Stuart Gray (footballer, born 1960) explained

Stuart Gray
Full Name:Stuart Gray
Birth Date:19 April 1960
Birth Place:Withernsea, England
Height:[1]
Position:Midfielder
Currentclub:Fulham (assistant manager)
Youthyears2:1978–1980
Youthclubs1:Withernsea YC
Youthclubs2:Nottingham Forest
Years1:1980–1983
Years2:1983
Years3:1983–1987
Years4:1987–1991
Years5:1991–1993
Years6:1994
Clubs2:Bolton Wanderers (loan)
Clubs5:Southampton
Clubs6:Bognor Regis Town
Caps1:49
Caps2:10
Caps3:120
Caps4:106
Caps5:12
Caps6:1
Goals1:3
Goals2:0
Goals3:23
Goals4:9
Goals5:0
Goals6:0
Totalcaps:298
Totalgoals:35
Manageryears1:2001
Manageryears2:2002
Manageryears3:2004
Manageryears4:2007–2009
Manageryears5:2010–2011
Manageryears6:2011
Manageryears7:2013–2015
Manageryears8:2015
Managerclubs2:Aston Villa (caretaker)
Managerclubs3:Wolverhampton Wanderers (caretaker)
Managerclubs5:Burnley (caretaker)
Managerclubs6:Portsmouth (caretaker)
Managerclubs7:Sheffield Wednesday
Managerclubs8:Fulham (caretaker)

Stuart Gray (born 19 April 1960)[1] is an English former professional footballer and manager. He has previously managed Southampton, Northampton Town and Sheffield Wednesday as well as working as caretaker manager for a number of teams. He has been Fulham's defensive coach since 2016, in which time they have earned three promotions to the Premier League.

Playing career

Born in Withernsea, East Riding of Yorkshire,[1] Gray began his professional career with Nottingham Forest, emerging from the youth system with players such as Steve Hodge and Colin Walsh. He joined Barnsley in 1984 and continued to build a reputation as a steady and versatile player, scoring eleven league goals in the 1986–87 season. He moved to Aston Villa in 1987 and won promotion the following year and runners-up in the First Division in 1990.

Gray joined Southampton in September 1991 for a fee of £200,000 as one of Ian Branfoot's first signings. Initially, this appeared to be a useful signing for the club as he could play either at left-back as cover for Micky Adams or in midfield, but a serious Achilles tendon injury sustained in an FA Cup match against former club Bolton Wanderers ended his playing career.[2]

Earlier in that FA Cup run, Gray scored his only goal for Southampton, in a replay against Manchester United at Old Trafford. Micky Adams hit a probing left-foot pass which dropped between Peter Schmeichel and Paul Parker. Gray nipped between the goalkeeper and defender to stroke the ball home from just outside the area. Southampton eventually went on to win the game in a penalty shoot-out after scores were level 2–2 after extra time. This was the first ever such shoot-out involving First Division sides.

Coaching and management career

Southampton

After his playing career was finished, Gray joined the coaching staff at The Dell before moving to Wolverhampton Wanderers in June 1994 as reserve team coach.[3] His family were unable to settle in the West Midlands at this time, so he returned to Southampton, initially working in the community office, before becoming reserve team coach under Dave Jones in July 1997, moving up to first team coach in November 1998, a role he retained after the appointment of Glenn Hoddle as manager in January 2000.

When Hoddle was lured away to Tottenham Hotspur in March 2001, Gray initially took over as caretaker manager, before taking on the role permanently in June, as Southampton moved to their new St Mary's Stadium. Early results were poor and chairman Rupert Lowe panicked about the effect on the club's investment in the new stadium and Gray was sacked after little more than three months in charge, to be replaced by Gordon Strachan. During his brief tenure as manager, he broke Southampton's transfer record, signing Rory Delap for a fee of £4 million.[4]

Coaching

He has since coached successfully at a number of football clubs. These include Aston Villa, where he and John Deehan acted as joint caretaker managers after the departure of John Gregory. Stuart Gray moved briefly to Crystal Palace to assist caretaker manager, Kit Symons. He then joined Dave Jones at Wolverhampton Wanderers in the capacity of assistant manager. The two had previously worked together at Southampton. After the dismissal of Jones from Wolverhampton, Gray remained as assistant manager to Glenn Hoddle, once more acting as caretaker manager after Hoddle's departure; he had served as a caretaker for a month between the departure of Jones and arrival of Hoddle.[5]

Northampton Town

On 2 January 2007, Gray was appointed as the manager of Northampton Town after accepting a -year contract; he replaced John Gorman who had resigned on 20 December 2006.[6]

Gray was sacked as Northampton Town Manager on 8 September 2009, following relegation from League 1 in the 2008–09 season and being 16th in League 2 after six games in the 2009–10 season.

Burnley

On 19 January 2010, Gray became the first-team coach for Burnley.[7] On 30 December he was appointed caretaker manager following the departure of Brian Laws.[8] Gray left Burnley on 13 May 2011 as part of a restructuring after the club failed to achieve even a play-off place in the season just ended.[9] Gray became first-team coach at Portsmouth but was made redundant in April 2012 as part of cost cutting due to their financial difficulties.[10]

Sheffield Wednesday

In December 2012, Gray was hired by his former Southampton colleague, Dave Jones, as a member of the coaching staff at Championship club Sheffield Wednesday.[11]

Following the departure of Dave Jones from Sheffield Wednesday at the end of November 2013 Gray took over as caretaker manager with a view to taking on the managerial role permanently, and as of 8 February had led Wednesday to a run of eleven unbeaten games in all competitions.[12]

Stuart Gray was appointed as head coach of Sheffield Wednesday following the 2–1 win over Rochdale in the FA Cup on 25 January 2014.

In his one full season in charge of the club, he secured their highest finish for six years, finishing 13th in a Championship campaign that also saw Wednesday equal their clean sheet record for a season.

Following a takeover at Sheffield Wednesday by Thai businessman Dejphon Chansiri, Gray was sacked in the summer of 2015[13] and replaced by head coach Carlos Carvalhal.[14]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Nottingham Forest
1980–81[15] First Division141300010181
1981–82First Division3320050382
1982–83First Division20001030
Total493306010593
Bolton Wanderers (loan)1982–83[16] Second Division1000000100
Barnsley
1983–84Second Division1780010188
1984–85Second Division70100080
1985–86Second Division3621011383
1986–87Second Division40114022114714
1987–88Second Division202003010242
Total1202360732113527
Aston Villa
1987–88[17] Second Division2050000205
1988–89First Division354203010414
1989–90First Division290223142385
1990–91First Division220215040331
Total1069631119213215
Southampton1991–92[18] First Division120415010221
Career total2873519429413334846

Managerial

[19]

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
Southampton30 March 200121 October 2001
Aston Villa (caretaker)24 January 20025 February 2002
Wolverhampton Wanderers (caretaker)1 November 20047 December 2004
Northampton Town2 January 20078 September 2009
Burnley (caretaker)29 December 201016 January 2011
Portsmouth (caretaker)October 2011November 2011
1 December 201312 June 2015
Fulham (caretaker)8 December 201527 December 2015
Total

Honours

Individual

Notes and References

  1. Book: Chalk. Gary. Holley. Duncan. Bull. David. All the Saints: A Complete Players' Who's Who of Southampton FC. 2013. Southampton. Hagiology Publishing. 978-0-9926-8640-6. 334.
  2. Book: Duncan. Holley . Gary. Chalk . In That Number - A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC . Hagiology Publishing . 2003. 0-9534474-3-X. 520.
  3. Web site: Stuart Gray . League Managers Association . 8 July 2023.
  4. News: Malone . Emmet . Delap decides to accept Southampton offer . 8 July 2023 . Irish Times . 11 July 2001.
  5. News: Wolves 0–1 Coventry . BBC News . 20 November 2004.
  6. News: Northampton name Gray as manager. BBC Sport. 2 January 2007. 16 April 2009.
  7. Web site: Stuart Gray Appointed First Team Coach. 19 January 2010 . vitalfootball. 25 March 2010.
  8. Web site: Gray Placed In Temporary Charge. Burnley FC. 30 December 2010. 30 December 2010. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110102070400/http://www.burnleyfootballclub.com/page/LatestHeadlines/0,,10413~2254104,00.html. 2 January 2011. dmy-all.
  9. Web site: Gray and Hoskin Leave In Re-Shuffle. Burnley F C official website. 13 May 2011 . 17 May 2011.
  10. News: Coach Stuart Gray loses Portsmouth job. BBC Sport. 27 April 2012.
  11. News: Sheffield Wednesday: Stuart Gray experience important - Jones. BBC Sport. 20 December 2012.
  12. Web site: Coach Stuart Gray appointed caretaker manager of Sheffield-Wednesday. 3 December 2013 . Daily Express. 3 December 2013.
  13. Web site: Stuart Gray: Sheffield Wednesday head coach sacked. BBC Sport. 4 August 2015. 11 June 2015.
  14. News: Sheffield Wednesday name Carlos Carvalhal as new head coach. BBC Sport. 30 June 2015. 4 August 2015.
  15. Web site: Player search: Gray, S (Stuart) . English National Football Archive . subscription . 15 October 2022.
  16. Web site: Games played by Stuart Gray in 1982/1983 . sporting-heroes.net . 15 October 2022.
  17. Web site: Games played by Stuart Gray for Aston Villa . avfchistory.co.uk . 15 October 2022. NOTE: Select Stuart Gray from the "Select Player" field.
  18. Web site: Games played by Stuart Gray in 1991/1992 . saintsplayer.co.uk . 15 October 2022.
  19. Web site: Managers: Stuart Gray . Soccerbase . Centurycomm . 30 August 2018.
  20. Web site: Barnsley Player of the Season . Barnsley FC . 2 January 2024.