Belfast Telegraph

Former United boss Docherty dies at 92

Colourful Scot led Manchester club to FA Cup glory over Liverpool in ’77

- By Robert Jones

TOMMY Docherty, who has died at the age of 92, was one of football’s great characters.

The former Manchester United boss managed 12 clubs and the Scotland national team during the most colourful of careers.

He was irrepressi­ble, outspoken and often controvers­ial, accruing a seemingly endless supply of anecdotes, quips and one-liners.

Docherty, who was known as ‘The Doc’, spent nine years as a player with Preston and played for Scotland at the 1958 World Cup in Sweden, before a managerial career which took him to Portugal and Australia, but is best remembered for a five-year spell at Old Trafford.

Born in the Gorbals district of Glasgow on April 24, 1928, he once said in a Daily Telegraph interview of his tough upbringing: “If you wanted a new pair of shoes you went down the swimming baths in bare feet and just nicked a pair. I didn’t think it was morally wrong. It was the thing to do.”

Docherty joined boyhood heroes Celtic in 1947 after leaving the army, making his debut in a 1-0 league defeat to Rangers.

He left for Preston in 1949 — the year in which he married his first wife Agnes — after failing to pin down a first-team spot, and said years later: “When I was a youngster, it was my one and only ambition to play in a green and white jersey. When I was transferre­d it was one of the great disappoint­ments of my life.”

His time at Deepdale included an appearance in the 1954 FA Cup final and he won the first of his 25 Scotland caps, playing twice in the 1954 World Cup.

In 1958, Docherty joined Arsenal, where he effectivel­y ended his playing career.

Although he made a few appearance­s for Chelsea after moving to Stamford Bridge in February 1961, the switch brought about his first step into coaching and management.

He was unable to prevent the west London club being relegated from the top flight in the 196162 season, but the Blues bounced back at the first attempt.

In 1964- 65 they won t he League Cup with an aggregate victory over Leicester, but lost the 1967 FA Cup final to Tottenham.

The Glaswegian left to become manager of unfashiona­ble Rotherham and memorably said: “I promised I would take Rotherham out of the Second Division — and I took them into the Third. The old chairman said, ‘Doc, you’re a man of your word!’”

He left Rotherham after a year and began racking up a dizzying number of clubs while honing his repartee.

He had spells at QPR, Aston Villa and Porto and a term as assistant manager to Terry Neill at Hull before leaving in 1971 to become manager of Scotland, first on a temporary basis, then permanentl­y.

In December 1972, with Scotland on their way to the 1974 World Cup finals in West Germany, he quit to take over at Manchester United.

“One of my biggest regrets was leaving the Scotland job when I did,” he later said.

The Red Devils were relegated to the Second Division in 1974, but stormed back the next season as champions.

After surprising­ly losing the 1976 FA Cup final 1-0 to Second Division Southampto­n, he led United to the FA Cup final again the following year when they beat favourites Liverpool 2-1.

However, almost immediatel­y he was sacked for having an affair with the wife of club physiother­apist Laurie Brown.

Docherty later married Mary Brown and they remained together until his death. They had two children, Lucy and Grace, while he had four children — Tom, Michael, Peter and Catherine — to Agnes, who died in 2002.

He returned to the hot-seat at Derby before moving back to QPR, where he was sacked, then reinstated after just nine days — and then sacked again.

Docherty then had spells at Sydney Olympic, Preston, South Melbourne and then managed Sydney Olympic again in 1983 before becoming boss of Wolves. Altrincham was his final managerial post before retirement at the end of the 1987-88 campaign.

He was inducted into the Scottish Football Hall of Fame in November 2013, but at the press conference, after the jokes, he turned serious, saying: “This is something that will be there forever and will never be obliterate­d.”

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 ??  ?? Top Doc:
Tommy Docherty and Jimmy Nicholl celebrate Manchester United’s 1977 FA Cup Final win over Liverpool
Top Doc: Tommy Docherty and Jimmy Nicholl celebrate Manchester United’s 1977 FA Cup Final win over Liverpool
 ??  ?? United days: Docherty with George Best
United days: Docherty with George Best

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