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Terry Yorath

Terence Charles Yorath (born 27 March 1950)[2][3] is a Welsh former football player and manager at both club and international level.

Terry Yorath
Yorath in 1988
Personal information
Full name Terence Charles Yorath
Date of birth (1950-03-27) 27 March 1950 (age 74)
Place of birth Grangetown, Cardiff, Wales
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[1]
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
Leeds United
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1967–1976 Leeds United 141 (10)
1976–1979 Coventry City 99 (3)
1979–1981 Tottenham Hotspur 46 (1)
1981–1982 Vancouver Whitecaps 29 (2)
1982–1985 Bradford City 27 (0)
1986 Swansea City 1 (0)
Total 343 (16)
International career
1969–1981 Wales 59 (2)
Managerial career
1986–1989 Swansea City
1988–1993 Wales
1989–1990 Bradford City
1990–1991 Swansea City
1994–1995 Cardiff City
1995–1997 Lebanon
2001–2002 Sheffield Wednesday
2008–2009 Margate
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He represented Leeds United, Coventry City, Tottenham Hotspur, Vancouver Whitecaps, Bradford City, Swansea City and the Welsh national team. He later became a football manager for Bradford City, Swansea City, Cardiff City and Sheffield Wednesday, as well as assistant at Huddersfield Town. Yorath also managed the Wales and Lebanon national teams.

Club career edit

Early career edit

Yorath was an apprentice at Leeds United signing professional forms at the age of 17. Along with other Leeds midfield players of the time, such as Mick Bates and Terry Hibbitt, he found it difficult to establish himself ahead of Don Revie's preferred pairing of Billy Bremner and Johnny Giles. Between 1967 and 1972 he made just 14 League appearances for Leeds.

Leeds United edit

In the 1972–73 season, injuries and suspensions allowed Yorath to establish himself as a first team regular. His first season ended with two cup final runners-up medals; he was a substitute in the 1973 FA Cup Final, which Leeds lost 1–0 to Sunderland, and also appeared in the 1973 UEFA Cup Winners' Cup Final, which Leeds lost in controversial circumstances to AC Milan.

Yorath finally won some silverware the following 1973–74 season, where he was a key member of the Leeds championship winning side. Yorath became the first Welshman to play in a European Cup final when Leeds reached the final of the UEFA European Cup, but again Yorath ended up with a runners up medal as Leeds lost 2–0 to Bayern Munich in controversial circumstances.

Don Revie had left Leeds to manage England, and his eventual replacement Jimmy Armfield decided to dispense with Yorath's services in 1976, selling him to Coventry City for £125,000. During his time with Leeds, Yorath made 120 appearances and scored ten goals.

Coventry City edit

Yorath would be captain to one of only a handful of top flight Coventry City sides that spent an entire season in the top ten. Spearheaded by the prolific strike partnership of Ian Wallace and Mick Ferguson, and ably abetted by the legendary winger Tommy Hutchison and attacking full backs Graham Oakey and Bobby MacDonald, the Sky Blues would enjoy a 7th-place finish in the 1977–78 season, narrowly missing out on European football. Yorath's Coventry side containing such notables as Alan Green, McDonald and Mick Coop are still fondly remembered even today by the Sky Blue faithful. A remarkable 5–4 win over Norwich City at Highfield Road, Christmas 1977, replete with bicycle kick by Ian Wallace and last gasp penalty save by Jim Blyth, lives long in Coventry folklore.

Yorath remained at Coventry for three years, playing 99 games and scoring three goals and was captain for most of this period. He moved onto Tottenham Hotspur in 1979 for £300,000, and then briefly to Vancouver Whitecaps in 1981, where he made 59 appearances, scoring four goals in his two seasons with the club.

International career edit

Yorath picked up the first of 59 Welsh caps in 1970 against Italy, and he maintained a regular presence in the international side until 1981. Yorath also captained his country on 42 occasions.

Managerial career edit

In 1982, Yorath joined Bradford City as player/assistant coach. He was injured during the Bradford City stadium fire disaster in 1985 when he was forced to jump out of a window after evacuating supporters from a bar. He subsequently took up the manager's position at Swansea City in 1986 (making a single and final league appearance), and led the club to promotion from the Division Four to the Division Three at the end of the 1987–88 season.

In 1989, he was appointed part-time manager of Wales, eventually taking up the post on a full-time basis whilst still managing Swansea. However, this caused conflict with the club, and Yorath left Swansea to manage Bradford. He was dismissed by Bradford after just one year in charge, and returned to manage Swansea again.

In 1991, after a run of nine consecutive defeats, he left Swansea for a second time to concentrate on managing Wales. Yorath was popular amongst the Wales players and fans and guided them to wins over Brazil in 1990 and World Cup holders Germany in a European Championship Qualifier in 1991. Under Yorath, Wales attained what was then their highest ever FIFA ranking of 27th in August 1993 and came close to qualifying for the 1994 World Cup tournament. The qualifying group started disastrously with a 5–1 defeat away to Romania. However, Yorath turned things around with victories over the Faroe Isles, Belgium and Cyprus. Needing to win their final game of the qualifying group at home to Romania, Paul Bodin's penalty hit the crossbar with the scores level at 1–1. Romania went on to win 2–1. Following the failure to qualify Yorath's contract as manager was not renewed, angering many Welsh fans and John Toshack, then manager of Real Sociedad, was appointed as a part-time manager. However, Toshack resigned after just one game – a 3–1 defeat to Norway with the team being booed off the pitch in Cardiff by the Welsh fans still upset at the dismissal of Yorath.[4]

Yorath joined Cardiff City as general manager in 1994, after speculation that he would become manager of Middlesbrough in May that year,[5] and assumed control of team affairs in November of that year when manager Eddie May left the club. However, his time in the hotseat with the Bluebirds was brief, and he was sacked opening the door for Eddie May to return in March 1995 with the club headed for relegation, but he could not save them from the drop. In April of the same year,[6] Yorath took over as coach of the Lebanon national team, and helped them rise 60 places in the FIFA World Rankings before leaving in 1997.[7]

Between 1997 and 2000 he worked as a coach at Huddersfield Town and Bradford City, before joining Sheffield Wednesday as assistant to Paul Jewell. Yorath retained his position when Jewell was dismissed, and eventually became manager in 2001. However, he resigned in 2002 after a run of five defeats in six league matches saw Wednesday drop into the relegation zone.

In June 2008, Yorath returned to football when he was appointed the director of football at Isthmian League Premier Division side Margate,[8] where his brother Dai and nephew Dean had both played. On 21 November 2008, he was appointed manager of the club after Barry Ashby was sacked. However, Yorath resigned as Margate manager on 24 September 2009 following a run of disappointing results, leaving Neville Southall in temporary charge of the team.

Personal life edit

Yorath's autobiography, published in 2004, is titled Hard Man, Hard Knocks.[9] He is the father of television presenter Gabby Logan.

Honours edit

Player edit

Leeds United

Manager edit

Lebanon

References edit

  1. ^ Rollin, Jack, ed. (1981). Rothmans Football Yearbook : 1981–82. London: Queen Anne Press. p. 356. ISBN 0-362-02046-9. OCLC 868301130.
  2. ^ "Terry Yorath's Cardiff pride ahead of Champions League final". 13 May 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  3. ^ Honeyball, Interview by Lee (6 March 2005). "Triumph and despair: Terry Yorath". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 29 January 2019.
  4. ^ Hughes, Dewi (12 November 2004). "Time for Toshack to deliver". BBC Sport. BBC. Retrieved 12 November 2004.
  5. ^ Shaw, Phil (3 May 1994). "Football: Lawrence leaves Middlesbrough". The Independent. London.
  6. ^ FIFA.com. . Fifa.com. Archived from the original on 11 June 2020. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  7. ^ "Leeds United F.C. History". Ozwhitelufc.net.au. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
  8. ^ "Yorath lands Margate supremo role". BBC Sport. 2 June 2008. Retrieved 3 June 2008.
  9. ^ "LUFCTALK | Leeds United Fans Forum". Lufctalk.com. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  10. ^ "Leeds United: Season 1973 - 1974: Division One". Leeds-fans.org.uk. Retrieved 6 December 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Brown, Jim (2000). Coventry: An Illustrated History. Desert Island Books Ltd. ISBN 1-874287-36-8.
  • Yorath, Terry (2004). Hard Man, Hard Knocks. Celluloid. ISBN 0954596110.

External links edit

  • Terry Yorath at Soccerbase  
  • Terry Yorath management career statistics at Soccerbase
  • Profile on NASL Jerseys

terry, yorath, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, reliable, sources, contentious, material, about, living, persons, that, unsourced, poorly, sourced, must, removed, immediately, from, article, tal. This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Terry Yorath news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Terence Charles Yorath born 27 March 1950 2 3 is a Welsh former football player and manager at both club and international level Terry YorathYorath in 1988Personal informationFull nameTerence Charles YorathDate of birth 1950 03 27 27 March 1950 age 74 Place of birthGrangetown Cardiff WalesHeight6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 1 Position s MidfielderYouth careerLeeds UnitedSenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1967 1976Leeds United141 10 1976 1979Coventry City99 3 1979 1981Tottenham Hotspur46 1 1981 1982Vancouver Whitecaps29 2 1982 1985Bradford City27 0 1986Swansea City1 0 Total343 16 International career1969 1981Wales59 2 Managerial career1986 1989Swansea City1988 1993Wales1989 1990Bradford City1990 1991Swansea City1994 1995Cardiff City1995 1997Lebanon2001 2002Sheffield Wednesday2008 2009Margate Club domestic league appearances and goals He represented Leeds United Coventry City Tottenham Hotspur Vancouver Whitecaps Bradford City Swansea City and the Welsh national team He later became a football manager for Bradford City Swansea City Cardiff City and Sheffield Wednesday as well as assistant at Huddersfield Town Yorath also managed the Wales and Lebanon national teams Contents 1 Club career 1 1 Early career 1 2 Leeds United 1 3 Coventry City 2 International career 3 Managerial career 4 Personal life 5 Honours 5 1 Player 5 2 Manager 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksClub career editEarly career edit Yorath was an apprentice at Leeds United signing professional forms at the age of 17 Along with other Leeds midfield players of the time such as Mick Bates and Terry Hibbitt he found it difficult to establish himself ahead of Don Revie s preferred pairing of Billy Bremner and Johnny Giles Between 1967 and 1972 he made just 14 League appearances for Leeds Leeds United edit In the 1972 73 season injuries and suspensions allowed Yorath to establish himself as a first team regular His first season ended with two cup final runners up medals he was a substitute in the 1973 FA Cup Final which Leeds lost 1 0 to Sunderland and also appeared in the 1973 UEFA Cup Winners Cup Final which Leeds lost in controversial circumstances to AC Milan Yorath finally won some silverware the following 1973 74 season where he was a key member of the Leeds championship winning side Yorath became the first Welshman to play in a European Cup final when Leeds reached the final of the UEFA European Cup but again Yorath ended up with a runners up medal as Leeds lost 2 0 to Bayern Munich in controversial circumstances Don Revie had left Leeds to manage England and his eventual replacement Jimmy Armfield decided to dispense with Yorath s services in 1976 selling him to Coventry City for 125 000 During his time with Leeds Yorath made 120 appearances and scored ten goals Coventry City edit Yorath would be captain to one of only a handful of top flight Coventry City sides that spent an entire season in the top ten Spearheaded by the prolific strike partnership of Ian Wallace and Mick Ferguson and ably abetted by the legendary winger Tommy Hutchison and attacking full backs Graham Oakey and Bobby MacDonald the Sky Blues would enjoy a 7th place finish in the 1977 78 season narrowly missing out on European football Yorath s Coventry side containing such notables as Alan Green McDonald and Mick Coop are still fondly remembered even today by the Sky Blue faithful A remarkable 5 4 win over Norwich City at Highfield Road Christmas 1977 replete with bicycle kick by Ian Wallace and last gasp penalty save by Jim Blyth lives long in Coventry folklore Yorath remained at Coventry for three years playing 99 games and scoring three goals and was captain for most of this period He moved onto Tottenham Hotspur in 1979 for 300 000 and then briefly to Vancouver Whitecaps in 1981 where he made 59 appearances scoring four goals in his two seasons with the club International career editYorath picked up the first of 59 Welsh caps in 1970 against Italy and he maintained a regular presence in the international side until 1981 Yorath also captained his country on 42 occasions Managerial career editIn 1982 Yorath joined Bradford City as player assistant coach He was injured during the Bradford City stadium fire disaster in 1985 when he was forced to jump out of a window after evacuating supporters from a bar He subsequently took up the manager s position at Swansea City in 1986 making a single and final league appearance and led the club to promotion from the Division Four to the Division Three at the end of the 1987 88 season In 1989 he was appointed part time manager of Wales eventually taking up the post on a full time basis whilst still managing Swansea However this caused conflict with the club and Yorath left Swansea to manage Bradford He was dismissed by Bradford after just one year in charge and returned to manage Swansea again In 1991 after a run of nine consecutive defeats he left Swansea for a second time to concentrate on managing Wales Yorath was popular amongst the Wales players and fans and guided them to wins over Brazil in 1990 and World Cup holders Germany in a European Championship Qualifier in 1991 Under Yorath Wales attained what was then their highest ever FIFA ranking of 27th in August 1993 and came close to qualifying for the 1994 World Cup tournament The qualifying group started disastrously with a 5 1 defeat away to Romania However Yorath turned things around with victories over the Faroe Isles Belgium and Cyprus Needing to win their final game of the qualifying group at home to Romania Paul Bodin s penalty hit the crossbar with the scores level at 1 1 Romania went on to win 2 1 Following the failure to qualify Yorath s contract as manager was not renewed angering many Welsh fans and John Toshack then manager of Real Sociedad was appointed as a part time manager However Toshack resigned after just one game a 3 1 defeat to Norway with the team being booed off the pitch in Cardiff by the Welsh fans still upset at the dismissal of Yorath 4 Yorath joined Cardiff City as general manager in 1994 after speculation that he would become manager of Middlesbrough in May that year 5 and assumed control of team affairs in November of that year when manager Eddie May left the club However his time in the hotseat with the Bluebirds was brief and he was sacked opening the door for Eddie May to return in March 1995 with the club headed for relegation but he could not save them from the drop In April of the same year 6 Yorath took over as coach of the Lebanon national team and helped them rise 60 places in the FIFA World Rankings before leaving in 1997 7 Between 1997 and 2000 he worked as a coach at Huddersfield Town and Bradford City before joining Sheffield Wednesday as assistant to Paul Jewell Yorath retained his position when Jewell was dismissed and eventually became manager in 2001 However he resigned in 2002 after a run of five defeats in six league matches saw Wednesday drop into the relegation zone In June 2008 Yorath returned to football when he was appointed the director of football at Isthmian League Premier Division side Margate 8 where his brother Dai and nephew Dean had both played On 21 November 2008 he was appointed manager of the club after Barry Ashby was sacked However Yorath resigned as Margate manager on 24 September 2009 following a run of disappointing results leaving Neville Southall in temporary charge of the team Personal life editYorath s autobiography published in 2004 is titled Hard Man Hard Knocks 9 He is the father of television presenter Gabby Logan Honours editPlayer edit Leeds United First Division 1973 74 10 Manager edit Lebanon Pan Arab Games third place 1997References edit Rollin Jack ed 1981 Rothmans Football Yearbook 1981 82 London Queen Anne Press p 356 ISBN 0 362 02046 9 OCLC 868301130 Terry Yorath s Cardiff pride ahead of Champions League final 13 May 2017 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Honeyball Interview by Lee 6 March 2005 Triumph and despair Terry Yorath The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved 29 January 2019 Hughes Dewi 12 November 2004 Time for Toshack to deliver BBC Sport BBC Retrieved 12 November 2004 Shaw Phil 3 May 1994 Football Lawrence leaves Middlesbrough The Independent London FIFA com Terry Yorath leads the Lebanon revival Fifa com Archived from the original on 11 June 2020 Retrieved 10 July 2020 Leeds United F C History Ozwhitelufc net au Retrieved 10 July 2020 Yorath lands Margate supremo role BBC Sport 2 June 2008 Retrieved 3 June 2008 LUFCTALK Leeds United Fans Forum Lufctalk com Retrieved 21 March 2021 Leeds United Season 1973 1974 Division One Leeds fans org uk Retrieved 6 December 2020 Further reading editBrown Jim 2000 Coventry An Illustrated History Desert Island Books Ltd ISBN 1 874287 36 8 Yorath Terry 2004 Hard Man Hard Knocks Celluloid ISBN 0954596110 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Terry Yorath Terry Yorath at Soccerbase nbsp Terry Yorath management career statistics at Soccerbase Profile on NASL Jerseys Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Terry Yorath amp oldid 1219800455, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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