Late Tackle Football Magazine

THE! TRUE! VALUE! OF! RE VIE

Don Revie: The Biography, by Christophe­r Evans, published by Bloomsbury Sport, Price: £20

- Rating out of 10: 8 Ian Aspinall

WHEN football fans talk about the greatest English managers, Don Revie is often excluded.

Revie is perhaps the most controvers­ial figure in English football and has never been forgiven for resigning as England manager and moving to the United Arab Emirates.

As a player he was crowned Footballer of the Year and as a manager at Leeds United between 1961 and 1974, he created the most consistent and dominant side in England.

This extensivel­y researched biography by Christophe­r Evans MP attempts to reassess Revie’s contributi­on as both player and manager.

Revie had an itinerant playing career moving from Leicester

City, Hull City, Manchester City and Sunderland before he joined Leeds United. At Manchester City he introduced the ‘Revie Plan’, playing himself as a deep- lying centre-forward drawing the opposing centre-half out of position. In 1955 he became Footballer of the Year and won the FA Cup in 1956. When he took over as manager at Leeds they were in financial difficulti­es and languishin­g in the Second Division. He transforme­d the club and went on to win two First Division titles, two Fairs Cups, an FA Cup and a Le League Cup during his 13-year re reign.

Evans argues that Revie w was a master tactician and vis sionary who transforme­d the g game. His many innovation­s in included using scientists to m monitor player fitness, psyc chologists to improve minds sets and the commission­ing o of dossiers on opponents.

But Revie was also a man of many contradict­ions, and he was not immune to using dirty tricks. For example, he got the Leeds Fire Brigade to drench the Elland Road pitch before a European game with Hungarian team Ujpest Dozsa. Ironically, though, in quagmire conditions it was Leeds who struggled with the pitch.

At Leeds, Revie was able to develop a close relationsh­ip with his players and support staff. But with England he had limited time and, ultimately, he failed at internatio­nal level and fled to the Middle East.

This is an intriguing and absorbing biography and Evans makes a very strong case that, despite his faults, Revie should take his place alongside Sir Matt Busby, Bill Shankly and Sir Alex Ferguson as one of the greatest managers this country has ever seen.

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