[情報] 藍軍歷任教練

看板Chelsea作者 (首席百人隊長)時間20年前 (2004/06/08 06:09), 編輯推噓0(000)
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http://www.chelseafc.com/article.asp?id=207036 From James to Jose - Chelsea managers Saturday, Jun 05, 2004 Jose Mourinho is either our 22nd or 23rd manager, depending on the recognition you give to William Lewis. We are 99 years old. In our first 50years we had five managers – or six! James Tait Robertson 1905-1906 Our first manager was in his first management job. A 29 year old wing- half, he was player-manager, and had to recruit our first team. William Lewis 1906-1907 Robertson moved to Glossop in October 1906 and club secretary Lewis selected the team for the rest of the season. We won our first promotion, totop flight Division One. David Calderhead 1907-1933 Our longest serving manager, signed after he managed Lincoln to an impressive FA Cup draw (and replay defeat) against us. Highlights: FA Cup runners-up 1915, third in 1920, the signing of big stars like Hughie Gallacher and Alex James in 1930. Lowlights: six seasons in Division Two inthe 1920s, no silverware. Leslie Knighton 1933-1939 Like Calderhead, he was secretary-manager. Jack Whitley took charge of training. How times have changed. Knighton had a good record as manager of Bournemouth and Birmingham. Chelsea possessed great stars in the 1930s but won nothing. Billy Birrell 1939-1952 The man who invented our youth policy and laid the structures for the stars to be produced at the end of the 1950s and throughout the 1960s. He came from managing QPR. Dramatic FA Cup semi-final defeats and escapes fromrelegation were followed by retirement. Ted Drake 1952-1961 Arriving from Reading he was our first tracksuit manager. He changed us from The Pensioners to The Blues to make us more forward thinking and in 1955 won our only League Championship. He then went with youth, we struggled, and when Jimmy Greaves left we fell apart and he left soon after. Tommy Docherty 1961-1967 The most revolutionary and controversial manager to date in his first management job. In came the blue shirt, blue shorts, white socks of the modern era, and regular challenging for silverware. We reached one FA Cup Final, two other semi-finals and an Inter-Cities Fairs Cup semi-final, and we won the yet to be major League Cup. We also finished third in 1965. He left, suspended, in the controversy by which he ruled. But he was fun. Dave Sexton 1967-1974 Former Chelsea coach, latterly manager of Leyton Orient, Sexton took the wild roots of Doc’s reign and shaped them for the thinking coach’s game. We won the FA Cup and European Cup Winners’ Cup. We were League Cup runners-upand came third in the League. For ten years, from 1963 to 1973, we played beautiful football. But wildness won back its freedom and we fell apart. Ron Suart 1974-1975 The former Blackpool manager and assistant to Sexton had no chance of stopping the implosion. We plummeted towards relegation. Eddie McCreadie 1975-1977 A short spell as youth team coach after retiring from his great playing career, McCreadie went with youth as Docherty had done 14 years earlier, but this time the club was near bankrupt and he was unable to prop up the team with buys. Yet we won promotion in 1977, only for him to resign after a row with chairman Brian Mears about a club car. Ken Shellito 1977-1978 Followed the same role as McCreadie, star player to youth coach to first team manager, but he inherited injuries, changed the balance of the side which didn’t work and left us at the bottom. Danny Blanchflower 1978-1979 Famously captained Tottenham to the first double of the 20th century, but wasn’t successful as Northern Ireland manager and in his first club job we completed relegation with a record number of fewest points and went drifting in Division Two. Geoff Hurst 1979-1981 World Cup Final hat-trick hero, but in his first League club job as manager having come from non-League Telford. He resurrected our season and we just missed out on promotion but then we stopped scoring goals and there seemed no way forward. John Neal 1981-1985 The first experienced manager for many years, having done well at Wrexham and Middlesbrough. Fought off relegation to Division Three in 1983 , bought a new team with the aid of assistant Ian McNeill and the money of new chairman Ken Bates, won the Second Division Championship and came sixth in the first season back in the top flight. The birth of the modern era. He was moved upstairs after heart surgery. John Hollins 1985-1988 Great player, first job as manager. At Easter 1986 we were in a position to win the League but fell away to sixth. By the time he was sacked we were heading for relegation. But he bought some good players. Bobby Campbell 1988-1991 Experienced manager with Fulham and Portsmouth, he couldn’t stop the relegation but won the Second Division Championship immediately with a record number of points, and then achieved fifth in the First Division, our highest finish for 20 years. But after big spending in 1991 the team went backwards. Ian Porterfield 1991-1993 Uncertain times as the battle to keep the ground undermined planning for the future. An experienced manager with Sheffield United, Aberdeen and Reading, in his second season he had Don Howe to do the coaching which improved performance. But Don got sick and Ian got sacked. David Webb 1993. ‘Red Adair’ he called himself. To the rescue as the fires threatened to take us out of the newly formed Premiership. Our former playing hero and an experienced manager in the lower divisions. He stabilised the scene but wasn’t retained. Glenn Hoddle 1993-1996 Revolution. In came overseas methods learnt from his playing days at Monaco, and the former Swindon player-manager finally introduced Cup progress and beautiful football if still no major silverware since 1971. We reached the 1994 FA Cup Final and the 1995 European Cup Winners’ Cup Final. He signed Ruud Gullit, Mark Hughes and Dan Petrescu and our world changed. He then went off to manage England. Ruud Gullit 1996-1998 Sexy football. Phenomenal signings: Vialli, Leboeuf, Di Matteo, Zola, De Goey, Poyet, Flo, Le Saux, Babayaro and more. In his first season in his first management job we won the FA Cup. In his second we were second in the League, in the semi-finals of the League Cup and quarter-finals in Europe, but he had lost his way over a six week period of bad results and lost the board. He was sacked. Gianluca Vialli 1998-2000 In his first six months in his first management job we won the League Cup, European Cup Winners’ Cup and UEFA Super Cup. In his second season we came third. In his third season we reached the quarter-finals of the Champions League and won the FA Cup. In his fourth season he won the Charity Shield but was sacked after five League games as we didn’t start strongly and it was felt he’d lost the dressing room. Claudio Ranieri 2000-2004 Easily the longest pedigree of any of our managers, but this was his first job in England. He had won the Italian and Spanish Cups but no Leagues. In his first year he spent £42 m to transform the ageing side, but one FA Cup runner-up and two sixth places were disappointing. In 2003, however, Chelsea finished fourth, returned to the Champions League and with Roman Abramovich’s investment over £100 m was spent in the transfer market. We finished second with our record number of top flight points, got to the semi-final of the Champions League, but did not add to our silverware. He was sacked. Jose Mourinho 2004-? Our first manager to have previously won a League Championship; our first to have previously won a European trophy. Neil Barnett -- ╔═══╗ ╔╗ ╔╗ ╔═══╗ ╔╗ ╔═══╗ ╔═══╗ ╔═══╗ ║╔═╗║ ║║ ║║ ║╔══╝ ║║ ║╔══╝ ║╔══╝ ║╔═╗║ ║║ ╚╝ ║╚═╝║ ║╚══╗ ║║ ║╚══╗ ║╚══╗ ║╚═╝║ ║║ ╔╗ ║╔═╗║ ║╔══╝ ║║ ╚══╗║ ║╔══╝ ║╔═╗║ ║╚═╝║ ║║ ║║ ║╚══╗ ║╚══╗ ╔══╝║ ║╚══╗ ║║ ║║ ╚═══╝ ╚╝ ╚╝ ╚═══╝ ╚═══╝ ╚═══╝ ╚═══╝ ╚╝ ╚╝ -- ※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc) ◆ From: 203.73.69.22 ※ 編輯: JamesCaesar 來自: 203.73.69.22 (06/07 22:58)
文章代碼(AID): #10nEUS_J (Chelsea)
文章代碼(AID): #10nEUS_J (Chelsea)