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Joe Fagan

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Joe Fagan
Personal information
Full name Joseph Fagan
Date of birth (1921-03-12)12 March 1921
Place of birth Liverpool, England
Date of death 30 June 2001(2001-06-30) (aged 80)
Place of death Liverpool, England
Position(s) Right half[nb 1]
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1937–1938 Earlestown Bohemians
1938–1951 Manchester City 158 (2)
1939–1940 (wartime guest) Hyde United 26 (0)
1951–1953 Nelson 45 (4)
1953–1954 Bradford Park Avenue 3 (0)
1954–1955 Altrincham 30 (1)
Managerial career
1951–1953 Nelson (player-manager)
1956–1958 Rochdale (assistant manager)
1958–1971 Liverpool (reserve team coach)
1971–1979 Liverpool (first team coach)
1979–1983 Liverpool (assistant manager)
1983–1985 Liverpool (manager)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Joseph "Joe" Fagan (12 March 1921 – 30 June 2001) was an English footballer and manager. He played for Manchester City in the Football League First Division as a wing half and came close to gaining international honours. As his playing career came to an end, he decided to become a coach and worked at clubs in lower leagues before getting the chance to join Liverpool in 1958.

From December 1959, he worked with Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley and was highly successful in his coaching of the club's reserve team, being mainly responsible for the development of future star players like Roger Hunt, Ian Callaghan and Tommy Smith. After Shankly retired in 1974, Fagan became assistant manager to Paisley and finally manager himself when Paisley retired in 1983. In his first season, Fagan achieved an unprecedented "treble" as Liverpool won the European Cup, the League Championship and the League Cup. He had decided to retire at the end of his second season but his final match in charge was the 1985 European Cup Final which was the scene of the Heysel Stadium disaster, an event that caused him great distress.

Fagan was an uncomplicated man who believed in the simplicity of football, a devoted family man who preferred to just get on with his job and shun the limelight. He was one of the most respected figures in the game. He and his family lived in the same house not far from Anfield throughout his Liverpool career and afterwards. He died of cancer in 2001, aged eighty.

Early life

Joe Fagan was born in Walton hospital on 12 March 1921 and lived in the Litherland and Scotland Road areas during his childhood and youth.[1] His parents Patrick and Mary were of Irish descent.[2] His father has been recorded as something of a dubious character who was often absent for long periods and Fagan owed a happy childhood to his mother. The close proximity of Anfield and Goodison Park meant that football was always a significant part of his life and he developed his ability as a boy.[3] When he was fourteen, he captained his school, St Elizabeth Central, to the Daily Dispatch Trophy, a competition run by the Lancashire Schools Football Association.[1][4]

After leaving school, Fagan played for Earlestown Bohemians, known as the "Bohs", in the Liverpool County Combination, where he was described as "a strapping centre half".[1] Liverpool became interested and he was invited to Anfield for a trial. Manager George Kay offered him a contract but Fagan, then aged seventeen, declined as he thought his first team opportunities at Liverpool would be limited.[1] On 8 October 1938, he signed for Manchester City.[1] Throughout Fagan's playing career, he was a right half, though he could also play at centre half.[nb 1] In the 1938–39 season, Fagan made good progress at City playing for the club's "A" and "B" teams and then getting into the reserves. He was challenging for a first-team place when the Second World War began just as the 1939–40 season was getting under way and the Football League was suspended.[5]

Second World War

As Fagan, then aged eighteen, was not immediately eligible to join the armed forces, City gave him permission to play for Hyde United in the Cheshire County League which was not subject to the same wartime restrictions as the Football League, although it continued for only one season and was suspended in 1940. Fagan and his City team mate Billy Walsh made their debuts for Hyde on 13 October 1939, taking part in a 2–1 victory over Stalybridge Celtic. Fagan played a total of 26 games for Hyde and earned good reviews in the local press. Hyde had a successful season and won the Cheshire League's East Section but lost the two-legged championship playoff against West Section winners Runcorn.[6]

Fagan returned to City for the 1940–41 season in which regionalised leagues were tentatively launched. He made his debut for City in the opening North Regional League match, which was a goalless draw at home to Everton and played five matches in all before he became due for Military Service.[7]

He opted to volunteer rather than wait to be called up so that he would have a choice of services and so he was able to join the Royal Navy. He had never been to sea previously and immediately discovered that he was prone to seasickness. He was sent to Egypt where he worked as a telegraphist with a minesweeping flotilla and remained there for the duration. Many of the men he trained with were posted to the ill-fated HMS Hood and Fagan always counted himself lucky to have missed that posting.[7]

Fagan was very interested in boxing and was a useful practitioner during his naval career until he had his nose broken.[8] He played football for various service teams in Alexandria, one of his teams winning a competition called the Chrystall Cup in January 1946, only a few days before he returned to Britain to be demobilised.[8] During periods of leave in England, Fagan had managed to represent City in six regional league matches, including a local derby against Manchester United; and he had also played for Portsmouth.[9]

Manchester City

When league football resumed after the war, Fagan hoped to establish himself as a regular member of the Manchester City side. The team, managed by Wilf Wild, were promotion favourites, especially as they included notable pre-war players like captain Sam Barkas, goalkeeper Frank Swift and inside forward Alex Herd. They got off to a winning start but in November there was a change of manager and Sam Cowan, City's pre-war captain, took over.[9] Cowan was an innovator keen to make changes and one of these, on 1 January 1947 against Fulham at Maine Road, was to give Joe Fagan his official Manchester City debut more than eight years after he had joined the club. Fagan was then 25 and he played at right-half, making a creditable performance as City won 4–0.[10] He went on to play a key role in City's 1946–47 Second Division Championship winning team.[1]

Fagan was an established member of the first team when City returned to the First Division in 1947–48 and was an ever-present that season. He was a popular figure at Maine Road due to his strong team ethic, loyalty to the cause and an ever-ready smile, qualities that were to serve him well in his later coaching and management career.[11] His friend Frank Swift gave him the nickname "Patsy", a reference to the Irish folk song Hallo Patsy Fagan.[12] In a match in November 1947, Fagan met his future colleague Bob Paisley for the first time when they played against each other in City's 2–0 win over Liverpool at Maine Road. City finished tenth that season, one place above Liverpool.[13]

In the 1948–49 season, Fagan was again an ever-present as City finished seventh under new manager Jock Thomson. In October 1949, Thomson made the decision to sign goalkeeper Bert Trautmann, attracting criticism for signing a former German paratrooper so soon after the war, though Trautmann justified Thomson's decision by going on to play for the club for 15 years.[14]

The 1949–50 season proved to be Thomson's last. With two thirds of the season gone City had won only five matches. Thomson was dismissed, and at the end of season the club were relegated.

Fagan was later appointed captain at Maine Road but could not halt City's slide back into the Second Division three seasons later.[1]

In 1951, after a broken leg, 138 games and two goals, Fagan left City to become player-manager of non-league Nelson on a part-time basis.[1]

Early coaching career

Fagan began his managerial career at Nelson in the Lancashire Combination as player-manager, where he led the club to the championship in his first season in 1952. Simultaneously, he worked in a factory checking gas meters for leaks.[1] Nelson applied for re-election to the Football League but were unsuccessful. Fagan moved on and made a brief return to the Football League as a player, making three appearances for Bradford Park Avenue in 1953. Following a short spell playing for Altrincham, Fagan became assistant manager at Rochdale in 1954, serving under future Everton manager Harry Catterick until 1958. In addition to coaching, he took on numerous other duties at Spotland, such as doing the laundry and marking the pitches.[1]

Liverpool

Following a recommendation by Catterick, Fagan was approached by Liverpool manager Phil Taylor about a coaching role and he accepted. The family moved into a house near Anfield where they remained for the rest of Fagan's life.

Bill Shankly joined Liverpool as manager in December 1959. Upon arriving at Anfield, Shankly was delighted to find Fagan on the coaching staff because, when manager of Grimsby Town in the early 1950s, he had tried to sign Fagan as a player.[1] Shankly's first words to Fagan at Anfield were: "You must have been a good player, Joe, because I tried to sign you".[15] On his first day in charge, Shankly held a meeting with the coaching staff which consisted of Bob Paisley, Reuben Bennett and Fagan to tell them that he was not bringing in his own coaches. He wanted to work with them and so guaranteed them their jobs. Shankly pointed out that he would decide the training strategy and they must all work together with absolute loyalty to each other and to the club.[16] Under Phil Taylor, training had been the traditional slog of physical exercise and road running. Shankly insisted on training which was "based on speed and using the ball" with everything done on grass.[17] Five-a-side games were introduced as a key part of the strategy. Fagan had been keen on training with the ball at Nelson and was, like Paisley and Bennett, delighted to implement Shankly's methods.[17]

Training strategy was key to Liverpool's success in the 1960s and afterwards. There was more to it than using the ball and playing five-a-side matches. Influenced by Paisley, Fagan and Bennett, Shankly cottoned on to the importance of allowing players to cool down after training before having a bath or shower. Paisley as a trained physiotherapist argued that a person needs to cool down for about forty minutes after heavy exercise because, if they go into a bath while still sweating, their pores remain open and they are more susceptible to chills and strains. Fagan had advocated getting changed at Anfield before going via team bus to the club's training complex at Melwood. They would return to bath, change and eat. This routine satisfied the need for a cooling down period and had the added advantages of encouraging team bonding during the two journeys and ensuring familiarity with Anfield, an important need for them as home team. Everton, by contrast, did everything at their Bellefield training complex and their players only went to Goodison Park for home matches every two weeks or so. Shankly claimed that the cooling down period resulted in "an astonishing lack of injuries over many seasons". For example, in 1965–66 when Liverpool won the league title and reached the European Cupwinners Cup final, they only used fourteen players in the entire season.[18]

Fagan is credited with converting a storage area at Anfield into a "common room" for the coaches and it became the now-legendary Boot Room. Shankly held daily meetings in there with Fagan, Paisley and Bennett to discuss strategy, tactics, training and players.[19] As coach of Liverpool's reserve team, Fagan helped nurture the talents of youngsters like Roger Hunt, Ian Callaghan and Tommy Smith. During Shankly's time as manager, the role of reserve team coach became one of the most critical jobs at Anfield as a key part of Shankly's strategy was to transform the reserves into "a kindergarten for future stars".[20] Though using irony, Shankly emphasised this when he famously said that "the city of Liverpool is blessed with not one, but two great football teams – Liverpool and Liverpool reserves".[21]

In 1966, Fagan was promoted to work with the first team and then in 1979 he became assistant to Bob Paisley. Quiet and unassuming, he was renowned throughout football for his ability as a coach and Bobby Robson once rated him the best in the game, when interviewed during the early eighties.[1] After Paisley retired, Fagan was appointed as manager on 1 July 1983, despite his initial reluctance to take on the role.

In the 1983–84 season, Fagan's first as Liverpool manager, the team won the European Cup, the League Championship and the League Cup and so Fagan was the first manager of an English club to win three major trophies in a single season. Fagan had quickly expanded his squad with the signings of David Hodgson, Michael Robinson and Gary Gillespie. His first game in charge ended in defeat, at the hands of Manchester United in the FA Charity Shield, but the first silverware was received following victory over Everton in the League Cup Final replay at Maine Road. The Championship was secured with a game to spare and then Liverpool won a penalty shoot-out against A.S. Roma in Rome to clinch the club's fourth European Cup.[22] Fagan won the Manager of the Year award.[1]

Soon afterwards, Liverpool's captain Graeme Souness left the club for Sampdoria. Repeating the treble was always going to be difficult and Fagan signed Danish midfielder Jan Mølby, John Wark, Paul Walsh and Kevin MacDonald. Liverpool finished second behind Everton in the 1984–85 season but reached the European Cup final again. On 29 May 1985, Fagan announced he would retire and was succeeded by Kenny Dalglish. In Dalglish's autobiography, he claims that Fagan was left a haunted man for the rest of his life after witnessing the Heysel Stadium disaster. Never one to court the limelight, Fagan stepped back into anonymity following his retirement but continued to visit both Anfield and Melwood on a regular basis and was always on hand with words of advice for his successors.

Personality

Stephen F. Kelly, in Shankly's biography, describes Fagan as "a rubber-faced character, as Liverpudlian as the Liver Bird... the psychologist, the genial scouser, full of Liverpool humour and always grinning". He praised Fagan's man management as he "knew when to kick backsides or when to put an arm around a player".[23] Ronnie Moran remembered Fagan as "what the bootroom was all about" and he "never met a nicer, more straightforward fellow" because Fagan was "never interested in the fancy side of football and never looked for the glamour or the glory".[20]

Fagan was also a motorcar enthusiast.[citation needed]

Personal life

Fagan met his future wife Lillian (Lil) Poke soon after he joined Manchester City in October 1938 and they were married two years later, during the war, before he joined the Navy.[5] Their first child was born in June 1945 while he was stationed in Egypt and in all he and Lil raised six children together, five sons and a daughter.[9] Throughout his time at Liverpool and until his death the family lived in the same modest house, which was situated just a short walk away from Anfield. It summed up his down-to-earth approach.

Joe Fagan died of cancer in July 2001, aged eighty. He was buried at Anfield Cemetery, near Liverpool's stadium.[24] Lil outlived Joe by nearly a decade, dying on 4 October 2010 at the age of 92 in a Lincolnshire nursing home.[25]

Honours

As a player

Manchester City

As a manager

Liverpool

Managerial statistics

Team From To G W D L Win%
Liverpool 1 July 1983 29 May 1985 131 71 36 24 54.2

As an individual

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b The position of wing half is now obsolete in football terminology but it was a key role at the time of Fagan's career when teams routinely played in a 2–3–5 formation. The wing halves (right and left) played outside the centre half in the middle three. Although some wing halves were more creative than defensive, Fagan's job was to win the ball and move it forward, so he was the equivalent of what is called a holding midfielder in 21st century football.


References

Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "The Joe Fagan Story". Liverpool FC. 2001. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
  2. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 1.
  3. ^ Fagan & Platt, pp. 2–3.
  4. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 3.
  5. ^ a b Fagan & Platt, p. 13.
  6. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 14.
  7. ^ a b Fagan & Platt, p. 15.
  8. ^ a b Fagan & Platt, p. 16.
  9. ^ a b c Fagan & Platt, p. 17.
  10. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 18.
  11. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 20.
  12. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 21.
  13. ^ Fagan & Platt, p. 22.
  14. ^ James, Gary (2006). Manchester City - The Complete Record. Derby: Breedon. ISBN 1-85983-512-0. p. 245.
  15. ^ Shankly & Roberts
  16. ^ Kelly, p. 141.
  17. ^ a b Kelly, p. 145.
  18. ^ Kelly, p. 231.
  19. ^ Fagan & Platt, pp. 53–54.
  20. ^ a b Kelly, p. 139.
  21. ^ "Some people believe football is a matter of life and death... The wit and wisdom of Bill Shankly". Daily Mirror. 2 September 2010. Retrieved 12 March 2014. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  22. ^ "Smokin' Joe Fagan in 10 fascinating stories". Liverpoolfc.com. 26 May 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2014.
  23. ^ Kelly, p. 138.
  24. ^ "Anfield Cemetery and Crematorium". Find A Grave. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
  25. ^ Laura Jones (8 October 2010). "Tributes paid as Liverpool FC legend Joe Fagan's widow Lil dies". Crosby Herald. Retrieved 13 January 2014.
General
  • Andrews, Gordon (1989). The Datasport Book of Wartime Football 1939–46. Datasport.
  • Fagan, Andrew; Platt, Mark (2011). Joe Fagan – Reluctant Champion. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-550-8.
  • Hughes, Simon (2009). Geoff Twentyman: Secret Diary of a Liverpool Scout. Liverpool: Trinity Mirror Sport Media. ISBN 978-1-906802-00-4.
  • Keith, John (2001). Bob Paisley: Manager of the Millennium. London: Robson. ISBN 1-86105-436-X.
  • Kelly, Stephen F. (1997). Bill Shankly: It's Much More Important Than That. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0-7535-0003-5.
  • Kennedy, Alan; Williams, John (2004). Kennedy's Way – Inside Bob Paisley's Liverpool. Edinburgh: Mainstream. ISBN 1-84596-034-3.
  • Liversedge, Stan (1996). Paisley: A Liverpool Legend. Cleethorpes: Soccer Book Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-947808-85-X.
  • Paisley Family (2007). The Real Bob Paisley. Liverpool: Trinity Mirror Sport Media. ISBN 978-1905-266-26-5.
  • St John, Ian (2005). The Saint: My Autobiography. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-84114-1.
  • Shankly, Bill; Roberts, John (1976). Shankly. London: Arthur Barker Ltd. ISBN 0-213-16603-8.
  • Smith, Tommy (2008). Anfield Iron. London: Transworld Publishers. ISBN 978-0-593-05958-6.