Stan Ternent Explained

Stan Ternent
Fullname:Francis Stanley Ternent[1]
Birth Date:16 June 1946
Birth Place:Gateshead, England
Position:Midfielder
Years1:1966–1968
Years2:1968–1974
Years3:1974
Clubs3:Sunderland
Caps1:5
Caps2:188
Caps3:0
Goals1:0
Goals2:5
Goals3:0
Totalcaps:193
Totalgoals:5
Manageryears1:1979–1980
Manageryears2:1989–1991
Manageryears3:1995–1998
Manageryears4:1998–2004
Manageryears5:2004–2005
Manageryears6:2008
Managerclubs1:Blackpool
Managerclubs2:Hull City
Managerclubs3:Bury
Managerclubs4:Burnley
Managerclubs5:Gillingham
Managerclubs6:Huddersfield Town

Francis Stanley Ternent (born 16 June 1946) is an English former footballer and manager. He managed Blackpool, Hull City, Bury, Burnley, Gillingham and Huddersfield Town. He was a scout for Hull City until January 2017. As a manager, he won three promotions between 1996 and 2000, including two in succession (from Division Three to Division One) with Bury. The other came with Burnley in 1999–2000.

Playing career

Born in Gateshead, Ternent signed as an apprentice for Burnley after being spotted by scout Jack Hixon. Ternent found first team opportunities limited at Burnley and was transferred to Second Division Carlisle United, where he gained a reputation as a hard tackling midfielder. Carlisle won promotion to the First Division at the end of the 1973–74 season, but Ternent had suffered a serious knee injury earlier that season. Despite an attempted comeback with Sunderland the following season, Ternent was forced to retire from playing later in 1974, at the age of 28.

Managerial career

Upon retiring, he became a coach at Sunderland, firstly, then Blackpool, assisting Bob Stokoe. Ternent himself became manager of the Tangerines in 1979, his first such role, and Blackpool's sixth manager in a decade.

Immediately upon his appointment at Bloomfield Road, Ternent began to reshape the team, spending large sums on new players. Jack Ashurst was purchased from Sunderland for a then-club-record £132,400. Fellow newcomers included Dave Bamber, Colin Morris, Peter Noble and Tom McAlister. Despite the fresh faces, the Seasiders' fortunes did not improve, and by early 1980 they were in the bottom half of the Third Division. Ternent was sacked on 1 February 1980, at the time becoming the club's shortest-serving manager in their history.

He was part of the coaching staff at Bradford City and served as assistant manager to Steve Coppell at Crystal Palace before his next role as manager came nine years later, at Hull City from 1989 to 1991. He lost his job in January 1991, a few months before the club suffered relegation from the Second Division. From 1991 to 1993 he was assistant manager to Ian Porterfield and then David Webb at Chelsea before again being made redundant.

Ternent was not out of the game for long. He moved from the Premier League to Division Three in a matter of weeks, becoming Mike Walsh's assistant at Bury. When Walsh quit in October 1995, Ternent moved up to the manager's seat, and seven months later he took them to Division Two as the third-placed team in Division Three. A year later they won the Division Two championship and survived the first season in Division One; however, Ternent left Gigg Lane at the end of the 1997–98 season to take charge of Burnley in Division Two.

Ternent inherited a club in chaos after the ill-fated tenure of Chris Waddle, and a major clearout ensued. Despite a number of heavy defeats, Ternent gained the support of the new owner and chairman, Barry Kilby, and finished the season with an unbeaten run of eleven games to finish in 15th position. Ternent's second season as Burnley manager, 1999–2000 saw the club finishing as runners-up, securing automatic promotion. Over the next two seasons under Ternent, Burnley became an established Division One club, achieving consecutive 7th-place finishes. The next two seasons were rather more disappointing as the collapse of ITV Digital hit the club's finances, and despite reaching the FA Cup quarter finals in 2003, the club's board did not renew his contract after the 2003–04 campaign. At the end of his final game against Sunderland, an emotional Ternent took a lap of honour around Turf Moor to a standing ovation from the Burnley supporters. Ternent made a brief comeback in 2004–05 with Gillingham, taking Ronnie Jepson from Burnley to be his assistant; however, his short-term contract as manager was not renewed, as despite a heroic attempt at survival they were relegated to League One. Ternent quit Gillingham in May 2005.[2]

In November 2007, he was appointed to the backroom staff of new Derby County manager Paul Jewell. He left this role on 24 April 2008 to take up the reins at Huddersfield Town in place of Andy Ritchie, who had been relieved of his duties at the beginning of the month. Ex-Town player Ronnie Jepson, appointed on the same day, became his assistant. He officially started his new job on 28 April, leaving Gerry Murphy in charge of Town's last home game against Walsall on 26 April and their last away game at Luton Town on 3 May.[3]

Backed by a large budget, Ternent signed Keigan Parker, Jim Goodwin, Andy Butler, Chris Lucketti, Michael Flynn, Gary Roberts and David Unsworth during the opening weeks of 2008–09 pre-season. On 4 November, Ternent left the Galpharm Stadium after just over six months in charge of the Terriers.[4] To date, that is the second-shortest reign of any permanent manager in Huddersfield Town's history.[5]

In September 2009 he became a scout for Sunderland.[6] In September 2012, Ternent was appointed as Chief Recruitment Officer for Hull.[7] He left the club in January 2017, following the sacking of head coach Mike Phelan.[8]

Personal life

In January 2007, Ternent faced assault charges after being accused of headbutting a man at Burnley Cricket Club in August 2006.[9] He was cleared in September 2007. His defence included a statement by Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson.[10]

Managerial statistics

TeamCountryFromToRecord
GWLDWin %
Blackpool19 September 19791 February 198022510722.7
Hull City8 November 198931 January 19916219281530.6
Bury4 September 19952 June 199814960444540.3
Burnley2 June 19983 June 20043121221088239.1
Gillingham7 December 200421 May 200525771128.0
Huddersfield Town28 April 20084 November 20081858527.8

Honours

As a player

Carlisle United

As a manager

Bury

Burnley

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hugman , Barry J. . The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–2005 . Queen Anne Press . 2005 . 605 . 1-85291-665-6 .
  2. News: 15 May 2005. Ternent quits as Gillingham boss. BBC Sport. 30 August 2007.
  3. News: 24 April 2008. Ternent named Huddersfield boss. BBC Sport. 4 November 2008.
  4. News: Huddersfield sack manager Ternent. BBC Sport. 4 November 2008. 4 November 2008.
  5. Web site: Huddersfield Town | Match | Pre-Match Analysis | CREWE ALEXANDRA: PRE-MATCH ANALYSIS . 11 May 2009 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090426000141/http://www.htafc.com/page/PreMatch/0,,10312~1562580,00.html# . 26 April 2009 . dead .
  6. Web site: Ternent joins Sunderland scouting network . Sunderland Echo. 20 September 2009.
  7. News: Hull City: Stan Ternant's 'experience' key to Steve Bruce. 11 September 2012. Hull Daily Mail. 31 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121028133238/http://www.thisishullandeastriding.co.uk/Hull-City-Stan-Ternant-s-experience-key-Steve/story-16871707-detail/story.html#. 28 October 2012. dead.
  8. News: Tigers Confirm Coaching Staff Departures . 4 January 2017 . Hull City A.F.C. . 4 January 2017.
  9. News: 29 January 2007. Ex-Clarets boss appears in court. BBC Sport. 30 August 2007.
  10. News: 7 September 2007. Ex-Burnley boss cleared of attack. BBC Sport. 7 September 2007.