Steve Evans (footballer, born 1962) explained

Steve Evans
Birth Date:30 October 1962
Birth Place:Glasgow, Scotland
Position:Striker
Currentclub:Rotherham United (manager)
Youthyears1:?–1979
Youthclubs1:Bolton Wanderers
Years1:1979–1981
Years2:1981–1984
Years3:1984–1985
Years4:1985
Years5:1985–1986
Clubs1:Clyde
Clubs2:Albion Rovers
Clubs3:Ayr United
Clubs4:Hamilton Academical
Clubs5:St Johnstone
Caps1:36
Caps2:76
Caps3:30
Caps4:2
Caps5:24
Goals1:4
Goals2:28
Goals3:4
Goals4:0
Goals5:6
Totalcaps:168
Totalgoals:42
Manageryears1:1994–1998
Manageryears2:1998–2002
Manageryears3:2004–2007
Manageryears4:2007–2012
Manageryears5:2012–2015
Manageryears6:2015–2016
Manageryears7:2016–2018
Manageryears8:2018–2019
Manageryears9:2019–2022
Manageryears10:2022–2024
Manageryears11:2024–
Managerclubs1:Stamford
Managerclubs2:Boston United
Managerclubs3:Boston United
Managerclubs4:Crawley Town
Managerclubs5:Rotherham United
Managerclubs6:Leeds United
Managerclubs7:Mansfield Town
Managerclubs8:Peterborough United
Managerclubs11:Rotherham United

Steve Evans (born 30 October 1962) is a Scottish professional football manager and former player who is the manager of EFL League One club Rotherham United.

Born in Glasgow, Scotland, Evans played professional football for Bolton Wanderers, Clyde, Albion Rovers, Ayr United, Hamilton Academical and St Johnstone until a knee ligament injury ended his playing career at 24.

After his retirement he became a manager. Prior to taking charge at Crawley Town, he managed Stamford and Boston United, the latter on two occasions.

A controversial figure, whilst manager of Boston United he was successfully prosecuted for tax evasion. However, in charge of Rotherham United, he led the club to two successive promotions. He left the club in late September 2015. On 19 October 2015, Evans replaced Uwe Rösler as head coach of Leeds United, before being sacked in May 2016.[1]

Early life

Born in Glasgow, Scotland,[2] Evans was spotted by scouts from English team Bolton Wanderers when playing for his local youth football club in Glasgow,[3] and he joined Bolton after leaving school.[3]

Playing career

Evans failed to break into the first team at Bolton and was released in 1979.[4] He then returned to his native Scotland and joined Clyde, where he played in 36 league matches, scoring four goals, before joining Albion Rovers in 1981, where he scored 28 goals in 76 league matches during three years at Cliftonhill. He subsequently moved to Ayr United in 1984, scoring four goals in 30 matches, and to Hamilton Academical in 1985, where he only played in two league matches. He joined St Johnstone in 1985 and scored six goals in 24 matches before a knee ligament injury ended his playing career in 1986, aged 24.[2]

Managerial career

Stamford

Evans fell out of football following his retirement, and was working in sales for Budweiser,[5] when he became manager at Peterborough League side Gedney Hill. He soon moved to Holbeach United for eighteen months, before briefly becoming chairman at Corby Town.[6] His managerial career got going in earnest with Stamford in 1994,[7] who he led to the United Counties Football League Premier Division title and to promotion to the Southern Football League.[8]

Boston United

After resigning as Stamford manager he was appointed manager of Boston United in October 1998.[8] [9] He managed Boston to promotion from the Southern Football League to the Football Conference in 2000 and subsequently to the Football League in 2002. Both promotions have since been overshadowed by revelations of off-the-field cheating.[10]

Evans was suspended by Boston as manager on 4 July 2002 after a much-publicised Football Association (The FA) investigation into "contract irregularities".[11] He later resigned as manager of the club in September 2002, after still being suspended by the club.[12] He was found guilty by The FA in December 2002 of impeding an FA inquiry into contract irregularities.[13] Evans was also suspended from the game for 20 months in January 2003 for involvement of the affairs of Boston,[14] in which players' contracts lodged with the FA contained false salary details.[10] Evans was further accused of impeding the inquiry and fined £8,000.[10] Evans lodged an appeal against charges in May 2003,[15] but The FA rejected his appeal later that month and the punishment stood.[16] Evans later pleaded guilty in court to conspiring to cheat the public revenue, and was given a 12-month prison sentence, suspended for two years.[17] [18]

An announcement was made on 20 February 2004 that Evans would return as Boston's manager on 2 March.[19] In September 2005, Evans and four other people connected with Boston appeared in court, denying fraud charges.[20] In November 2005, Evans was given a £1,000 fine, suspended for a year, after admitting to using insulting or abusive words to the match official in a match against Peterborough United in October 2005.[21] On 11 February 2006, he was escorted from Grimsby Town's stadium Blundell Park by Humberside Police at half-time,[22] after he berated the fourth official after being incensed when Grimsby goalkeeper Steve Mildenhall appeared to handle the ball outside his area and was immediately spoken to by a police officer after a complaint of alleged foul and abusive language. After the match Boston chairman Jon Sotnick accused the football authorities of waging a "conspiracy" against his manager.[23] In October 2006, Evans was linked with the vacant Darlington managerial vacancy, but Boston chairman James Rodwell and Evans both denied the link.[24] Also in October, Evans was sent from the dugout after an altercation with Wycombe Wanderers player Tommy Doherty[25] for which he later received a £1,000 suspended fine from the FA.[26] Despite this, which came on top of his conviction for tax evasion, Evans kept his manager's position at Boston, a decision that angered the Boston United Supporters' Trust.[27]

In March 2007, Evans was left with only 11 professional footballers for the relegation clash with Bury.[28] Although players were back from suspension, Evans was left frustrated after players such as Barnsley's on-loan striker Nathan Joynes quit the club, which left him with just 12 fit senior players and he was forced to put 16- and 17-year-olds on an incomplete substitute's bench.[29] After drawing 1–1 in their penultimate match of the season against relegated Torquay United,[30] Boston needed a win against relegation rivals Wrexham on 5 May 2007 to avoid the drop out of league football.[31] Francis Green gave Boston a 1–0 half-time lead, but in the second half United conceded a penalty kick, which Wrexham defender Ryan Valentine converted. Two late goals from Chris Llewellyn and Michael Proctor gave Wrexham a 3–1 victory to ensure their survival.[32] On 8 May 2007, Evans pledged his commitment to the club despite their relegation and return to non-League football.[33] However, on 27 May, Evans and his assistant manager Paul Raynor resigned from Boston with immediate effect.[34] Evans' two occasions as manager combined at Boston made him the club's second-longest-serving manager behind Fred Tunstall, who had three occasions as manager of the club in the 1930s, 40s and 50s.[35] He managed the team on 354 occasions, which resulted in 145 wins, 99 draws and 110 losses.[36]

Crawley Town

On 29 May 2007, two days after resigning from Boston, Evans took over as Crawley Town manager.[37] He has been sent from the dugout numerous times, which resulted in a ten match ban during the 2008–09 season.[38] He verbally accepted a new three-year contract with Crawley in February 2011.[39] During the 2010–11 season, Crawley reached the fifth round of the FA Cup, beating Swindon Town of League One, Derby County of the Championship and Torquay United of League Two. In the fifth round they were drawn against Manchester United at Old Trafford. Crawley lost this match 1–0 but earned over £1 million for this match alone. Evans stated afterwards "I think we have done our football club proud and we wanted to go away with some respect" and "We have had a fantastic run in the competition and we could not have wished it to finish anywhere else". On 9 April 2011 Crawley clinched promotion to Football League Two for the 2011–12 season. Evans and striker Tyrone Barnett were nominated for League Two Player of the Month and Manager of the Month for August but lost out to Andy Scott and Mark Arber respectively.[40] Despite this, Evans was named October Manager of the Month after achieving five wins, including a 5–2 away victory at AFC Wimbledon, strengthening their push for a second consecutive promotion.[41]

Rotherham United

Evans left Crawley on 9 April 2012 to be appointed manager of fellow League Two club Rotherham United on a three-year contract.[42] In September 2012, Evans was given a six-match stadium ban and fined £3,000 by the Football Association after being found guilty of "using abusive and insulting words and behaviour" towards a female member of Bradford City's staff, an incident which occurred during his time at Crawley.[43]

In his first full season at the club, Rotherham showed inconsistent form throughout, but a run of 5 wins in their last 5 games saw them elevate into the automatic promotion places, finishing second behind champions Gillingham, after a 2–0 win over Aldershot Town saw Rotherham promoted on the final day.[44] Starting the following season in League One, Evans continued to produce good results, an honorable mention being the 6–0 win at home against Notts County.[45] Rotherham were promoted later that season in May 2014, drawing the play-off final 2–2 over 120 minutes, and subsequently beating Leyton Orient 4–3 in a penalty shootout.[46]

On 29 May 2014, Evans agreed a new three-year contract with Rotherham, live on Sky Sports News,[47] a deal which would commit him to the club until 2017. Under his management Rotherham survived their first season back in the Championship, with a game to spare. Evans wore a sombrero, shorts and sandals to the fixture against Leeds United at Elland Road on the final day of the season by way of a celebration.[48]

On 28 September 2015, Evans and his assistant manager Paul Raynor left Rotherham with the club citing that the two parties wanted to take the club in different directions.[49] He was replaced as manager on 9 October by former Leeds Head Coach Neil Redfearn.[50]

Leeds United

On 19 October 2015, Evans joined fellow Championship side Leeds United on a rolling contract until the end of the 2015–16 season, with the option of a second year, replacing previous head coach Uwe Rösler. Evans' assistant at Rotherham, Paul Raynor, also joined him as part of the coaching staff.[51]

Evans took charge of a Leeds side one point off the relegation zone, however, he managed to guide Leeds to a 13th-place finish at the end of the 2015–16 season with Leeds finishing 15 points behind the playoff positions. He also gave débuts to 3 academy graduates during the season with Lewie Coyle, Bailey Peacock-Farrell and Ronaldo Vieira all making their débuts under Evans during his tenure.[52] Evans also helped Leeds have an FA Cup run, however his side were knocked out on 20 February 2016 against Premier League side Watford in a narrow 1–0 defeat after a high-profile own goal from Leeds defender Scott Wootton to send Watford through to the FA Cup quarter-final.[53]

After the final game of the 2015–16 season against Preston North End, a tearful Evans proclaimed that he had a 'gut feeling' that his contract would not be renewed by club owner Massimo Cellino.[54] At the end of the season Cellino approached MK Dons manager Karl Robinson and Bristol Rovers manager Darrell Clarke to replace Evans, but neither accepted.[55] [56] Evans, along with his assistant Paul Raynor, was sacked on the 31st of May.[57] The following month he accepted personal terms to become manager at League One side Oldham Athletic, but then turned the post down.[58]

Mansfield Town

Evans was appointed manager of League Two side Mansfield Town on 16 November 2016, replacing Adam Murray.[59] He resigned on 27 February 2018,[60] saying he wanted to go and work in China.[61]

Peterborough United

Evans was appointed manager of League One side Peterborough United on 28 February 2018, one day after leaving Mansfield.[62] On 23 January 2019 he was charged by the FA over comments made to a match official during a defeat against Luton Town,[63] and then on the 26th both he and assistant Paul Raynor were released from their contracts, with Darren Ferguson taking charge just hours later.[64] [65]

Gillingham

On 21 May 2019, Evans was announced as the new manager of Gillingham and began his role on 1 June 2019.[66] Evans was awarded the League One Manager of the Month award for March 2021 after achieving 17 points from a possible 24.[67]

In August 2021, Evans started the 2020-21 season by being awarded a yellow card in the first match against Lincoln City, and then a red card in the next game, a EFL Cup fixture against Crawley Town. He was then once again charged with verbally abusing a match official.[68]

On 9 January 2022, following a 4–0 home defeat to Ipswich Town that left the side 22nd in the table, seven points from safety, Evans was sacked by the club.[69]

Stevenage

Evans was appointed as manager of League Two club Stevenage on 16 March 2022, the club sitting in 22nd position just three points clear of the relegation zone with the team below having two games in hand.[70] Survival was secured with three matches remaining after a run of ten points across Evans' first six matches, culminating in a 2–0 home win over Tranmere Rovers, saw his side move seven points clear of Oldham Athletic who were relegated at Stevenage's expense.[71] Evans' 2022–23 campaign started strongly with 10 victories out of 13 in the League, resulting in Stevenage sitting top of the league on 8 October 2022.[72] In an FA Cup third-round tie at Premier League side Aston Villa, Evans' side came from behind to win 2–1 at Villa Park.[73] A 2–0 win against Grimsby Town, on 29 April 2023, confirmed Stevenage's promotion to League One.[74] On 5 May 2023 Evans was named the League Two Manager of the Month of April after guiding the team through eight games in the month with only one defeat.[75]

Following an impressive first season after promotion that saw Stevenage in a race for the play-offs, Evans was nominated for League One Manager of the Year, ultimately losing out to Portsmouth manager John Mousinho.[76] [77] He left the club in April 2024 having won 57 of his 120 matches with the club.[78]

Rotherham United

On 17 April 2024, Evans returned to already relegated Championship club Rotherham United on a three-year deal.[79] [78]

Personal life

As of 2004, Evans was married to Sarah-Jane and had two daughters.[80] He is a supporter of Scottish club Celtic.[81]

Managerial statistics

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
Boston UnitedOctober 19984 July 2002
Boston United2 March 200427 May 2007
Crawley Town29 May 20079 April 2012[82]
Rotherham United9 April 201228 September 2015
Leeds United19 October 201531 May 2016
Mansfield Town16 November 201627 February 2018
Peterborough United28 February 201826 January 2019
Gillingham1 June 20199 January 2022
Stevenage16 March 202217 April 2024
Rotherham United17 April 2024Present
Total

Honours

As a manager

Stamford

Boston United

2001–02

Crawley Town

2010–11

Rotherham United

2014

Stevenage

Individual

August 2018, March 2021

October 2011, April 2023[85]

Notes and References

  1. News: Leeds United Official Site. 31 May 2016 . 31 May 2016 . CLUB STATEMENT: STEVE EVANS United part company with head coach..
  2. Web site: Steve Evans . 18 March 2007 . Post War English & Scottish Football League A – Z Player's Database .
  3. Web site: Steve Evans' profile . 10 June 2007 . Boston United F.C.
  4. Web site: Sobot . Lee . 2015-10-19 . Five things you didn't know about new Leeds United manager Steve Evans... . 2023-05-05 . . en.
  5. Web site: 28 July 2015 . Rotherham boss Steve Evans tells Goals on Sunday about meeting Michael Douglas . 2023-05-05 . . en.
  6. Web site: Burley. Julian. 2020-08-31. Who Are The League One Managers? No.10: Steve Evans (Gillingham). 2020-09-06. Vital Lincoln City. en.
  7. Web site: History of Stamford Association Football Club. Stamford Daniels. 6 April 2011.
  8. News: Evans for Conference side Crawley. Stamford Mercury. 31 May 2007. 6 April 2011.
  9. Web site: Steve Evans: Manager Profile . 12 January 2007 . League Managers Association.
  10. News: Chris . Summers . The football cheats who prospered . 12 January 2007 . 3 November 2006 . BBC News.
  11. News: Boston suspend Evans . 28 May 2007 . 4 July 2002 . BBC Sport.
  12. News: Evans quits Boston . 28 May 2007 . 20 September 2002 . BBC Sport.
  13. News: Evans found guilty . 28 May 2007 . 23 December 2002 . BBC Sport.
  14. News: Evans faces FA ban . 28 May 2007 . 29 January 2003 . BBC Sport.
  15. News: Evans set for appeal . 28 May 2007 . 1 May 2003 . BBC Sport.
  16. News: FA rejcts Evans's appeal . 28 May 2007 . 20 May 2003 . BBC Sport.
  17. News: Summers. Chris. The football cheats who prospered. 2006-11-03. BBC News. 2020-04-22. en-GB.
  18. News: Conn. David. Why tax fraud hasn't stopped Pilgrims' progress. 2006-11-15. The Guardian. 2020-04-22. en-GB. 0261-3077.
  19. News: Boston reappoint Evans . 29 May 2007 . 20 February 2004 . BBC Sport.
  20. News: Football manager denies charges . 29 May 2007 . 22 September 2005 . BBC News.
  21. News: Boston boss handed suspended fine . 29 May 2007 . 22 September 2005 . BBC Sport.
  22. News: Grimsby 1–0 Boston Utd . 29 May 2007 . 11 February 2006 . BBC Sport.
  23. News: Police send FA report over Evans . 10 June 2007 . 13 February 2006 . BBC Sport.
  24. News: Evans cool over Darlington link . 29 May 2007 . 26 October 2006 . BBC Sport.
  25. News: Boston 0–1 Wycombe . 10 June 2007 . 28 October 2006 . BBC Sport.
  26. News: Boston boss handed suspended fine. 22 November 2005. 22 April 2020. BBC News.
  27. News: Shamed football manager keeps job . 29 May 2007 . 4 November 2006 . BBC News.
  28. News: Pete . Oliver . No selection headaches for Evans . 29 May 2007 . 29 March 2006 . BBC Sport.
  29. News: Boston manager is left frustrated . 29 May 2007 . 12 April 2007 . BBC Sport.
  30. News: Boston Utd 1–1 Torquay . 29 May 2007 . 28 April 2007 . BBC Sport.
  31. News: Evans ready for last-day battle . 27 May 2007 . 28 April 2007 . BBC Sport.
  32. News: Boston lose Football League spot . 29 May 2007 . 5 May 2007 . BBC Sport.
  33. News: Boss Evans will not leave Boston . 29 May 2007 . 8 May 2007 . BBC Sport.
  34. News: Evans & Raynor leave Boston roles . 27 May 2007 . 27 May 2007 . BBC Sport.
  35. News: Evans signs off in second place . 29 May 2007 . 27 May 2007 . Boston United F.C.
  36. News: It's 354 and out for Evans . 28 May 2007 . 29 May 2007 . Boston United F.C.
  37. News: Crawley appoint Evans as new boss . 29 May 2007 . 29 May 2007 . BBC Sport.
  38. News: Crawley manager Steve Evans shows Joey Barton how it's done. James. David. 3 August 2008. Daily Mirror. 29 June 2009.
  39. News: Steve Evans and Paul Raynor agree new Crawley contracts. BBC Sport. 28 February 2011. 6 April 2011.
  40. News: Crawley duo in frame for gongs. Sky Sports. 8 September 2011. 8 September 2011.
  41. News: Evans named Manager of the Month. The Football League. 4 November 2011. 17 February 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130729000127/http://www.football-league.co.uk/league2/news/20111104/evans-named-manager-of-the-month_2293326_2504702. 29 July 2013. dmy-all.
  42. News: Rotherham appoint Crawley Town boss Steve Evans as manager. BBC Sport. 9 April 2012. 9 April 2012.
  43. News: Rotherham manager Steve Evans hit with stadium ban and £3,000 fine. The Guardian. 10 September 2012. 25 May 2014.
  44. News: Rotherham promoted to League One. BBC Sport. 27 April 2013. 9 February 2015.
  45. News: Millers thrash lifeless County. BBC Sport. 1 March 2014. 9 February 2015.
  46. News: Rotherham promoted to Championship after penalty win over Leyton Orient. The Guardian. 25 May 2014. 25 May 2014.
  47. News: Steve Evans: Rotherham United boss signs new deal. BBC Sport. 29 May 2014.
  48. News: Steve Evans: life's a beach for Rotherham United manager at Leeds Rotherham . 10 September 2020 . The Guardian . 2 May 2015.
  49. News: Millers part company with Steve Evans and Paul Raynor....
  50. News: Neil Redfearn: Rotherham United appoint ex-Leeds head coach . BBC Sport . 9 October 2015 . 9 October 2015.
  51. News: Steve Evans Appointed United Head Coach. Leeds United F.C.. 19 October 2015.
  52. News: Leeds United Official Site . 7 May 2016 . 7 May 2016 . REPORT: SPOILS SHARED AT PRESTON .
  53. News: Riach . James . Watford enjoy Scott Wootton's blunder and leave Leeds to their woe . 10 September 2020 . The Observer . 20 February 2016.
  54. News: Yorkshire Evening Post . 7 May 2016 . 7 May 2016 . Leeds United: Tearful Steve Evans expects to depart Elland Road.
  55. News: BBC Sport. 23 May 2016 . 23 May 2016 . Karl Robinson: MK Dons boss turns down Leeds United managerial offer.
  56. News: Yorkshire Evening Post. 27 May 2016 . 27 May 2016 . Leeds United rebuffed as Darrell Clarke signs lucrative new deal with Bristol Rovers.
  57. News: BBC Sport. 31 May 2016 . 31 May 2016 . Steve Evans: Leeds United sack head coach.
  58. News: Steve Evans: Club Statement. Oldham Athletic. 21 June 2016. 21 June 2016.
  59. Web site: Steve Evans: Mansfield Town appoint former Leeds boss as manager. BBC Sport. 16 November 2016.
  60. Web site: Steve Evans: Mansfield Town manager resigns. BBC Sport. 27 February 2018.
  61. Web site: Radfords lift the lid on Evans' shock walk-out for the first time. 2021-11-21. www.chad.co.uk. en.
  62. Web site: Steve Evans: Peterborough United name ex-Mansfield Town boss as manager . BBC Sport . 28 February 2018 . 2 March 2018 .
  63. Web site: Peterborough's Steve Evans charged with misconduct. 2021-08-14. Sky Sports. en.
  64. Web site: theposh.com . 26 January 2019 . 26 January 2019. Official Club Statement 26/01/19 .
  65. Web site: theposh.com . 26 January 2019 . 26 January 2019 . Ferguson Appointed As Manager Until End Of Season .
  66. News: Steve Evans: Gillingham name former Leeds and Peterborough boss as new manager . 21 May 2019 . BBC Sport . 21 May 2019.
  67. Web site: Gaffer wins manager of the month award. www.gillinghamfootballclub.com. 9 April 2021.
  68. News: Gillingham boss Evans charged by FA. en-GB. BBC Sport. 2021-08-14.
  69. Web site: Club Statement. www.gillinghamfootballclub.com. 9 January 2022. 9 January 2022.
  70. News: Managerial change. Stevenage F.C.. 16 March 2022. 16 March 2022.
  71. Web site: Stevenage 2–0 Tranmere Rovers. BBC Sport. 23 April 2022. 26 April 2022.
  72. Web site: Stevenage go top of the table after win over Swindon Town . 8 October 2022 .
  73. News: Stevenage beat Villa with dramatic late comeback . Harry Poole . BBC Sport . 8 January 2023 . 27 January 2023.
  74. Web site: WE ARE GOING UP! Stevenage 2-0 Grimsby Town. Stevenage FC. 29 April 2023. 5 May 2023.
  75. Web site: Steve Evans wins Sky Bet League Two Manager of the Month . 2023-05-09 . www.stevenagefc.com . en-gb.
  76. Web site: EFL Awards 2024: Shortlists revealed. www.efl.com. 3 April 2024. 17 April 2024.
  77. Web site: Kieran McKenna wins the Sky Bet Championship Manager of the Season. www.efl.com. 14 April 2024. 17 April 2024.
  78. News: Steve Evans: Rotherham United reappoint Stevenage manager after sacking Leam Richardson . BBC Sport . 17 April 2024 . 18 April 2024.
  79. Web site: READ EVANS RETURNS AS FIRST TEAM MANAGER. www.themillers.co.uk. 17 April 2024. 17 April 2024.
  80. News: Boston United Squad 2003/2004 . 10 June 2007 . Fox, Ken .
  81. Web site: Crawley manager Steve Evans gets his wish as his team are drawn against the might of Manchester United. The Telegraph. 16 November 2016.
  82. Web site: Steve Evans. Soccerbase. 6 April 2011.
  83. Web site: League Managers Association - STEVE EVANS. www.leaguemanagers.com. 2019-05-19.
  84. Web site: 29 April 2023 . Stevenage players are the true heroes of promotion season says Steve Evans . 9 July 2024 . The Comet.
  85. Web site: 4 May 2023 . Sky Bet EFL Manager and Player of the Month: April winners . 5 May 2023 . EFL.