Graham Turner
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Graham Turner | ||
Personal information | ||
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Full name | Graham John Turner | |
Date of birth | October 5, 1947 | |
Place of birth | Ellesmere Port, England | |
Height | 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m) | |
Playing position | Centre back | |
Club information | ||
Current club | Hereford United (Chairman, Director of Football, Manager) |
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Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1964–1968 1968–1973 1973–1983 |
Wrexham Chester City Shrewsbury Town Total |
218 (5) 355 (22) 650 (27) |
77 (0)
Teams managed | ||
1978–1984 1984–1986 1986–1994 1995– |
Shrewsbury Town Aston Villa Wolverhampton Wanderers Hereford United |
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1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Graham Turner (born 5 October 1947 in Ellesmere Port) is an English former footballer, and current chairman, director of football and manager of Hereford United. He has been the majority shareholder of the club since 1998 and will become the second longest serving manager in the top four divisions, behind Sir Alex Ferguson, when Dario Gradi retires on 1 July. As of the end of the 2007-08 season he has overseen 1,483 competitive matches, of which 1,239 are league matches.
In his 30th year of football management he guided Hereford to third place in League Two and promotion, which will be the club's first season in the third tier for 30 years. In recognition he was voted League Two Manager of the Year by the League Managers Association.
Graham has a son, Mark Turner, who currently plays for Tamworth and also had spells at Wolves and Hereford while Graham was manager.
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[edit] Career History
As a central defender he was an England youth international and started his playing career at Wrexham before moving to rivals Chester City in January 1968 in part-exchange for Ian Moir. Five years and 218 Football League appearances later he moved to his third and final club Shrewsbury Town for £30,000. He went on to make over 350 league appearances for the Salopians.
During the 1970s he played against Hereford United several times, the club he was later to buy. He became player-manager for the Shrews in the 1978-79 season, the same year the club sealed the Third Division championship. Shrewsbury ultimately spent ten seasons in the Second Division and Turner twice led them to the quarter-finals of the FA Cup. He ended his playing career in 1983, and left Shrewsbury after six seasons to take charge of Aston Villa in the summer of 1984. Unfortunately his time at Villa Park was less successful and he was sacked on 17 September 1986, just over two years after his appointment.
He was then appointed manager of Wolves, a club then in the Fourth Division and massively in debt. In his first season Wolves reached the play-offs but failed to secure promotion. However the following two seasons brought successive landslide promotions with the help of goal-machine Steve Bull and striking partner Andy Mutch. Mid-table finishes in the Second Division, and subsequently (following the formation of the Premier League) Division One, followed before he left in March 1994. He also led Wolves to Sherpa Van Trophy glory at Wembley in 1987-88.
[edit] Hereford United
He was appointed manager of Division Three side Hereford United for the 1995-96 season, a club with major financial problems. In his first season the team reached the play-offs, after a tremendous run from 19th to 6th in two months, but failed to progress past the semi-final stage. Unfortunately Graham was unable to retain several key players due to financial constraints and the 1996-97 season was a very different story.
Hereford spent most of the season in the bottom five of Division Three and faced a relegation decider on the last day of the season at home to Brighton. Hereford needed to win but a 1-1 draw meant they were relegated from the Football League on goals scored. After the match he handed in his resignation but there was overwhelming support for him to stay, so he did. In his third season he bought the controlling shares in the club, taking on a large debt and saving the club from going under. With the bank balance firmly in the red he had to endure several fruitless seasons in the Conference and had to sell key players to keep the club in business. Indeed in more than 12 years at the club, he has only spent £40,000 on transfer fees.
The financial situation was becoming desperate early in the 2001-02 season. After a humiliating defeat to Hayes, and with the proverbial wolves at the door, Graham handed first team duties over to player-coach Phil Robinson while he concentrated on securing the club's financial future. When Hereford finished 17th at the end of the season, it appeared enough was enough and Graham handed in his resignation to the board. But after several discussions he again decided to continue to remain at the club, despite the deadline to repay the debt looming large.
He took the opportunity to build a new squad, retaining only six from the previous season. The collapse of ITV Digital meant there were many Football League players released and Graham took advantage of this. The team, built entirely of free transfers, evolved arguably into the best footballing side in the Conference achieving three consecutive 2nd places. Unfortunately Hereford failed to progress in the play-offs in 2003-04 and 2004-05 but in the 2005-06 season it was third time lucky as Hereford defeated Halifax in the 2006 Conference Playoff Final 3-2 to secure promotion to the Football League. After the match, Graham said his overwhelming feeling was "relief" after many hard seasons in the Conference.
Hereford survived their first season back in the Football League, and began the 2007-08 in fine form, so much so that they achieved promotion to the league's third tier that the fans had hoped for when Turner arrived at the helm back in 1995.
[edit] Managerial statistics
Team | Nat | From | To | Record | |||||||
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L | FAC | FLC | FLT | FAT | PO | OC | Total | ||||
Shrewsbury Town | 1 November 1978 | 1 July 1984 | 241 | 21 | 17 | - | - | - | 11 | 290 | |
Aston Villa | 16 July 1984 | 14 September 1986 | 90 | 5 | 12 | - | - | - | - | 107 | |
Wolverhampton Wanderers | 7 October 1986 | 16 March 1994 | 346 | 17 | 19 | 18 | - | 4 | - | 404 | |
Hereford United | 1 August 1995 | present | 562 | 42 | 10 | 21 | 30 | 9 | 8 | 682 |
[edit] Honours
- Third Division (now Football League One): Winners (1978-79, 1988-89)
- Fourth Division (now Football League Two): Winners (1987-88)
- Conference National: Play-Off Winners (2005-06), Runners-Up (2003-04, 2004-05, 2005-06)
- Welsh Cup: Winners (1978-79, 1983-84)
- Football League Trophy (Sherpa Van Trophy): Winners (1987-88)
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