English footballer & manager
Alan Peter Buckley
(born 20 April 1951) is an English former professional footballer and
football
manager who now works as a sports co-commentator for
BBC Humberside
.
As a player, he was a
forward
from 1967 to 1987 for
Nottingham Forest
,
Walsall
,
Birmingham City
,
Stourbridge
and
Tamworth
.
[1]
He moved into management and has been in charge of
Walsall
,
Kettering Town
,
West Bromwich Albion
,
Lincoln City
and
Rochdale
. He gained renown for his three stints as manager of
Grimsby Town
between 1988 and 2008, where his achievements have made him the club's most successful manager. Buckley is one of only 14 managers to have reached 1,000 matches in charge of a league club, but the only one of the 14 never to have managed a team in the Premiership or its predecessor, the First Division.
[2]
Playing career
[
edit
]
Buckley began his career with
Nottingham Forest
, but was transferred to
Walsall
in 1973 having never managed to win a regular place in the first team. He became a prolific striker at
Fellows Park
, before he was transferred briefly to
Birmingham City
in October 1978. He returned to Walsall as their record signing (£175,000) in June 1979.
[2]
He began his managerial career with 'The Saddlers', initially as player/manager and briefly as co-manager with
Neil Martin
. This was an era that became a hallmark for some of the most attractive football seen in Walsall and the side gradually established itself as promotion contenders.
[1]
Buckley gained a favourable reputation during his time in the
Black Country
, scoring against
Manchester United
as a player during an
FA Cup
upset in January 1975, and leading his Walsall side as a manager to victories against the likes of
Arsenal
, and a draw at
Anfield
during a
League Cup
run which took them to the semi-finals, just '90 Minutes From Europe'. He was sacked in August 1986, when
Terry Ramsden
bought the club, installing his own managerial team within 90 minutes of the takeover deal being completed.
[3]
Alan Buckley is still regarded very highly at Walsall; promotion in his first season as manager and in 1984 taking the European Champions Liverpool all the way in a League Cup semi final after drawing at Anfield 2-2. Walsall were the better team but poor finishing and bad luck at home meant Liverpool won 2?0 with their only shots after which Graeme Souness said he would rather play against Juventus than Walsall as they totally "outplayed us" at times after the match.
He joined
Tamworth
as a player in October 1986, playing a total of five games for the club,
[4]
three in the
West Midlands Premier League
, with a debut in the 2?0 victory at
Tividale
on 4 October 1986.
[5]
Management career
[
edit
]
Later as a manager, after a spell with non-league
Kettering Town
, he guided
Grimsby Town
to promotion from the
Fourth Division
in 1990 and they reached the
Second Division
a year later
[6]
? where they spent all but one of the next 12 seasons. In his first two spells at the club, Buckley's Grimsby sides were renowned for their attractive passing game and mounted periodic challenges for the play-offs. Buckley remained at
Blundell Park
until the autumn of 1994 when he joined Grimsby's Division One rivals
West Bromwich Albion
.
[6]
His spell at the Hawthorns lasted two-and-a-half years before he was sacked for failing to get Albion anywhere near a promotion challenge.
A few months after being sacked by Albion, Buckley returned to Grimsby in summer 1997 for his second spell as manager. Town had just been relegated to Division Two, but he took them back to Division One at the first time of asking with two
Wembley
visits in 1998. Buckley remained in charge for two full seasons after that, but was dismissed after just two games of 2000?01. A couple of brief, short-lived spells in Division Three followed ? first with
Lincoln City
, arriving at
Sincil Bank
in January 2001.
[7]
Buckley left the Imps in April 2002, with the club stating that financial reasons were behind his departure.
[8]
He then took charge of
Rochdale
in June 2003,
[9]
but left by mutual consent in December of the same year after failing to revive the club's fortunes.
[10]
On 9 November 2006 Buckley was appointed manager of Grimsby for a third time.
[11]
In his first season back with Grimsby, a mid-table finish was considered a creditable achievement after relegation from the Football League had looked a distinct possibility. In 2007?08, Grimsby made a slow start but soon picked up. A good run in the
Football League Trophy
saw The Mariners travel to the new
Wembley
10 years after their first visit. However this time Grimsby lost 0?2 to
MK Dons
.
[12]
League form suffered terribly afterwards, the season ending with eight straight defeats. After gaining just two points from the opening six games of the 2008?09 season, Buckley was again dismissed as manager.
[13]
In his three stints as
Grimsby Town
manager?spanning, in total, over 10 years?the club was never relegated and he also guided them to three promotions.
Only 14 managers have reached 1,000 matches in charge of a Football League team by 1998 and Buckley is one of them.
[6]
On 14 June 2012 Buckley returned to Grimsby for a fourth time by joining the coaching staff as the new U17's team manager.
[14]
Personal life
[
edit
]
His younger brother
Steve
played over 300 games as a
full-back
for
Derby County
, and well over 100 for
Luton Town
. His eldest son Simon was contracted to both
West Bromwich Albion
and
Grimsby Town
without playing but later played at non-league level for
Boston United
. His other son
Adam
did however make just under 50
Football League
appearances combined for both
Grimsby Town
and
Lincoln City
before going on to feature for a number of clubs at a semi-professional level.
Buckley's grandson
Brandon
has also played for Grimsby Town.
[15]
Media career
[
edit
]
Since his departure from management with Grimsby in 2008, Buckley who continues to live in the area is often the co-commentator and guest pundit for
BBC Radio Humberside
's coverage of Grimsby Town games. He has continued to work in this role alongside his current management duties of the club's U17 side.
Honours
[
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]
As a player
[
edit
]
Walsall
As a manager
[
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]
Kettering Town
Grimsby Town
Managerial stats
[
edit
]
As of 24 May 2007.
[17]
Team
|
From
|
To
|
Record
|
G
|
W
|
L
|
D
|
Win %
|
Walsall
|
27 June 1979
|
1 July 1981
|
93
|
36
|
24
|
33
|
0
38.71
|
Walsall
|
1 July 1981
|
1 January 1982
|
18
|
9
|
4
|
5
|
0
50.00
|
Walsall
|
1 July 1982
|
1 August 1986
|
201
|
87
|
66
|
48
|
0
43.28
|
Grimsby Town
|
6 June 1988
|
20 October 1994
|
327
|
130
|
109
|
88
|
0
39.76
|
West Bromwich Albion
|
20 October 1994
|
22 January 1997
|
118
|
39
|
45
|
34
|
0
33.05
|
Grimsby Town
|
21 May 1997
|
22 August 2000
|
175
|
67
|
63
|
45
|
0
38.29
|
Lincoln City
|
28 February 2001
|
25 April 2002
|
69
|
16
|
29
|
24
|
0
23.19
|
Rochdale
|
1 June 2003
|
30 December 2003
|
28
|
8
|
15
|
5
|
0
28.57
|
Grimsby Town
|
9 November 2006
|
15 September 2008
|
97
|
33
|
41
|
23
|
0
34.02
|
Total
|
1,126
|
425
|
396
|
305
|
0
37.74
|
References
[
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]
Further reading
[
edit
]
External links
[
edit
]
Alan Buckley managerial positions
|
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|