Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

George Burley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scottish footballer and manager
This article is about the Scottish international footballer. For other people, seeGeorge Burley (disambiguation).

George Burley
Personal information
Full nameGeorge Elder Burley[1]
Date of birth (1956-06-03)3 June 1956 (age 69)[2]
Place of birthCumnock, Scotland
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[2]
PositionRight-back
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1973–1985Ipswich Town394(6)
1985–1988Sunderland54(0)
1988–1989Gillingham46(2)
1989–1991Motherwell54(0)
1991–1993Ayr United67(0)
1993Falkirk1(0)
1993–1994Motherwell5(0)
1994Colchester United7(0)
1994–1995Ipswich Town0(0)
Total628(8)
International career
1976–1977Scotland U215(0)
1974–1975Scotland U232(0)
1979–1982Scotland11(0)
Managerial career
1991–1993Ayr United
1994Colchester United
1994–2002Ipswich Town
2003–2005Derby County
2005Heart of Midlothian
2005–2008Southampton
2008–2009Scotland
2009Scotland B
2010–2011Crystal Palace
2012Apollon Limassol
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

George Elder Burley (born 3 June 1956) is a Scottish formerfootball player and manager. He had a professional career spanning 21 years as a player, making 628 league appearances and earning 11 Scotland caps. His most successful spell came while atIpswich Town making 394 senior appearances, and being part of the squad that won the FA Cup and UEFA Cup in1978 and1981 respectively.

Burley's managerial career began in 1990 withAyr United and has since spent spells at seven different clubs, including an eight-year spell back at Ipswich Town as manager, which included a promotion to the Premier League and guiding the club to a fifth place league finish at that level. On 24 January 2008 he was appointed manager of theScotland national team. He was sacked on 16 November 2009, following a 3–0 defeat to Wales.[3]

Playing career

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(August 2010)

Burley was born inCumnock, East Ayrshire.[2] He joinedIpswich Town in 1972 as an apprentice and won theFA Youth Cup in 1973.[4] He made his senior debut againstManchester United atOld Trafford in 1973, being given the job of markingGeorge Best. In 1978, he was a member of the Ipswich side which upset the odds to defeatArsenal 1–0 in theFA Cup final. However, in 1981 injury forced him out of Ipswich'sUEFA Cup final triumph overAZ Alkmaar. Town missed out on the First Division title on the last day of the season, finishing runners-up toAston Villa.

In 1985, he joinedSunderland after making 500 appearances for Ipswich, and was part of the Sunderland team that slipped into the Third Division in 1987, only to win promotion a year later.

He played forGillingham in the1988–89 season, but was unable to prevent them from being relegated to the Fourth Division. He moved back to Scotland in 1989 to play forMotherwell.

Burley received elevenScotland caps.[5]

Management career

[edit]

Ayr United

[edit]

Burley joinedAyr United as a player-manager in 1991, succeedingAlly MacLeod. In his first season, he took United to the B&Q Centenary Cup Final and again reached the final of the competition (by then renamed theB&Q Challenge Cup) the following season. However, he did not succeed in taking Ayr back to the Premier League and was dismissed in 1993 for adverse results with the side's place in the First Division in serious jeopardy.

Motherwell

[edit]

Burley moved briefly toFalkirk in 1993 as a player before returning toMotherwell as player-coach.

Colchester United

[edit]

In June 1994 Burley returned toEast Anglia asplayer-manager ofColchester United. He played seven first team games and managed the club for 20 matches, 8 of which they won, before returning toIpswich Town in December.

Ipswich Town

[edit]

Burley was appointed manager at his former club, withDale Roberts as his assistant, having had talks with Town without Colchester knowing and so compensation was duly paid.[citation needed] He made his playing return for Ipswich, ten years after his last game for the club in a match againstMotherwell in 1995 although didn't feature again as a player.[6][7][8]

During an eight-year reign he took Ipswich to three play-offs semi finals before finally winning promotion to thePremier League on the fourth attempt via theplay-offs atWembley beatingBarnsley 4–2.

The following season, he guided the club to fifth place and qualification for theUEFA Cup. This earned him the 2000–01Premier League Manager of the Season award. Relegation the following season saw Burley's side struggling at the foot ofFootball League First Division and his contract was terminated by mutual agreement in 2002.

Burley again applied for the job in 2012, losing out toMick McCarthy.[9] He was later critical of how the club was being run, in 2017, following the club's lowest finishing in nearly 60 years, stating that:

The tradition of this club, with what Alf Ramsey, Bobby Robson and even myself achieved shouldn't be forgotten. Right now, Ipswich should be contesting for the top six in the Championship every year at the very least – that's where I think they should be. I was at the club for 21 years as a player and manager and the standard never dropped below that. That's the level Ipswich Town should be endeavouring to be at again. That's where they should expect to be. It's that type of club.When I took over in 1994 the first thing I said was I wanted to take the club back into Europe and we did that.[10]

Burley again showed interest in the Ipswich job following Mick McCarthy's exit in 2018, but he again lost out in favour ofPaul Hurst.[11]

In November 2002, Burley was on the verge of taking over asStoke City manager, but he had a late change of heart and declined the offer.[12]

Derby County

[edit]

In 2003, Burley became interim manager ofDerby County while permanent managerJohn Gregory was suspended. Burley managed to halt Derby's alarming slide towards the relegation zone of the First Division (just one season after relegation from the Premier League) and kept the club up comfortably. Burley was then appointed manager permanently when Gregory was sacked. The following season (2003–04) was often a struggle, with Derby actually finishing two places lower than the season before, but there were signs of improvement. This showed through in the2004–05 season when, despite spending no money on new players, Burley transformed Derby from relegation contenders to a fourth-place finish and play-off semi-finalists. However, things were not as happy as they seemed on the surface with Burley's relationship withdirector of footballMurdo Mackay and the club's board (who sold star playerTom Huddlestone without informing Burley) being very strained. After days of speculation andmudslinging, Burley announced his resignation from Derby in June 2005.

Heart of Midlothian

[edit]

Burley was appointed manager ofHeart of Midlothian on 30 June 2005. A stunning start to his tenure as Hearts manager saw them top theScottish Premier League after the first ten games, winning eight of these, including a 4–0 victory over rivalsHibernian – proving themselves to be genuine title challengers. However, he left the club the day after major shareholderVladimir Romanov, with whom Burley had a notoriously uneasy relationship, announced a bid to take private control of Hearts. A club statement declared his departure was by mutual consent because of irreconcilable differences.[13]

Southampton

[edit]

Burley was appointed as Head Coach ofSouthampton on 23 December 2005 following the departure ofHarry Redknapp.[14] The club's technical director,Sir Clive Woodward, was moved sideways to a newly created post as director of football as part of restructuring following Burley's appointment, before eventually leaving the club in August 2006.[15] Following the change in control of the club in July 2006, Burley's title was changed to that of "manager". He guided Southampton to the2006–07 play-offs but lost on penalties in the second-leg of the semi-final after drawing 4–4 on aggregate against his former club Derby County, who went on to win the final.[16]

Scotland

[edit]

It was announced on 24 January 2008 that Burley had been appointedScotland manager on a four-year contract.[17] He became the third former Ipswich manager to manage his country, asAlf Ramsey andBobby Robson had before him. In his first match in charge, Scotland drew 1–1 withCroatia. In the following two friendlies, Scotland failed to register a victory, with a 3–1 loss against theCzech Republic, and a goalless draw withNorthern Ireland.

Although winning 2–1 againstIceland in their second game of the 2010 World Cup qualifying campaign, Burley received heavy criticism for the 1–0 defeat toMacedonia in the opening match and a 0–0 home draw againstNorway. Questions were raised about his choice of bringing on uncappedChris Iwelumo (who missed an open goal from 3 yards) instead of proven-goal scorerKris Boyd. The Rangers striker quickly announced his retirement from international football while Burley was still in charge.[18]

Scotland were defeated 3–0 in Amsterdam by the Netherlands, but then recovered by beating Iceland 2–1 at home. The team lost 4–0 to Norway in their next match, putting Burley's bid to take Scotland to the World Cup for the first time since 1998 in jeopardy.[19] Qualification to the play-offs remained in Scotland's hands, with the team needing to win the two remaining fixtures to be guaranteed second place.Scottish FA chiefGordon Smith moved to confirm that Burley's position was not under threat, but said that much depended on the final two matches.[20]

In the end, a 2–0 home victory overMacedonia at Hampden on 5 September 2009 was followed four days later by a 0–1 defeat at home tothe Netherlands, ending Scottish hopes of qualifying for the finals.[21]

Despite failure to qualify for the 2010 World Cup, Burley was given the backing of the SFA at a meeting on 15 September 2009, to lead the country into the Euro 2012 qualifying campaign.[22]

His final game as Scotland manager was a 0–3 loss toWales on 14 November 2009 inCardiff.[23] On 15 November 2009, Burley came under fire, with reports suggesting he would lose his job as Scotland manager.[24] and the following day, Burley was sacked as manager of Scotland after winning just three out of fourteen games.[25]

Crystal Palace

[edit]

On 17 June 2010, Burley took charge ofCrystal Palace, with fellow ScotDougie Freedman as his assistant.[26] His first league match as Crystal Palace manager ended in a 3–2 victory overLeicester City.[27] He was sacked after a 3–0 defeat againstMillwall on New Year's Day, 2011.[28]

Apollon Limassol

[edit]

On 10 May 2012, Burley was appointed as manager of Cypriot sideApollon Limassol.[29] He was sacked in September after just two games in charge, due to an alleged rift with the club's sporting director.[30]

Personal life

[edit]

His nephew,Craig, is also a former Scotland international footballer.[31]

In September 2024, Burley revealed he was undergoing treatment for cancer.[32][33] In May 2025, he announced that he was cancer-free.[34][35]

Managerial statistics

[edit]
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamNatFromToRecordRef
PWDLWin %
Ayr UnitedScotland2 January 199123 December 1993161624554038.5[36]
Colchester UnitedEngland1 June 199424 December 199420857040.0[37]
Ipswich TownEngland28 December 199411 October 200241018597128045.1[37]
Derby CountyEngland31 March 20037 June 2005107392543036.4[37]
Heart of MidlothianScotland30 June 200521 October 200512921075.0[37]
SouthamptonEngland23 December 200524 January 2008109452539041.3[37]
ScotlandScotland24 January 200816 November 200914338021.4[37]
Scotland BScotlandMay 2009May 20091100100.0[38]
Crystal PalaceEngland17 June 20101 January 2011267514026.9[37]
Apollon LimassolCyprusMay 2012September 20122101050.0[30]
Total862360207295041.8

Honours

[edit]

Player

[edit]

Ipswich Town

Sunderland

Individual

Manager

[edit]

Ayr United

Ipswich Town

Individual

References

[edit]
  1. ^"George Burley".Barry Hugman's Footballers. Archived fromthe original on 8 June 2024. Retrieved4 March 2017.
  2. ^abc"George Burley: Profile".worldfootball.net. HEIM:SPIEL. Retrieved25 December 2019.
  3. ^"George Burley sacked as Scotland manager". STV. 16 November 2009. Archived fromthe original on 18 November 2009. Retrieved16 November 2009.
  4. ^Malone, Roger (17 April 1973). "Ipswich skill earns its due reward".The Daily Telegraph. p. 34.
  5. ^George Burley at theScottish Football Association
  6. ^"Pride of Anglia – Ipswich Town Football Club".
  7. ^"Pride of Anglia – Ipswich Town Football Club".
  8. ^"Pride of Anglia – Ipswich Town Football Club".
  9. ^"George Burley wants Ipswich Town job".BBC Sport. 25 October 2012. Retrieved31 May 2017.
  10. ^Watson, Stuart (29 May 2017)."Ipswich Town's standards should remain high, insists George Burley".East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved31 May 2017.
  11. ^"George Burley wants to be the next Ipswich manager".east Anglain Daily Times. 4 May 2018. Retrieved20 October 2018.
  12. ^Smith, Peter (1 November 2017)."The inside story behind what Stoke City did after George Burley's disappearing act".StokeonTrentLive. Retrieved30 December 2019.
  13. ^"Burley in shock exit from Hearts".BBC Sport. 22 October 2005. Retrieved21 January 2007.
  14. ^"Saints name Burley as head coach". CBBC Newsround. 23 December 2005. Retrieved12 August 2007.
  15. ^"Southampton confirm Woodward exit".BBC Sport. 31 August 2006. Retrieved13 September 2024.
  16. ^"Derby secure play-off final berth".BBC Sport. 15 May 2007. Retrieved13 September 2024.
  17. ^"Burley appointed Scotland manager".BBC Sport. 24 January 2008. Retrieved24 January 2008.
  18. ^Forsyth, Roddy (12 October 2008)."Iwelumo-Boyd situation". Telegraph Sport. Retrieved14 February 2010.
  19. ^Lindsey, Clive (12 August 2009)."Norway 4–0 Scotland".BBC Sport. Retrieved12 August 2009.
  20. ^"Burley's position is safe – Smith".BBC Sport. 13 August 2009. Retrieved13 August 2009.
  21. ^"Scotland 0–1 Netherlands".BBC Sport. 9 September 2009. Retrieved16 November 2009.
  22. ^"Burley remains as Scotland boss".BBC Sport. 15 September 2009. Retrieved15 September 2009.
  23. ^"Wales 3–0 Scotland".BBC Sport. 14 November 2009. Retrieved16 November 2009.
  24. ^"Burley set to lose Scotland post".BBC Sport. 16 November 2009. Retrieved16 November 2009.
  25. ^"Burley sacked as Scotland manager".BBC Sport. 16 November 2009. Retrieved16 November 2009.
  26. ^"Burley Named Manager". Crystal Palace FC. 17 June 2010. Archived fromthe original on 9 September 2011. Retrieved12 October 2013.
  27. ^"Crystal Palace 3 – 2 Leicester".BBC Sport. 7 August 2010.
  28. ^"Crystal Palace sack manager George Burley".BBC Sport. 1 January 2011. Retrieved1 January 2011.
  29. ^"Burley Moves to Cyprus". TWTD. 10 May 2012. Retrieved10 May 2012.
  30. ^abJackson, Keith (21 September 2012)."George Burley sacked by Cypriot side after just two games in charge".Daily Record. Retrieved21 September 2012.
  31. ^Smith, Ben (17 November 2009)."Scotland players were 'too thick' to play for George Burley, claims nephew".The Times. Retrieved10 September 2024.
  32. ^"A statement from George Burley".Ipswich Town FC. 10 September 2024. Retrieved10 September 2024.
  33. ^"Ipswich legend Burley being treated for cancer".BBC Sport. 10 September 2024. Retrieved10 September 2024.
  34. ^Banks, Ben (12 May 2025)."Upbeat George Burley update provided after cancer treatment as former Hearts boss gets 'magnificent' reception".Edinburgh News. Retrieved13 May 2025.
  35. ^"Burley feeling 'very lucky' after cancer all-clear".BBC News. 13 May 2025. Retrieved13 May 2025.
  36. ^"George Burley Manager Profile".ayrutdarchive.com. The Ayr United Archive. Retrieved3 March 2025.
  37. ^abcdefg"George Burley Managerial Statistics". Soccerbase. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  38. ^"Scotland B manager profile".Fitbastats.com. Retrieved12 October 2017.
  39. ^"Third Division Days – Sunderland AFC 1987/88". Ryehill Football. 9 February 2018. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  40. ^"George Burley profile". Scottish Football Association. Archived fromthe original on 10 October 2008. Retrieved26 October 2007.
  41. ^"Scottish League Challenge Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved14 September 2020.
  42. ^"Ipswich triumph at last".BBC News. 29 May 2000. Retrieved7 February 2008.
  43. ^ab"Manager profile: George Burley". Premier League. Retrieved18 September 2018.
  44. ^"League Managers Association – George Burley".leaguemanagers.com. Archived fromthe original on 28 February 2020. Retrieved20 December 2020.
  45. ^"League Managers Association – LMA Manager of the Year".leaguemanagers.com. Archived fromthe original on 5 May 2020. Retrieved30 December 2019.
  46. ^"Four Town players in Hall of Fame".East Anglian Daily Times. 17 April 2010. Archived fromthe original on 20 April 2013. Retrieved21 March 2014.
  47. ^ab"Scottish Premier League Manager, Player & Young Player of the Month Awards". My Football Facts. Retrieved21 April 2017.

External links

[edit]
Awards
Scotland
Managerial positions
Ayr United F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager
(c) =caretaker manager; (s) = secretary
(c) = caretaker
(c) =caretaker manager, (p) player-manager
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_Burley&oldid=1324805659"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp