Jason Beckford Explained

Jason Beckford
Fullname:Jason Neil Beckford
Birth Date:14 February 1970
Birth Place:Moss Side, Manchester, England
Height:[1]
Position:Forward
Youthyears1:1986–1987
Youthclubs1:Manchester City
Years1:1987–1991
Clubs1:Manchester City
Caps1:20
Goals1:1
Years2:1991
Clubs2:Blackburn Rovers (loan)
Caps2:4
Goals2:0
Years3:1991
Clubs3:Port Vale (loan)
Caps3:5
Goals3:1
Years4:1992–1994
Clubs4:Birmingham City
Caps4:7
Goals4:2
Years5:1994
Clubs5:Bury (loan)
Caps5:3
Goals5:0
Years6:1994
Clubs6:Stoke City
Caps6:4
Goals6:0
Years7:1994–1995
Clubs7:Millwall
Caps7:9
Goals7:0
Years8:1995–1996
Caps8:1
Goals8:0
Totalcaps:53
Totalgoals:4
Manageryears1:2003–2007
Managerclubs1:Mossley
Manageryears2:2018
Managerclubs2:Vaughan Azzurri (assistant)
Manageryears3:2022–2023
Managerclubs3:Simcoe County Rovers

Jason Neil Beckford (born 14 February 1970) is an English professional football manager and former player. His elder brother Darren also played professional football.

Beckford began his playing career as a forward with Manchester City, where he played 12 times in the 1988–89 Second Division promotion winning campaign. He then had brief loan spells at Blackburn Rovers and Port Vale, before signing with Birmingham City for a £150,000 fee in the 1991–92 Third Division promotion-winning season. He was loaned out to Bury, before joining Stoke City in 1994. He ended the 1994–95 season at Millwall before announcing his retirement after spending the 1995–96 season with Northampton Town.

Beckford coached in the Academy at Bolton Wanderers, before being appointed assistant manager of Mossley in June 2002. He was appointed as manager 13 months later and went on to lead the club to promotions out of the North West Counties League in 2003–04 and the Northern Premier League Division One in 2005–06. He left the club at the end of the 2006–07 season and went on to coach at Bolton and Oldham Athletic. He emigrated to Canada in 2012 and was appointed as head coach of Simcoe County Rovers in March 2022. He led Rovers to the League1 Ontario title in 2023.

Playing career

Manchester City

Beckford began his career at Manchester City in 1987–88, who were then a Second Division side under the stewardship of Mel Machin. Beckford signed as an apprentice at age 16, turned professional at age 17, and made his first-team debut against Middlesbrough. City won promotion as the division's runners-up in 1988–89, and went on to finish 14th in the First Division in 1989–90 under new boss Howard Kendall. Towards the end of the 1990–91 season, new manager Peter Reid allowed Beckford to drop down a division to play four games on loan at Don Mackay's Blackburn Rovers. After returning from Ewood Park, he found himself out of the first-team picture at Maine Road. John Rudge – who had sold his brother Darren a few months earlier – brought Beckford on loan to Port Vale in September as cover for the injured Keith Houchen.[2] He claimed a goal in a 2–1 win over Grimsby Town at Blundell Park on 12 October, before leaving Vale Park after five Second Division appearances.[2]

Birmingham City

He moved on to Birmingham City in the 1991–92 season for a £150,000 fee. His Blues career was blighted by a serious knee injury for 20 months, which kept him out of manager Terry Cooper's first-team plans. He scored the "Blues" consolation goal on his debut in a 2–1 defeat to Stoke City at the Victoria Ground on 4 January. He started two league games as Birmingham won promotion as runners-up of the Third Division. He started three games at the start of the 1992–93 campaign and claimed a goal at St Andrew's in a 2–0 win over Southend United on 1 September. Beckford's only appearances in the 1993–94 season came at Gigg Lane in a three-game loan spell with Mike Walsh's Bury after coming back from long-term injury at Birmingham.

Later career

Beckford spent the first half of the 1994–95 season at Stoke City but made just three starts for the "Potters". He then joined Mick McCarthy's Millwall and played nine First Division games in the second half of the 1994–95 season. However, he left The Old Den at the end of the season and arrived at Third Division side Northampton Town for the start of the 1995–96 campaign. He made four substitute appearances for Ian Atkins's "Cobblers", before announcing his retirement at Sixfields due to the persistent knee injury.

Management and coaching career

Beckford arrived at Mossley after coaching at Manchester City and the Bolton Wanderers' Academy side. He was appointed assistant manager in June 2002 and, following Ally Pickering's sudden departure in July 2003 he was appointed team manager.[3] He led the "Lilywhites" to second place in the North West Counties League in 2003–04, which was enough to secure a place in the Northern Premier League. A seventh-place finish in 2004–05 saw Mossley miss out on the Division One play-offs by a three-point margin, before they won the league in 2005–06. However, they could not survive in the Premier Division, and Beckford left the club after relegation in 2006–07.

After leaving this post in April 2007, he returned to Bolton in 2008 as part of the club's restructured youth academy, and also worked as the under-16 coach alongside Steve Morgan at Oldham Athletic.[4] In August 2012, he moved to Canada to work as Newmarket Soccer Club's technical director.[5] He was later Technical Director at Kleinberg Nobleton SC and Vaughan SC, serving as Club Head Coach 2016-2019.[6] In March 2022, he was appointed as head coach of League1 Ontario club Simcoe County Rovers.[7] He was named the league's Coach of the Year.[8] He departed the club at the end of 2023, after leading Rovers to the league title that season with victory over Scrosoppi in the play-off final.[9]

Personal life

His parents, Dudley and Valdene, were from Jamaica.[10] His brother, Darren Beckford, is a former professional footballer. His son Ethan Beckford has also played professional football.[11]

Career statistics

As a player

Source:

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Manchester City1987–88Second Division5000000050
1988–89Second Division81004000121
1989–90First Division5000000050
1990–91First Division2000110031
Total201005100252
Blackburn Rovers (loan)1990–91Second Division4000000040
Port Vale (loan)1991–92Second Division5100000051
Birmingham City1991–92Third Division4100001051
1992–93First Division3100000031
1993–94First Division0000000000
Total7200001082
Bury (loan)1993–94Third Division3000000030
1994–95First Division4000001050
Millwall1994–95First Division9000000090
Northampton Town1995–96Third Division1010002040
Career total534105140635

A.  The "Other" column constitutes appearances and goals in the Anglo-Italian Cup and Football League Trophy.

As a manager

Honours

As a Player

Manchester City

Birmingham City

As a Manager

Mossley

Simcoe County Rovers

2023[9]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rothmans football yearbook, 1997-98 . 31 July 1997 . London : Headline . 978-0-7472-7738-5 .
  2. Book: Kent, Jeff. Port Vale Personalities. Witan Books. 22. 1996. 0-9529152-0-0.
  3. Web site: Jason BECKFORD, 2003 – 2007. Mossley Managers. 13 May 2009. 30 May 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190530092253/http://www.mossleyweb.com/Managers1.htm. dead.
  4. News: Centre of Excellence Programme at Boundary Park. 24 July 2011. oldhamathletic.co.uk. 17 August 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100411062734/http://www.oldhamathletic.co.uk/page/CentreOfExcellence/0,,10337,00.html. 11 April 2010.
  5. Web site: Cudmorw. John. Newmarket Soccer Club hires new technical director. yorkregion.com. 14 January 2013.
  6. Web site: Jason Beckford Assistant coach. League1 Ontario.
  7. Web site: Rovers Name Former Manchester City Forward Jason Beckford As Head Coach. Northern Tribune. 5 March 2022 . John. Jacques.
  8. Web site: Men's Premier Division 2023: Award Winners. November 20, 2023. League1 Ontario.
  9. Web site: Coach Beckford leaving Rovers after winning League1 title. 27 October 2023. Barrie Today.
  10. Web site: HiProfile.com . Paul Martin- . Black Coaches Canada Present Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Advocacy in Sports . Black Coaches Canada . 5 March 2022 . en.
  11. Web site: Ethan Beckford – Men's Soccer . Penn State University Athletics . 15 August 2020 . en.