Mark Cooper (footballer, born 1968) explained

Mark Cooper
Fullname:Mark Nicholas Cooper[1]
Birth Date:18 December 1968
Birth Place:Wakefield, England
Height:[2]
Position:Midfielder
Currentclub:Yeovil Town (manager)
Youthyears1:–1987
Youthclubs1:Bristol City
Years1:1987–1989
Clubs1:Bristol City
Caps1:0
Goals1:0
Years2:1989–1991
Clubs2:Exeter City
Caps2:50
Goals2:12
Years3:1990
Clubs3:Southend United (loan)
Caps3:5
Goals3:0
Years4:1991–1992
Clubs4:Birmingham City
Caps4:39
Goals4:4
Years5:1992–1994
Clubs5:Fulham
Caps5:14
Goals5:0
Years6:1993
Clubs6:Huddersfield Town (loan)
Caps6:10
Goals6:4
Years7:1994
Caps7:2
Goals7:1
Years8:1994–1996
Clubs8:Exeter City
Caps8:88
Goals8:20
Years9:1996–1997
Caps9:31
Goals9:9
Years10:1997
Clubs10:Macclesfield Town (loan)
Caps10:8
Goals10:2
Years11:1997–1998
Clubs11:Leyton Orient
Caps11:1
Goals11:0
Years12:1998–2000
Caps12:17
Goals12:8
Years13:2000
Clubs13:Telford United (loan)
Caps13:5
Goals13:1
Years14:2000–2001
Clubs14:Hednesford Town
Caps14:24
Goals14:4
Years15:2001–2002
Caps15:48
Goals15:18
Years16:2002–2007
Clubs16:Tamworth
Caps16:104
Goals16:31
Years17:2007
Clubs17:Hinckley United
Caps17:15
Goals17:1
Years18:2007–2009
Clubs18:Kettering Town
Caps18:1
Goals18:1
Totalcaps:457
Totalgoals:115
Manageryears1:2004–2007
Managerclubs1:Tamworth
Manageryears2:2007–2009
Managerclubs2:Kettering Town
Manageryears3:2009–2010
Managerclubs3:Peterborough United
Manageryears4:2010–2011
Managerclubs4:Darlington
Manageryears5:2012
Managerclubs5:Kettering Town
Manageryears6:2013
Managerclubs6:AFC Telford United
Manageryears7:2013–2015
Managerclubs7:Swindon Town
Manageryears8:2016
Managerclubs8:Notts County
Manageryears9:2016–2021
Managerclubs9:Forest Green Rovers
Manageryears10:2021–2022
Managerclubs10:Barrow
Manageryears11:2022–
Managerclubs11:Yeovil Town

Mark Nicholas Cooper (born 18 December 1968) is an English former association football player and manager who played as a midfielder. He is currently the manager of Yeovil Town.

Cooper followed his father Terry into the sport, starting his career with Bristol City in 1987. During a 22-year playing career he was at 17 clubs, including three on loan and two spells at Exeter City. He played 457 league games, during which he scored 115 goals, with his five-year spell at non-League Tamworth being his longest at any club. At two of his final three clubs, he also combined the role with being manager. He then went into management full-time, with clubs both outside and within the Football League.

Playing career

Born in Wakefield, West Riding of Yorkshire, Cooper's football career started in 1987, where he first appeared on the books of Bristol City as a trainee, but never made any first team appearances for the club. After two seasons with the Robins, Cooper moved on to Exeter City, managed by his father, in October 1989. He played 50 games and scored 12 goals for the south-western club, and during his time with The Grecians, Mark went on loan to Southend United, where he only made 5 appearances.

In September 1991, Cooper joined Birmingham City. He played a total of 39 games, and scored 4 goals for the Midlands club. Cooper next signed for London club Fulham for a £40,000 fee. After only 14 games for the club, and a brief loan spell with Huddersfield Town in 1993, he moved on to Wycombe Wanderers, before returning for a second spell with Exeter City in February 1994.

Two seasons later Cooper went north to Hartlepool United, where he made 31 appearances and scored 9 goals. His third and final loan spell was with Macclesfield Town in September 1997, where he spent two months and made just 8 appearances, scoring twice. In December 1997, Cooper joined Leyton Orient on a non-contract basis, before moving on to Rushden & Diamonds.

After two years with the club, Cooper moved on to Hednesford Town. Cooper then moved on to Forest Green Rovers, where he was club captain and named Supporters' Player of the Year. This was his final team before joining Tamworth as a player in May 2002.

Managerial career

At the start of the 2003–04 season Cooper was appointed player/assistant manager at Tamworth and moved up to manager following the departure of Darron Gee for the 2004–05 season.[3]

During his time as Tamworth manager, Cooper managed to get them into the third round of the FA Cup in two consecutive seasons. The first time they played against Stoke City at the Britannia Stadium and they managed to force a replay at their own ground, where the game was decided on penalties. The following season they played against Norwich City and lost 4–1.

Tamworth's league form did not match their cup exploits, however. In the 2005–06 season Tamworth finished second-bottom of the Conference, and only survived when Canvey Island resigned from the league. The following season went little better, and on 24 January 2007, he left Tamworth by mutual consent, with the club bottom of the Conference table.[4]

On 16 May 2007, Cooper was appointed manager of Kettering Town.[5] He had a successful first season with the Poppies, winning the Conference North title with a margin of 17 points. In the 2008–09 season, he guided Kettering to the FA Cup fourth round, a joint record for the furthest the club have been in the competition, where they faced Premier League team Fulham. He also guided the Poppies to eight place in the Conference National, completing a successful return to that division.

After days of speculation, on 13 November 2009, Cooper agreed in principle to a three-and-a-half-year contract to become Darren Ferguson's successor as manager of Championship side Peterborough United.[6] He was appointed as manager the following day.[7] He left Kettering second in the table and on a twelve-game unbeaten run. The Poppies were also in the Second Round of the FA Cup, and had been handed a dream tie against Leeds United. Cooper managed his last game as a Poppy away at Cambridge United where his side won 2–0, Cooper was applauded off the pitch by the Kettering Town faithful and had tears running down his cheeks.

On 25 November, he made his first signing as Peterborough manager, signing Exodus Geohaghon from former club Kettering Town. On 19 December, Peterborough won their first game with Cooper in charge, a 2–1 home win against Watford. Later that month, they recovered from a 0–4 home deficit to Cardiff City to claim a 4–4 draw. Cooper was sacked just 13 games into his tenure on 1 February 2010 with only 1 win in those 13 games.[8]

Cooper was named Darlington manager on 29 June 2010, where he signed a two-year contract.[9] Chairman Raj Singh turned down official approaches from Lincoln City and York City for Cooper in October.[10] Cooper's first season with Darlington in 2010–11 was deemed a success. After a rocky start to the season the team recovered, going on a run of only one defeat in 20 league and cup matches from January 2011, eventually finishing in a creditable league position of 7th. Darlington under Cooper's guidance also reached the second round of the FA Cup, and beat Mansfield Town 1–0 at Wembley to win the 2011 FA Trophy Final. Following what the chairman described as "recent results ... closer to relegation form than promotion form", Cooper was dismissed as Darlington manager on 24 October 2011.[11]

On 4 January 2012, Cooper was appointed caretaker manager of Kettering Town,[12] but withdrew from the role after only one match citing the club's off-field issues.[13]

Cooper was appointed manager at AFC Telford United on 31 January 2013 after Andy Sinton was sacked.[14] After just five games in charge – one draw and four defeats – he was appointed assistant to new Swindon Town manager Kevin MacDonald.[15]

On 20 August 2013, he was appointed manager of Swindon Town, after taking over as assistant manager from when MacDonald resigned on 13 July 2013.[16] He led the club to 8th in his first season in charge during the 2013–14 Football League One campaign, and followed that up by qualifying for the 2014–15 League One play-offs the following season. After play-off semi-final success over Sheffield United,[17] he led the club out in the 2015 League One play-off final at Wembley Stadium but was denied promotion, losing 4–0 to Preston North End.[18] Later after play-off final defeat, he sold midfield duo Ben Gladwin and Massimo Luongo to Queens Park Rangers for undisclosed seven-figure transfer fees.[19]

On 17 October 2015, following a 2–0 defeat to Millwall, it was announced that he had parted company with Swindon Town.[20]

Cooper was appointed manager of League Two Notts County on 20 March 2016 on a short-term contract until the end of the season. He was set a points target which, if met, would bring a permanent deal.[21] He met the target but chose to leave the club.

Forest Green Rovers

After leaving Notts County, Cooper became manager of National League club Forest Green Rovers; when he joined, on 9 May, they had just reached the 2016 National League play-off final, although caretaker manager Scott Bartlett took charge for the final at Wembley with Cooper in an advisory role.[22] Despite losing that final to Grimsby Town, Cooper led Forest Green to promotion to the Football League for the first time in the following season, beating Tranmere Rovers in the 2017 play-off final.[23]

On 23 November 2019 Mark Cooper was accused of provoking Leyton Orient Interim Head Coach Ross Embleton with a comment about the passing of Justin Edinburgh. Cooper denied the allegations, and the Football Association decided not to investigate the matter further.[24]

On 11 April 2021, Forest Green Rovers parted company with Cooper after five years at the club during which he oversaw a historic promotion to the Football League.[25]

Barrow

On 28 May 2021, Cooper was appointed as manager of Barrow after weeks of speculation, signing a three-year deal with the club.[26]

On 17 February 2022, Cooper was given an eight-game touchline ban for comments he allegedly made to a female assistant referee which included a reference to gender.[27]

On 20 March 2022, Cooper left his role as manager by mutual consent the day after a 2–1 Cumbrian Derby defeat to Carlisle United that left his side in 21st position.[28]

Yeovil Town

On 28 October 2022, Cooper was appointed manager of National League side Yeovil Town, signing a two-and-a-half-year deal.[29] Under Cooper, Yeovil were relegated from the National League to the National League South on 18 April 2023.[30]

An impressive start to the 2023–24 season saw Cooper awarded the Manager of the Month award for October 2023 having overseen five wins from five.[31] His winning streak led to a club record of 14 consecutive wins in November, with Yeovil top of the league.[32] [33] On 11 April 2024, a 2–0 victory over Truro City saw Yeovil's promotion as champions secured.

Personal life

He is the son of former Leeds United and England full-back Terry Cooper. Mark's son, Charlie, also became a footballer; who plays for his father at Yeovil.

Managerial statistics

[34]

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
Tamworth<-- the stats for this row don't appear in the Soccerbase source above the table -->28 April 200424 January 2007
Kettering Town16 May 200714 November 2009
Peterborough United14 November 20091 February 2010
Darlington29 June 201024 October 2011
Kettering Town4 January 201218 January 2012
AFC Telford United31 January 20131 March 2013
Swindon Town13 July 201317 October 2015
Notts County20 March 20167 May 2016
Forest Green Rovers9 May 201611 April 2021
Barrow28 May 202120 March 2022
Yeovil Town28 October 2022Present
Total

Honours

Manager

Kettering Town

2007–08Darlington

2010–11[35]

Forest Green Rovers

Yeovil Town

2023–24[36]

Individual

November 2014[37]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hugman . Barry J. . The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–2005 . Queen Anne Press . 2005 . 137 . 1-85291-665-6.
  2. Web site: Mark Cooper . Soccerbase . Centurycomm . 30 December 2019.
  3. News: Tamworth appoint Cooper . BBC Sport . 28 April 2004 . 26 January 2010.
  4. News: Cooper and Tamworth part company . BBC Sport . 24 January 2007 . 26 January 2010.
  5. News: Kettering unveil Cooper as boss . BBC Sport . 17 May 2007 . 17 May 2007.
  6. News: Cooper agrees to become Posh boss . Peterborough Today . 13 November 2009 . 26 January 2010.
  7. News: Cooper confirmed as Posh manager . 14 November 2009 . BBC Sport . 14 November 2009.
  8. News: Mark Cooper sacked as Peterborough United manager . BBC Sport . 1 February 2010 . 1 February 2010.
  9. News: Peter . Barron . Cooper confirmed as new Quakers manager . The Northern Echo . Darlington . 29 June 2010 . 29 June 2010.
  10. News: Craig . Stoddart . Quakers ready to fight with Cooper on brink . The Northern Echo . Darlington . 11 October 2010 . 11 October 2010.
  11. News: Darlington part company with manager Mark Cooper . BBC Sport . 24 October 2011 . 25 October 2011.
  12. News: Mark Cooper in for Mark Stimson at Kettering Town. BBC Sport . 4 January 2012 . 4 January 2012.
  13. News: Mark Cooper puts Kettering Town role on hold . BBC Sport . 18 January 2012 . 16 April 2012.
  14. News: AFC Telford: Mark Cooper becomes interim first-team boss. 31 January 2013 . BBC Sport . 31 January 2013.
  15. News: Mark Cooper leaves AFC Telford to take Swindon Town assistant role . BBC Sport . 1 March 2013 . 1 March 2013.
  16. News: Mark Cooper: Swindon Town assistant given manager's job . BBC Sport . 20 August 2013.
  17. News: Swindon Town 5–5 Sheffield United . Nabil . Hassan . BBC Sport . 11 May 2015 . 1 February 2019.
  18. News: Preston North End 4–0 Swindon Town . Nathan . Middleton . BBC Sport . 24 May 2015 . 1 February 2019.
  19. Web site: QPR sign Massimo Luongo and Ben Gladwin from Swindon Town . The Guardian . Press Association . 28 May 2015 . 1 February 2019.
  20. News: Swindon Town: Mark Cooper leaves League One club. 17 October 2015 . BBC Sport. 26 October 2015.
  21. News: Mark Cooper: Notts County manager gets points target . BBC Sport . 20 March 2016 . 9 May 2016.
  22. News: Mark Cooper: Forest Green Rovers name new manager . BBC Sport . 9 May 2016 . 9 May 2016.
  23. News: Tranmere Rovers 1–3 Forest Green Rovers . Tom . Garry . BBC Sport . 14 May 2017 . 5 December 2023.
  24. News: Leyton Orient: Ross Embleton to 'look forward' after Mark Cooper jibe row. BBC Sport. 29 November 2019.
  25. Web site: Club Statement: Mark Cooper. fgr.co.uk. 11 April 2021.
  26. Web site: Mark Cooper Appointed As Barrow Manager. barrowafc.com. 28 May 2021.
  27. News: Mark Cooper: Barrow boss gets eight-game touchline ban . BBC Sport . 17 February 2022 . 17 February 2022.
  28. Web site: Club Statement: Mark Cooper. barrowafc.com. 20 March 2022. 20 March 2022.
  29. Web site: Club News Mark Cooper appointed as First Team Manager . Yeovil Town F.C. . 28 October 2022 . 28 October 2022 .
  30. News: Wrexham on brink of title as Yeovil relegated . BBC Sport . 28 December 2023.
  31. Web site: A Tale Of Tremendous Turn Arounds For Our South Stars!. www.thenationalleague.org.uk. 14 November 2023. 14 November 2023.
  32. Web site: Jenkins . Paul . 15 November 2023 . Yeovil Town record 14th straight win as Young nets hat-trick . 28 December 2023 . Somerset Live .
  33. Web site: Jenkins . Paul . 9 November 2023 . Yeovil Town eye club record 13th straight win after Torquay triumph . 28 December 2023 . Somerset Live .
  34. Web site: Managers: Mark Cooper . Soccerbase . Centurycomm . 1 February 2019.
  35. News: 7 May 2011 . FA Trophy final: Darlington 1–0 Mansfield Town . BBC Sport . 13 April 2022.
  36. News: Yeovil Town: Club secure promotion to National League after season in sixth tier . BBC Sport . 11 April 2024 . 11 April 2024.
  37. News: Mark Cooper named Sky Bet League 1 Manager of the Month . EFL . 5 December 2014 . 3 October 2022.
  38. Web site: A Tale Of Tremendous Turn Arounds For Our South Stars! . The National League . 14 November 2023 . 14 November 2023 .
  39. Web site: Elliot . Sam . 8 June 2024 . Bossing It! Your Managers Of The Season Are Crowned . 9 June 2024 . The Vanarama National League .