what Dave Jones was doing with his tactics – now we need men to stand up and fight, not freeze - Hartlepool Mail". Archived fromthe original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved5 November 2018.
  24. ^Tom Garry (6 May 2017)."Hartlepool United 2–1 Doncaster Rovers". BBC Sport. Retrieved3 February 2023.
  25. ^"Exclusive: Former Premier League manager applies for Singapore head coach role | FourFourTwo". Archived fromthe original on 6 November 2018.
  26. ^Phillips, Terry (23 July 2019)."Former Bluebirds 'Wilko' And Jones Take On Toughest Job In Football League Management - Dai Sport".Dai Sport.
  27. ^@CardiffCityLive (3 July 2019)."Dave Jones has just helped Bury find a new boss #Bluebirds" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  28. ^abcChrisafis, Angelique (16 December 2000)."Former football manager cleared of child abuse charges". London: Guardian. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  29. ^ab"Premiership manager on child abuse charges". BBC Sport. 27 July 1999. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  30. ^"Football boss denies child abuse". BBC Sport. 2 November 1999. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  31. ^Waterhouse, Rosie (18 February 2003)."Man made 'false claim of abuse in care to get compensation'". London: Daily Telegraph. Archived fromthe original on 21 April 2013. Retrieved20 February 2009.
  32. ^abDave Jones at the English National Football Archive(subscription required)
  33. ^"Managers: Dave Jones".Soccerbase. Retrieved11 February 2017.
  34. ^abcdefghijklm"Dave Jones".League Managers Association. Retrieved24 December 2022.
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