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Brian Tinnion

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Brian Tinnion
Personal information
Date of birth (1968-02-23) 23 February 1968 (age 56)
Place of birth Stanley, England
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1986–1989 Newcastle United 32 (2)
1989–1993 Bradford City 145 (22)
1993–2005 Bristol City 458 (36)
2005–2006 Aldershot Town 7 (1)
2006–2007 Weston-super-Mare ? (?)
2007 Team Bath ? (?)
Managerial career
2004–2005 Bristol City
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Brian Tinnion (born 23 February 1968[1]) is an English former footballer and ex-manager. He made over 450 appearances for Bristol City, including a spell as player-manager. He started as a left-back but later became a goal-scoring left-sided midfielder.

Career

He was born in Stanley, County Durham[1] and was recruited by Newcastle United as an apprentice after scouts had spotted his useful left foot, he went on to be a member of the Newcastle United FA Youth Cup winning side of 1985 that included the likes of Paul Gascoigne. Tinnion signed as a professional before a first-team home game on the pitch of St James' Park a few days after his eighteenth birthday in 1986. In the 1987–88 season, he started 30 league games for the Magpies in the left-back slot. He earned a call-up to the England Under-21 squad in May 1988 for a tour of Toulon but unfortunately had to pull out injured. He was sold to Bradford City for £150,000 in 1989. He scored the last-gasp penalty that pinched a point at Elland Road on Grand National Day 1990 in a heated local derby against Leeds United.

It was while at Bradford that Tinnion expressed himself when pushed forward onto the left side of a three-man midfield in the early 1990s, the Bantam soon had the reputation of having the most creative left foot of the lower leagues. Tinnion found himself top-goalscorer in all competitions across all four divisions by Christmas 1991 with 13 goals (most of which spectacular), but he picked up a career-threatening injury at Hartlepool on Boxing Day 1991; in front of a host of top-flight scouts so it was thought. His injury was overcome in time to start the 1992–93 season in the Bantams starting line-up, but before the season was out, in March 1993, he failed to agree a new contract and moved on to Bristol City for a tribunal-set fee of around £180,000. His first goal for his new club came against bitter rivals Bristol Rovers with a last-gasp penalty. Then in January 1994 he scored the winning goal in City's giant-killing FA Cup win over Liverpool at Anfield.

He went on to become one of City's dominant players of the 1990s. He switched from wide on the left flank into the centre of a three-man midfield under new manager Danny Wilson in 2000 and the role often gave him time and space to execute through balls, such was his form in that role that he was voted as the best player in his division. He became player-coach in 2000 (and had helped coach the club's youth teams since the mid-90s) and succeeded Danny Wilson as manager in 2004.

Tinnion's first season in charge saw Bristol City fail to make the play-offs and the 2005–06 season started inconsistently, leaving the City fans unconvinced about his ability to make his move into management successful. City's league results failed to improve in 2005/6, and capitulating in a 7–1 thrashing by Swansea City on 10 September 2005 was the final straw; facing a wave of discontent among the supporters, Tinnion stepped down as manager the following day.

After his departure from Bristol City, Tinnion trained with Cheltenham Town, turning out for them in a reserve match,[2] and then joined Conference side Aldershot.

He subsequently played for Conference South side Weston-super-Mare and in January 2007 joined TeamBath.[3]

Tinnion has since retired from playing in the summer of 2007[4] and now coaches youth football, running soccer schools both in Southern Spain and at The Imperial Ground in Bristol.

References

  1. ^ a b Football League Career Stats at Neil Brown
  2. ^ "Tinnion training with Cheltenham". BBC. 20 October 2005. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  3. ^ Tinnion Coup For Team Bath Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine From www.NonLeagueDaily.com, Posted 8 January 2007.
  4. ^ Tinnion Calls It A Day Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine From www.NonLeagueDaily.com, Posted 29 June 2007.