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Mark Goldberg (football manager)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English football manager and club chairman

Mark Goldberg
Personal information
Place of birthEngland
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
Bromley
Beckenham Town
Managerial career
Beckenham Town
2006–2007Bromley
2008–2011Bromley
2011–2016Bromley
2016Welling United
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Mark Goldberg is an English entrepreneur andfootball club chairman and manager.

Business

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Mark Goldberg started out in the recruitment industry in 1984. Between 1992 and 1998 he built one of the UK's fastest growing IT contracting companies which doubled its turnover for five consecutive years resulting in a public flotation in 1996 at a market value capitalization of £36m as MSB INTERNATIONAL PLC. Goldberg sold a majority of his shareholding in 1998 at market cap of £200m.[1] With this money and a further credit from the previous ownerRon Noades he bought in 1998 the Premier League club Crystal Palace - Goldberg's plans for the club to go onto the London Stock Market did not materialise and due to lack of financial assistance he was declared bankrupt in 2000.[2][3]

Football

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Playing career

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As a player, Goldberg played fornon-League clubsBromley andBeckenham Town, where he was player-manager while still in his 20s.[3][4]

He also played football for two seasons in the United States, from 1982 to 1983, atthe College of William and Mary, after being recruited by its head coach,Al Albert.[5]

Crystal Palace

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Goldberg became owner and chairman ofCrystal Palace Football Club in June 1998. Goldberg was unable to raise sufficient funds to achieve his plan for the club, ultimately resulting in the club being forced into administration and leading to his personal bankruptcy.[6]

Goldberg had purchased the club from long-serving chairmanRon Noades, but Palace ended up relegated from theFA Premier League that season – for the third time in six years. The takeover deal also saw ItalianSerie A sideJuventus have a 10% stake in Palace, with a view to Juventus players being loaned or sold to the club. Goldberg also set a target into turning Palace into a leading European club by 2003.[7]

At the end of the1997–98 season, Goldberg appointedTerry Venables as head coach for the following season and former managerSteve Coppell became Director of football. The club was not successful under his chairmanship and in January 1999 it was taken over by administrators who counted £22 million of debts,[6] including £2m owed to Terry Venables and £7m to banks, the remainder to football clubs, players andHMRC. The club also failed to reach the standards set when Goldberg took over, with their financial crisis not being solved until a takeover bySimon Jordan was completed more than a year later, and a return to the Premier League was not achieved until 2004.

Bromley

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Goldberg was player manager for a short period in 1988. He re-joined Bromley FC as first team manager in 2005, Appointed by his brother-in-law and Bromley chairman, Jerry Dolke, Goldberg replaced incumbent manager George Wakeling and his management team.[1]

Goldberg's start in management was successful, leading Bromley to promotion into theConference South division via the play-offs. His first pre-season included a tie against the youth team of Crystal Palace and his competitive start was good, with Bromley topping the Premier Division after his first eleven games and reaching the first round of theFA Cup before losing 4–1 toLeague One sideGillingham.[3]

Goldberg left Bromley during the 2007–08 season, to be succeeded bySimon Osborn, but returned to the club at the end of the season. In April 2009, Goldberg suffered serious damage to his knee ligament while playing for Bromley Veterans in an Isthmian Veterans Cup semi-final.[citation needed]

Goldberg guided the club to promotion from the Ryman Premier Division during his first season after winning the Play Off Final against Billericay FC.

During his term, Goldberg guided the club to win 3 trophies amongst the Kent and London Senior Cup competitions as well as leading the club to reach the FA Cup first round, during 5 out of his 8 seasons as manager.

Goldberg agreed to step down as manager on 4 February 2016.[8]

Welling United

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Goldberg became manager of Welling United in April 2016. He left the position in November 2016.[9]

Personal life

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Goldberg's son,Bradley, was a semi-professional footballer.

Honours

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Club

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Bromley

References

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  1. ^abOrnstein, David (11 November 2006)."Buoyant Goldberg living the dugout dream".The Guardian.
  2. ^"Done Deal: An Insiders Guide to Football contracts ...", Bloomsbury Sport (London, UK), 2019,ISBN 978-1-4729-4717-8
  3. ^abcFormer Palace chairman Mark Goldberg sees a different side of life as Bromley managerThe Daily Telegraph, 5 November 2009
  4. ^Goldberg returns to Bromley for third stint in chargeArchived 20 August 2016 at theWayback MachineKent News, 21 June 2011
  5. ^William and Mary Men's Soccer (Images of Sports)- p.52 – Arcadia Publishing 2010 – Al Albert
  6. ^ab"Crumbling Palace admit debts add up to £22m".The Guardian. 18 March 1999.
  7. ^"Football: Venables the target of Goldberg's pounds 30m Palace".The Independent. 22 October 2011.
  8. ^Mark Goldberg leaves Bromley FC as investors demand resultsOrpington News, 5 February 2016
  9. ^"Day & Pennock Take Charge at Welling". The National League Official Website. 24 November 2016. Archived fromthe original on 26 November 2016. Retrieved25 November 2016.
Bromley F.C.managers
(c) =caretaker manager
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