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Craig Brown (footballer, born 1940)

Scottish football manager (1940–2023)


Scottish football manager (1940–2023)

FieldValue
nameCraig Brown
full_nameJames Craig Brown
imageCraig Brown.jpeg
birth_date
birth_placeGlasgow, Scotland
death_date
death_placeAyr, Scotland
positionWing half
youthclubs1Kilmarnock Amateurs
years11957–1961
clubs1Rangers
caps10
goals10
years21957–1958
clubs2→ Coltness United (loan)
years31960–1961
clubs3→ Dundee (loan)
years41961–1965
clubs4Dundee
caps414
goals40
years51965–1967
clubs5Falkirk
caps517
goals50
totalcaps31
totalgoals0
manageryears11977–1986
managerclubs1Clyde
manageryears21986–1993
managerclubs2Scotland U21
manageryears31993–2001
managerclubs3Scotland
manageryears41994–1995
managerclubs4Scotland B
manageryears52002–2004
managerclubs5Preston North End
manageryears62009–2010
managerclubs6Motherwell
manageryears72010–2013
managerclubs7Aberdeen

James Craig Brown (1 July 1940 – 26 June 2023) was a Scottish professional football player and manager. After his playing career with Rangers, Dundee and Falkirk was curtailed by a series of knee injuries, Brown entered management with Clyde in 1977. He then coached various Scotland youth teams until he was appointed Scotland manager in 1993. He held this position until 2001, the longest tenure for a Scotland manager, and they qualified for the UEFA Euro 1996 and 1998 FIFA World Cup tournaments. He later managed Preston North End, Motherwell and Aberdeen. He retired from management in 2013 and was appointed a non-executive director of Aberdeen.

Early life

Brown was born on 1 July 1940 in Corkerhill, Glasgow, but brought up with two younger brothers in Troon, Rutherglen and Hamilton, mother Margaret Caldow, moving with his father's career as a physical education teacher, later a senior advisor on the subject. He was a keen golfer as well as watching Queen's Park and Hamilton Academical matches.

Playing career

Early career

Educated at the former Hamilton Academy, Brown played for the school in Scottish schools competitions and in youth international teams, before joining Rangers in 1957, being considered a top prospect.

Rangers

Brown was initially farmed out to Coltness United to gain experience, and was selected for the Scotland Junior squad. He failed to find a regular first team place at Rangers, with his progress halted by a knee injury and the arrival of Jim Baxter who played in the same position, and moved to Dundee on loan in October 1960.

Dundee

Brown was the first signing of Dundee manager Bob Shankly. Although knee surgery meant he barely played for the first team during his loan, the move was made permanent in the summer of 1961. Dundee won the Scottish league title that season and Brown's nine appearances entitled him to a medal.

Falkirk

Brown signed for Falkirk in 1965 on a part-time basis and went on to make 42 total appearances at Brockville. He was released in 1967 and signed for Stranraer, but his injured knee almost immediately required him to call time on his playing career, and he returned the signing-on fee he had received from the club.

Managerial career

Clyde

Brown quickly showed a keen interest in being involved in the coaching side of football and he became assistant manager of Motherwell in 1974. He got his first managerial job as part-time manager of Clyde in 1977, where he spent ten seasons – winning the Second Division championship in his first season – whilst also working as a primary school head teacher then a lecturer in primary education at Craigie College, Ayr.

Scotland

Brown was in charge of Scotland's youth teams. In 1989, he coached Scotland's Under-16s to the final of the 1989 FIFA U-16 World Championship and three years later coached the under-21s to the semi-finals of the 1992 UEFA Under-21 Championship.

In July 1986, he took up the post of assistant manager of Scotland, also with responsibility for the under-21 team. Brown was assistant manager to Alex Ferguson for the Scotland senior team's campaign at the 1986 FIFA World Cup (the appointment he said 'changed his life' as it enabled him to move from being a part-time manager and teacher to a full member of the national coaching setup), and served the same role under Andy Roxburgh at the 1990 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 1992. He succeeded Roxburgh initially on an interim basis, after the team failed to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup; his debut was a 3–1 loss away to Italy.

Euro 1996

Brown took Scotland to Euro 96, as the team only conceded three goals in 10 qualifying matches

Scotland were drawn in the finals with the Netherlands, England (the host nation) and Switzerland. The opening game against the Netherlands ended in a goalless draw, then the match against England hinged on two moments late in the second half. With the score standing at 1–0 to England, Gary McAllister had a penalty kick saved by David Seaman and almost straight away Paul Gascoigne scored a brilliant goal to secure a 2–0 England win. This left Scotland needing an unlikely combination of results from the final games to qualify, but for a while this was happening as another McCoist goal gave them a 1–0 lead against Switzerland while the Netherlands were losing 4–0 to England.

1998 World Cup

Scotland also qualified for the 1998 World Cup under Brown, again only conceding three goals in their 10 qualifying matches Brown had complained about the poor standard of floodlighting at the Kadriorg Stadium, which prompted FIFA to bring forward the kick-off time on the morning of the game. This decision upset the Estonians, who had their preparations disrupted and stood to lose some television revenue. Brown thought the Estonians would just protest the kick-off change and turn up at the last minute, but they did not and Scotland were left to kick-off without any opposition. The FIFA delegate at the match believed Scotland would be awarded a walkover win, but instead a committee ordered the game to be replayed at a neutral site.

Scotland were drawn in Group A at the finals with Brazil, Norway and Morocco. As Brazil were the World Cup holders, this meant that Scotland played in the opening match of the tournament.

A 1–1 draw with Norway left Scotland needing a positive result against Morocco in their third match to have a chance of progressing. Scotland lost that match 3–0 and were eliminated them from the tournament, although a Norwegian win against Brazil meant that Morocco did not progress either. The result against Morocco was heavily criticised as Scotland had rarely conceded more than two goals in a game under Brown, although he cited secondary statistics (shots at goal, possession and corners) which suggested the performance was better than the one-sided scoreline.

Euro 2000 qualifying

Scotland finished second in their UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying group, which meant they entered a playoff against England. Scotland lost the first leg 2–0 at Hampden Park, but then won 1–0 at the old Wembley in the second, losing 2–1 on aggregate. Paul Scholes scored both England goals in the tie.

2002 World Cup qualification

After Scotland finished third in their 2002 FIFA World Cup qualification group and failed to qualify for the World Cup, Brown resigned as Scotland manager in October 2001. He was replaced by German Berti Vogts. Brown took charge of Scotland for 70 international matches, more than any other Scotland manager. He won 32 games, drew 18 and lost 20. Scotland did not qualify for another major tournament until Euro 2020, and 1998 is still their most recent appearance in a men's World Cup finals.

Preston North End

Brown then had a spell in club management when he was appointed manager of Preston North End in April 2002, but left by mutual consent on 29 August 2004 after a poor start to the league campaign.{{cite news |access-date=9 September 2007}} He later had a brief spell as football consultant at Derby County under former protégé Billy Davies, helping them win promotion to the Premier League in 2006–07. He was one of eight members of staff sacked alongside Davies in November after a poor start to the 2007–08 Premier League season.

In October 2008, the 68-year-old Brown was linked to the vacant managerial position with Scottish First Division side Dundee, but the job went to Jocky Scott.

Motherwell

On 28 December 2009, it was announced that Brown would be taking charge of Motherwell, with Archie Knox as his assistant. Brown and Knox established Motherwell in the top six of the Scottish Premier League during their time in charge. |access-date=10 December 2010}}

Aberdeen

Brown, who was working without a contract at Motherwell, rebuffed an initial approach by Aberdeen on 8 December 2010. He then had a change of heart after a second approach was made, and was appointed Aberdeen manager on 10 December.{{cite news

On 14 March 2013, Brown announced he was retiring from football management at the end of the 2012–13 season. His retirement date was brought forward when Derek McInnes was appointed to the position on 5 April, with Brown accepting a position on the Aberdeen board.

Personal life

Brown was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1999 Birthday Honours for services to football. Brown was also awarded an honorary Doctorate of Arts by Abertay University in 2001.

Brown had two brothers: Brown's grandson and namesake, Craig, plays for Montrose.

Brown died on 26 June 2023, five days before his 83rd birthday. His funeral was held at Masonhill Crematorium in Ayr, followed by a memorial service at Ayr Racecourse, on 25 July.

Managerial statistics

TeamFromToRecordGWDLWin %Total
ClydeAugust 1977May 1986
Scotland U21September 1986November 1993
Scotland13 October 199330 October 2001
Scotland BFebruary 1994February 1995
Preston North End29 April 200229 August 2004
Motherwell29 December 200910 December 2010
Aberdeen13 December 20106 April 2013

Honours

Player

Dundee

Manager

Clyde

Scotland U16

  • FIFA under-16 World Cup: Runner-up 1989

Scotland U21

  • UEFA under-21 Euros: Bronze 1992
  • Toulon Tournament: Bronze 1991, 1993

Individual

  • Scottish Premier League manager of the month: January 2010, February 2010, January 2012 and October 2012

References

References

  1. (26 June 2023). "Telegraph Obituaries : Craig Brown, footballer who became the most recent manager to lead Scotland to the World Cup finals". The Daily Telegraph.
  2. 9781782192695
  3. ''Hamilton Advertiser'', 21 May 2009
  4. 'Every picture tells a story: Craig Brown, Part 1', ''Evening Times'', 15 April 2004
  5. 'The rise and rise of a well honoured manager', ''The Herald'', 12 July 1999
  6. Kearney, Ben. (26 June 2023). "Former Scotland and Falkirk player Craig Brown dies aged 82".
  7. Galloway, Dave. (26 June 2023). "Former Scotland manager Craig Brown dies".
  8. "Craig Brown: Former Scotland, Aberdeen, Motherwell, Clyde and Preston boss dies aged 82".
  9. (26 June 2023). "Craig Brown: The teacher turned coach who took Scotland to the big stage".
  10. Young, Chick. (25 July 1986). "Brown takes Scotland No. 2 job". [[The Evening Times]].
  11. Shaw, Phil. (16 August 1995). "McCoist the saviour for Scotland". The Independent.
  12. Wilson, Richard. (15 June 2016). "England 2-0 Scotland: 20 years of regret from Euro 96 loss". BBC Sport.
  13. (6 October 2003). "McCoist magic not enough for Scotland in EURO '96 Group A".
  14. Mullen, Scott. (26 June 2023). "Scotland: Craig Brown relives his France 98 World Cup journey". BBC Sport.
  15. (11 June 1998). "Own Goal Gets Brazil Off Scot-Free". The Washington Post.
  16. (17 June 2021). "'We had personality': when Scotland won at Wembley in 1999 but still lost". The Guardian.
  17. Campbell, Jordan. (11 November 2020). "'For 20 years we've found ways of not qualifying' – Scotland's glorious failure".
  18. (7 October 2001). "Brown resigns after World Cup failure". The Observer.
  19. (27 November 2007). "Ruthless Derby look to Ince as Davies pays for poor results". The Guardian.
  20. (23 October 2008). "Davies, Brown linked with Dundee". BBC Sport.
  21. [https://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/m/motherwell/8433200.stm Brown given stint at Motherwell], BBC Sport, 29 December 2009
  22. (14 March 2013). "Aberdeen boss Craig Brown to retire in the summer". BBC Sport.
  23. Richard Gordon. (5 April 2013). "Aberdeen boss Craig Brown to retire in the summer". BBC Sport.
  24. {{London Gazette. (12 June 1999)
  25. (12 June 1999). "Sports stars top the list". BBC News.
  26. (14 September 2021). "Craig Brown – Honorary Graduate".
  27. (22 November 2018). "Obviously we are not going to win it, but you never know". BBC Sport.
  28. (26 June 2023). "Craig Brown: Scotland's longest-serving manager dies aged 82". BBC Sport.
  29. (26 June 2023). "Craig Brown, Scotland's longest serving national team coach, dies at 82". AP News.
  30. (25 July 2023). "Funeral held for former Scotland manager Craig Brown".
  31. [https://www.fitbastats.com/clyde/manager.php?id=805 (Clyde manager) Brown, Craig], FitbaStats
  32. [https://www.fitbastats.com/scotlandu21/manager.php?id=2 (Scotland U21 manager) Brown, Craig], FitbaStats
  33. "Managers: Scottish Football Association". Scottish Football Association.
  34. [https://www.rsssf.org/tabless/scot-intres1995.html Scotland – International Matches 1991-1995], [[RSSSF]]
  35. [https://www.scottishfa.co.uk/international-matches/?mid=25610 International Matches {{!}} Italy 3-1 Scotland], Scottish Football Association
  36. [https://www.fitbastats.com/scotlandb/manager.php?id=3 (Scotland B manager) Brown, Craig], FitbaStats
  37. "Craig Brown – manager". Soccerbase.
  38. "Craig Brown - managerial statistics".
  39. (22 April 1992). "GLORY BOYS: The Scotland under-21 squad which has steered their country to the semi-finals of the European". [[Evening Express (Scotland).
  40. (3 June 1991). "NO THANKS: Same old jinx". [[Daily Record (Scotland).
  41. (4 February 2010). "Motherwell manager Craig Brown aims high". BBC Sport.
  42. (9 February 2012). "Aberdeen manager Craig Brown wins SPL January award". BBC Sport.
  43. (6 November 2012). "Aberdeen trio collect monthly SPL awards". BBC Sport.
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