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Harry Catterick
English footballer and manager

Harry Catterick

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
English footballer and manager
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Darlington, Darlington, County Durham, North East England
Place of death
Liverpool, Liverpool, Merseyside, North West England
Age
65 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Harry Catterick (26 November 1919 – 9 March 1985) was an English football player and manager. As a player Catterick played for Everton and Crewe Alexandra, in a career that was interrupted by World War II, but he is most notable as a manager. After spells with Crewe and Sheffield Wednesday, with whom he won the Football League Second Division title, he took over at Everton and won the Football League twice and the FA Cup with the Merseyside club and is regarded as one of Everton's most successful managers. He finished his managerial career at Preston North End.

Playing career

Catterick played at amateur level for Stockport County where his father, Henry, was a coach and for Cheadle Heath Nomads before signing for Everton in 1937 as an 18-year-old. Prior to turning professional, he was an apprentice marine engineer.

However, his professional career coincided with the Second World War so that his opportunities to play were limited. His wartime scoring record with Everton was an impressive 55 goals in 71 games. During the war, he also played for Manchester United and Stockport County.

He finally made his league debut in August 1946, aged 26.

Managerial career

Sheffield Wednesday

Replacing Eric Taylor in 1958, Catterick achieved much success in his three years with Sheffield Wednesday. He led to team to the Division 2 title in 1959 and reached the FA Cup semi-final the following season, losing to Blackburn Rovers. The following season, Wednesday were league runners-up to Tottenham Hotspur, who won the Double. Catterick left just before the end of the season following an approach from Everton.

Everton

Catterick took over from Johnny Carey in 1961. He soon began to motivate the team and made some astute signings. Under his authoritarian guidance, Everton won the First Division Championship in the 1962–63 season and the 1966 FA Cup Final. Although he narrowly lost the 1968 FA Cup Final, the same young team eventually dominated the 1969–70 season, winning the Championship again by one point short of a record points total. Catterick upheld Everton's tradition of cultured, attacking football.

Many tipped Everton to dominate the 1970s under Catterick. However, the sale of Alan Ball to Arsenal and a dip in the team's morale saw Everton struggle in the league the following season. The struggle by a previously great team seriously affected Catterick's health, and he suffered a heart attack on 5 January 1972 due to the immense stress. He spent ten days in hospital in Sheffield and returned later that season, but later felt it took him over a year to fully recover.

He was persuaded to accept the role of a non-executive director of the club in April 1973 by John Moores, and he held that role until becoming manager of Preston North End from 27 August 1975 to May 1977.

The Shankly rivalry

While the manager of rivals Liverpool, Bill Shankly, was an extrovert, Catterick was the opposite; an introvert. He disliked that the press gave information about his team out to the public, even simple details such as the formation. He ensured that the players on the team-sheet were only listed in alphabetical order so that rival managers would not know the line-up.

He also disliked televised games as he wanted to keep Everton's playing style out of the public eye. His rival Shankly was the opposite, welcoming televised matches as he felt it frightened opposing teams.

Catterick once gave an "exclusive" story to a journalist that Everton had missed out on the signing of Preston North End's Howard Kendall and that Kendall had in fact opted to sign for Liverpool. The journalist published the story in the newspaper but hours later Kendall had in fact signed for Everton. It is claimed that Catterick had manipulated the media to score points off the field against Shankly.

Managerial statistics

Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecord
PWDLWin %
Crewe Alexandra1 December 19511 June 19537001750000000000000♠757001310000000000000♠317001110000000000000♠117001330000000000000♠337001413009999900000♠41.3
Rochdale1 June 19531 May 19587002238000000000000♠2387001880000000000000♠887001580000000000000♠587001920000000000000♠927001370000000000000♠37.0
Sheffield Wednesday1 August 1958April 19617002138000000000000♠1387001770000000000000♠777001310000000000000♠317001300000000000000♠307001558000000000000♠55.8
EvertonApril 196112 April 19737002597000000000000♠5977002278000000000000♠2787002157000000000000♠1577002162000000000000♠1627001466000000000000♠46.6
Preston North End27 August 19751 May 19777001980000000000000♠987001400000000000000♠407001240000000000000♠247001340000000000000♠347001408009999900000♠40.8
Total7003114600000000000♠1,1467002514000000000000♠5147002281000000000000♠2817002351000000000000♠3517001449000000000000♠44.9

Death

Catterick died of a heart attack shortly after watching Everton draw 2–2 with Ipswich Town in an FA Cup Sixth Round match at Goodison Park on 9 March 1985. He was 65 years old. His death came almost exactly five years after former Everton striker Dixie Dean had died while watching a game at the ground, also of a heart attack. Everton won the replay 1–0 and the players wore a black armband in honour of Catterick.

He is buried in the graveyard of the Parish Church of St Annes, Lancashire. His gravestone bears the Everton motto, "Nil satis nisi optimum".

Honours

Manager

  • Football League Second Division: 1958–59
  • First Division: 1962–63, 1969–70
  • FA Cup: 1965–66
  • Charity Shield: 1963, 1970

Portrayal

Catterick was portrayed by Colin Welland in the 1997 TV film The Fix, which featured the events of the 1964 betting scandal.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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