Graham Carr

Not to be confused with Graeme Carr.
Graham Carr
Personal information
Full name William Graham Carr
Date of birth (1944-10-25) 25 October 1944
Place of birth Corbridge, England
Playing position Half back
Club information
Current team
Newcastle United (scout)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1962–1968 Northampton Town 85 (0)
1968–1969 York City 33 (1)
1969–1970 Bradford Park Avenue 42 (2)
Altrincham
Telford United
Poole Town
Dartford
Tonbridge
Weymouth
Teams managed
Dartford
1977–1978 Weymouth
1978– ? Dartford
1981–1985 Nuneaton Borough
1985–1990 Northampton Town
1990 Blackpool
1991 Maidstone United
1992–1995 Kettering Town
1995 Weymouth
1995–1996 Dagenham & Redbridge

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


William Graham Carr (born 25 October 1944) is an English former professional footballer and football club manager. He is currently head scout at Newcastle United.

Club career

Carr, a half-back, joined his first professional club, Northampton Town in August 1962 and captained their reserve side before breaking into their first team. He played 27 times in Northampton's only season in the First Division. He moved to York City in June 1968 and then to Bradford Park Avenue in July 1969 where he was a regular in their final season in the Football League.

After leaving Bradford he moved into non-league football with Altrincham and Telford United, with whom he won an FA Trophy winners medal in 1971. He later played for Poole Town and Dartford, with whom he won the Southern League and gained an FA Trophy runners-up medal in 1974.

Coaching career

Carr's first job in management was as player-manager at Dartford. He briefly left management to play for Tonbridge and Weymouth before being appointed player-manager of Weymouth in January 1977.

He resigned in 1978 to manage Dartford and later managed Nuneaton Borough until 1985 when he left to become manager of his first club Northampton Town. He led the Cobblers to the Fourth Division title in the 1986–87 season. However, the title winning side's leadings scorer Richard Hill was sold to Watford and his strike partner Trevor Morley to Manchester City and Carr's subsequent sides struggled for goals and went from being a free-scoring attacking side to a negative one relying on the offside trap.

He was sacked from Northampton in May 1990 after their relegation back to the Fourth Division, taking over at Blackpool, who had been relegated along with Northampton, the following month. He had a torrid time at Blackpool, where he was never popular with the home fans, who took to spitting on the dugout during home games, especially after letting the previous season's player of the year, Colin Methven, sign for Walsall, saying he was neither good enough nor quick enough for Fourth Division football.[1] He was sacked on 30 November after Blackpool were beaten 4–0 away to Tranmere Rovers in the Football League Trophy three days earlier. He was, until Michael Appleton in 2012, Blackpool's shortest-serving manager, with just sixteen Football League matches in charge.

In February 1991 Carr was appointed as manager of Maidstone United, who had just sacked Keith Peacock following a run of poor results. Carr's time at Maidstone was also unhappy; a series of poor signings and baffling tactical decisions saw the team slump towards the foot of the table, and the Maidstone fans chanting for the board to sack him, which they did in October 1991, less than a year before the Kent side were forced to resign from the Football League.

Carr took over as manager of Kettering Town in September 1992, with the club in administration and under the threat of a winding-up order. Despite these off the field problems, Carr led the club to mid-table safety in the Football Conference. Kettering came out of administration in the summer of 1993 and Carr built on the relative success of the previous season, taking the side to within three points of the Conference title. He left Kettering at the end of the 1994–95 season after losing the fans' support, despite Kettering finishing sixth in the Conference.

He was not out of work for long, returning to Weymouth as manager on 12 May 1995, but resigned in September the same year. He was then briefly appointed assistant Manager at Doncaster Rovers.

Scouting career

In more recent times, he has built a good reputation as a scout for Tottenham Hotspur working under David Pleat, and since Manchester City and Notts County both places working under Sven-Göran Eriksson.[2] In February 2010 he left his second stint at Spurs to join Newcastle United as their chief scout following the reign of Dennis Wise.[3] Newcastle were promoted back to the Premier League in April 2010 and Carr was central to helping managers Chris Hughton and Alan Pardew (who replaced the sacked Hughton in December 2010) sign players from the French, Dutch and German leagues such as Hatem Ben Arfa, Yohan Cabaye, Sylvain Marveaux, Papiss Cissé and Cheick Tioté.[4] which helped turn the club's fortunes around and as a result they finished fifth in the Premier League in the 2011–12 season,[4] which led to qualification to the 2012–13 Europa League. In June 2012, Carr was rewarded for this work with a new eight-year contract with his hometown club, a deal which will keep him at the club until he is aged 75 years.[4]

Family

His son is Alan Carr, a comedian who achieved notice co-presenting The Friday Night Project and has since then been best known for hosting his own chat show called Alan Carr: Chatty Man.[5]

See also

References

  1. Calley, Roy (1992). Blackpool: A Complete Record 1887–1992. Breedon Books Sport. ISBN 1-873626-07-X.
  2. "Toon scout Graham Carr scours globe for talent". sundaysun.co.uk. 13 March 2011. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
  3. "Graham Carr, father of comedian Alan, to be announced as Newcastle chief scout". dailymail.co.uk. 7 February 2010. Retrieved 13 June 2011.
  4. 1 2 3 "Newcastle scout Graham Carr signs eight-year contract". bbc.co.uk/sport. 7 June 2012. Retrieved 4 July 2012.
  5. Barkham, Patrick (20 November 2007). "'I couldn't be cool if I tried'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 6 March 2009.
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