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Frank Brettell

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

English football player
Frank Brettell
Personal information
Full nameFrancis Edward Brettell
Date of birth1862
Place of birthSmethwick, Staffordshire, England
Date of death1936 (aged 73–74)
Place of deathDartford, Kent, England
PositionFull-back
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
St. Domingo's
Everton
Managerial career
1896–1898Bolton Wanderers
1898–1899Tottenham Hotspur
1899–1901Portsmouth
1903–1905Plymouth Argyle
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Frank E. Brettell (1862–1936) was an Englishfootballplayer,manager and administrator.

He played as afull-back forEverton, a club that was originally calledSt. Domingo's. He combined his role as player-secretary-manager with his full-time job as a reporter for theLiverpool Mercury. He became secretary ofBolton Wanderers in 1896 and remained there for two years before moving to London to joinTottenham Hotspur as their first manager. He then accepted a more lucrative offer to joinPortsmouth and guided them to a second-place finish in their first season in theSouthern League. He accepted an offer to joinPlymouth Argyle in 1903 and helped establish the club in the professional game. The job was to be his last as a manager and he retired from football altogether a year later.

Football career

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Brettell began his football career with a local club St. Domingo. He initially played ascentre- orinside-forward for the club, and later due to injuries ashalf-back and even on goal.[1] He combined his playing duties with a role as secretary-manager of the team in 1875.[2] The club was reformed asEverton in 1879 with Brettell as a member of the committee during the club's first year. After his playing career ended, he continued as a full-time reporter for local newspaper theLiverpool Mercury.

He joinedBolton Wanderers in 1896, again as secretary-manager. Two years later in February 1898, he was appointed manager ofTottenham Hotspur, and took up the post on 14 March 1898 soon after the club had been converted into aPublic limited company.[1][3] He signed a number of players from Bolton Wanderers and other northern clubs, includingJohn Cameron fromEverton who took over as manager of Spurs after Bretell left. His stay as the club's manager was relatively brief; he resigned in February 1899 to joinPortsmouth after they offered him substantially more money to take the job.[1]

His first season in charge was also Portsmouth's first in theSouthern League and adapted to their new surroundings well, finishingfourth in the league table. He left the club in June 1901 by "mutual agreement"; according toFootball Chat "a detailed explanation [would serve] no good purpose". "Let it suffice that the directors could not agree with him on certain rather important matters, and a mutual agreement was arrived at by which he consented to resign".[4]

It would be another two years before he took up his final managerial role when Brettell was invited to build a professional team forPlymouth Argyle in 1903, an offer which he accepted.[5]

Having been able to call upon twenty-eight years of experience as a football administrator and manager, he succeeded in his task and led the club into the Southern League for the1903–04 season. He used his extensive network of contacts to bring a number of experienced professionals toHome Park, including;Andy Clark,Jack Fitchett,Bob Jack,Billy Leech andJack Peddie. He led the club to creditable ninth- and fourth-place finishes in the Southern League, as well as winning theWestern League in 1905.[6] Brettell left the club at the end of his second season in charge and wouldn't manage a professional team again, but his place inEnglish football history was assured.

Later life

[edit]

It is believed that he retired altogether the following year, but only a little more is known about him.[2]He was the son of William Brettell, foreman at a nut and bolt works, and Charlotte Burgess. He moved to the Liverpool area with his parents in the 1860s, became a school teacher in the 1880s and 1890s, marrying Lavinia Isabel Spearman in 1882, with whom he had 10 children. After his professional career in football finished he continued to live in Plymouth, working as a clerk to a carrier firm in 1911. He died in Dartford, Kent, in 1936 aged 74.

References

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General
  • Danes, Ryan (2009).Plymouth Argyle: A Complete Record. Plymouth: Breedon Books.ISBN 978-1-85983-710-8.
  • Cowdery, Rick (2009).Plymouth Argyle: Miscellany. Plymouth: Pitch Publishing.ISBN 978-1-905411-40-5.
  • Knight, Brian (1989).Plymouth Argyle: A Complete Record 1903–1989. Derby: Breedon Books.ISBN 0-907969-40-2.
Specific
  1. ^abcGoodwin, Bob (29 August 1988).Spurs: A Complete Record 1882-1988. Breedon Books. p. 58.ISBN 978-0907969426.
  2. ^abFrank BrettellArchived 4 August 2009 at theWayback Machine Greens on Screen. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  3. ^Limited Company Formed Spurs History. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  4. ^Juson, Dave (2004).Saints v Pompey – A history of unrelenting rivalry. Hagiology Publishing. p. 21.ISBN 0-9534-4745-6.
  5. ^The Argyle StoryArchived 2 September 2009 at theWayback Machine Greens on Screen. Retrieved 25 February 2010.
  6. ^Argyle History Greens on Screen. Retrieved 25 February 2010.

External links

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(c) =caretaker manager; (i) = interim manager; (s) = secretary-manager
Portsmouth F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager
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