Information about Alf Ramsey
| Sir Alf Ramsey | ||
| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Full name | Alfred Ernest Ramsey | |
| Date of birth | January 22 1920 | |
| Place of birth | Dagenham, England | |
| Date of death | March 28 1999 (aged 79) | |
| Place of death | Suffolk, England | |
| Playing position | Right-back | |
| Youth clubs | ||
| Portsmouth | ||
| Senior clubs1 | ||
| Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
| 1944-1949 1949-1955 | Southampton Tottenham Hotspur | 90 (8) 226 (24) |
| National team | ||
| 1948-1954 | England | 32 (3) |
| Teams managed | ||
| 1955-1963 1963-1974 1977-1978 | Ipswich Town England Birmingham City | |
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. * Appearances (Goals) | ||
Early Life and Playing Career
Having been a gifted amateur as a pupil and as a player for his army regiment, he played for Portsmouth in the London War League in 1942 before moving to Southampton from 1943 to 1949 (since 1944 as a professional), and Tottenham Hotspur after that. He was very successful with Spurs, playing as a right-back in more than 250 cup and league games, and in 1948 made his England debut against Switzerland; he went on to captain his country three times. His last game for England was the 6-3 defeat by Hungary in November 1953, in which he scored a penalty. As a player Ramsey was considered slow: but had excellent positional sense, read the game better than most, had awareness, strength, and excellent distribution for a defender. He was also a specialist penalty kick taker; his coolness and ability to anticipate the goalkeeper earning him the nickname, The General of Penalties.Ipswich Manager
He retired from playing in 1955 to become manager of Ipswich Town, which he managed very successfully, taking the team from the Third Division South to First Division champions in 1962. This was arguably the most remarkable League Championship win in its history, as Ipswich were all but condemned to relegation by virtually all football pundits and journalists at that time. Alf Ramsey's tactical astuteness, working with a squad of solid but not outstanding players, baffled and astonished the illustrious football clubs involved to achieve the apparently impossible feat of actually winning the League title in Ipswich's first-ever season in the top flight.England Manager
He was appointed England manager in 1963 and immediately caused a stir when he predicted that England would win the next World Cup, which was to be held in England in 1966. This was a bold statement to make, as England's performance on the international stage had been poor up to that point. The World Cup started in 1930: but England refused to participate until 1950, when they suffered an embarrassing defeat at the hands of the U.S.A. When Ramsey took over, he demanded complete control over squad selections. Before Ramsey, Walter Winterbottom had been manager, but selections and other decisions were often carried out by board committees and so forth. When Ramsey took over all of these duties, it led to him being referred to as 'England's first proper manager'.Ramsey was a firm but fair manager and was often regarded as difficult by the press. He ran a strict regime with his players and made sure that no-one felt that they enjoyed special status, star player or not. In May 1964, after a number of players failed to show up for a meeting in a hotel about a forthcoming tour, amongst them Jimmy Greaves, Bobby Moore and Bobby Charlton, they eventually returned to their rooms to discover their passports left on their beds. His strict regime didn't suit everyone but the players with real talent and respect for the game responded well to them and had great respect for Ramsey. Very few of those who played for Ramsey spoke ill of him. In the preparations for the 1966 World Cup, Ramsey made sure that no player was confident of a place in the final 22, which resulted in players performing at their highest level. His decision to appoint a young Bobby Moore as captain also showed Ramsey's ability to see great potential in young players. Another one of his abilities was as a master tactician: a quality that he had first shown with his reading of the game as a player. When it came to tactics, Ramsey had revolutionary ideas.
Tactics
During his time at Ipswich, Ramsey began experimenting with a new style of play that would eventually lead to success in the World Cup and led to his England team being styled, "The Wingless Wonders". As natural wingers were not always known for their defensive qualities, Ramsey started dropping them in favour of attacking midfielders who could also drop back strong in defensive roles. This system proved revolutionary as it often baffled opposing fullbacks, who would naturally expect to see a winger coming down the flank at them once the ball was kicked off: instead, the attacking midfielders and strikers were taking the ball through the middle of the defence and scoring. This style of play proved successful at Ipswich, but really showed its worth when England traveled to Spain to play a friendly with them before the World Cup. As Bobby Charlton remarked, "The Spanish fullbacks were just looking at each other while we were going in droves through the middle". To go to Spain and win easily was a rare achievement for England, and clear evidence that Ramnsey's techniques were working.The 1966 World Cup
With his final squad chosen, Ramsey set about winning the World Cup for England. The first group game was against Uruguay and despite an array of attacking talent upfront including Jimmy Greaves and Roger Hunt, England were held to a 0-0 draw. Ramsey's statement made three years earlier was looking in doubt now: but he remained calm and still experimenting when his side faced Mexico in the next game. Ramsey was using the 4-3-3 system and for each of the group games used a winger, John Connelly against Uruguay, Terry Paine against Mexico and Ian Callaghan against France.Ramsey dropped Alan Ball and John Connelly and brought in Martin Peters, whose advanced style of play as a midfielder matched just the qualities Ramsey looked for in his system, and Terry Paine. England beat Mexico 2-0 and faced France in their last group match. England went on to beat France 2-0 with Ian Callaghan replacing Terry Paine securing qualification to the knockout rounds. Two difficult situations arose from the final group match, however. After making a vicious tackle and being cautioned, midfielder Nobby Stiles came under flack from the top FIFA officials, who called for Ramsey to drop him from the side. Ramsey was having none of it, and firmly told the FA to inform FIFA that either Stiles would remain in his team or Ramsey himself would resign. Another bad tackle was committed during that match, resulting in Tottenham striker (and one of England's most prolific goal-scorers) Jimmy Greaves being injured and sidelined for the next few matches. Despite having more experienced strikers in his side, Ramsey selected young Geoff Hurst as Greaves's replacement, once again seeing potential in the young West Ham forward. The France match also marked Ramsey's final game with a winger. After it, he dropped Ian Callaghan from his side and brought back Alan Ball to strengthen the midfield.
For the knockout stages, England's first opponents were a notoriously rough Argentina side. Ramsey once again showed his tactical awareness, and, now he was no longer using wingers, he decided to switch from 4-3-3 to 4-4-2. With Ball and Peters operating on the flanks, the midfield now boasted Nobby Stiles and Bobby Charlton in the centre. After a violent quarter-final (where the Argentine captain,Antonio Rattin refused to leave the field after being sent off), England scraped a 1-0 win thanks to Geoff Hurst latching onto a beautiful cross from Martin Peters and heading home a goal. Ramsey came under flack when he stopped his players swapping shirts with the Argentinians in protest at their dirty play and was then misquoted as describing the Argentinians as "animals".
In the semi-final, England faced a fluent and skillful Portuguese side containing the tournament’s top goal-scorer Eusébio. However, England won a 2-1 victory in a memorable semi-final which saw them concede their first goal of the competition from the penalty spot. Ramsey had found the perfect defensive formula that went unchanged throughout the entire tournament.
On the 30 July, 1966 Ramsey's promise was fulfilled as England became the World Champions by beating West Germany in a thrilling final. A lot of Ramsey's tactics and decisions proved their worth in this final. Ramsey came under pressure to restore the fit-again Jimmy Greaves to the side: but he stuck to his guns and kept faith with Greaves's replacement, Geoff Hurst, who was to thoroughly vindicate Ramsey's judgement by scoring a hat-trick in a 4-2 win (after extra time) at Wembley. Filling his side with a good balance of experience and youth proved vital when the gruelling final went to extra time. The youth in the team powered England through extra time. A particular example of this was Alan Ball who, at 21, was the youngest player in the England side. Even in extra time, he never showed signs of tiredness and never stopped running - famously setting up Hurst's controversial second goal, as well as having a few chances himself. Even as the match ended with Geoff Hurst scoring England’s fourth goal, Ball was still running down the pitch in case Hurst needed assistance. Rather than a cross from Hurst, Ball was greeted by a number of England fans running onto the pitch who, thinking that the game was already over, had already started celebrating England's victory.
Ramsey remained his usual self during the celebrations: not joining in, but rather opting to let his players soak up their achievement. With his boldly-made promise now fulfilled, Ramsey had proved that the 4-4-2 system could work and had assembled an England team that could compete on the highest level due to physical fitness and good tactics. He remains exemplary as to this day and is the only England manager ever to have won the World Cup: arguably England's greatest sporting achievement.
1966-1970
Despite famously losing to Scotland 3-2 at home in the qualifying competition, England still qualified for the 1968 European Championship, only to lose out in a 1-0 defeat by Yugoslavia in the semi-finals. England had to settle for third place after beating the Soviet Union.1970-1974
The fortunes of Ramsey's England declined in the 1970s. They lost to the Germans 3-2 in the quarter-finals of the 1970 World Cup, after having been in the lead 2-0 with only twenty minutes remaining. The blame was put partly on Sir Alf's cautious tactics; partly on the stand-in goalkeeper, Chelsea's Peter Bonetti. Ramsey was sacked in 1974, after England's failure to qualify for the World Cup tournament of that year. Again while Ramsey's tactics were partly to blame (his inappropriate, mistimed substitutions, for example), England had also been spectacularly denied a win over Poland that would have secured qualification, by outstanding play from the Polish goalkeeper Jan Tomaszewski.Later Life and Death
The later stages of his career were as a Board director and caretaker manager of Birmingham City and then as technical advisor to Panathinaikos between 1979 and 1980. He also appeared, in illustrated form, in the Roy of the Rovers comic, when he took over as caretaker manager of Melchester Rovers while Roy himself was in a coma.He suffered a stroke during the 1998 World Cup and died from Alzheimer's disease at a nursing home in Ipswich on 28 April 1999, aged 79.
Legacy
Sir Alf Ramsey Way, formerly Portman's Walk, is a street in Ipswich that was named after Ramsey shortly after his death in honour of his achievements as Ipswich Town manager. In 2000, a statue of Ramsey was erected on the corner of the street named after him and Portman Road, at the North Stand/Cobbold Stand corner of the stadium. The statue was commissioned by the Ipswich Town Supporters' Club after an initial idea by local fan Seán Salter. Lady Ramsey continues to live (2007) in Suffolk.[1].
Personality
Ramsey often came across as an "aloof" and "proud" figure who talked what was once described as "sergeant-major posh" despite coming from a working-class background. In spite of the airs that he gave himself, he allowed his players to address him as "Alf", which is unusual for managers even today. He had a particular dislike of the media and of anything that he saw as bad manners. He often trained his side hard, a practice which payed off when England were able to battle on despite the heat in their World Cup 1966 Final against West Germany. He seemed to have felt nothing but disgust for his successors. At Ipswich, after he left for the England job, he refused to give Jackie Milburn any advice in his managerial career. Milburn was sacked after nine months, following Ipswich's relegation from the top flight. Neither did Ramsey get on with Sir Bobby Robson, who some say did a better job than Ramsey as manager of Ipswich. Not only did Robson guide Ipswich to the FA Cup, the UEFA Cup, and a high place in the League, he also got England to the semi-finals of the 1990 World Cup. Many thought that Ramsey's attitude to Robson was evidence of jealousy - even though Robson failed to match his achievements in winning the English championship with Ipswich and the World Championship with England. Members of Ramsey's family have suggested that he was liable to take a negative view of anyone who took over one of his jobs. Shortly before he died, however, Ramsey passed on his thanks to Sir Bobby through Bobby's wife after the Robsons paid for his bills in his nursing home. Sir Bobby later declared that Alf was the greatest British football manager ever.Quotes
- "Never change a winning team."
- "It seemed a pity so much Argentinian talent is wasted. Our best football will come against the right type of opposition - a team who come to play football, and not act as animals." - Ramsey's indignant opinion of Argentina after England beat them 1-0 in a bruising quarter final in the 1966 World Cup.
- "You've won it once. Now you'll have to go out there and win it again." - Ramsey's brief team talk prior to the extra-time period in the 1966 final.
Managerial stats
| Team | Nat | From | To | Record | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| G | W | L | D | Win % | ||||
| Ipswich Town | August 1 1955 | April 1 1963 | 363 | 172 | 117 | 74 | 47.38 | |
| England[1] | 1963 | 1974 | 113 | 69 | 17 | 27 | 61.06 | |
| Birmingham City | September 8 1977 | March 6 1978 | 26 | 10 | 12 | 4 | 38.46 | |
Notes
External links
- Alf Ramsey management career stats at Soccerbase
- Alf Ramsey management career stats at Soccerbase
- English Football Hall of Fame Profile
| Sporting positions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Aymoré Moreira | FIFA World Cup winning managers 1966 | Succeeded by Mário Zagallo |
| Preceded by Walter Winterbottom | England national football team manager 1963–1974 | Succeeded by Joe Mercer (caretaker) |
| Preceded by Scott Duncan | Ipswich Town F.C. manager 1955-1963 | Succeeded by Jackie Milburn |
England squad - 1950 FIFA World Cup | ||
|---|---|---|
| DF Aston • MF Baily • FW Bentley • MF Cockburn • MF Dickinson • GK Ditchburn • DF Eckersley • FW Finney • MF Hughes • FW Mannion • FW Matthews • FW Milburn • FW Mortensen • FW Mullen • MF Nicholson • DF Ramsey • DF Scott • DF Taylor • MF Watson • GK Williams • DF Wright • Coach: Winterbottom | ||
England squad - 1966 FIFA World Cup Champions (1st Title) | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 Banks • 2 Cohen • 3 Wilson • 4 Stiles • 5 J. Charlton • 6 Moore • 7 Ball • 8 Greaves • 9 B. Charlton • 10 Hurst • 11 Connelly • 12 Springett • 13 Bonetti • 14 Armfield • 15 Byrne • 16 Peters • 17 Flowers • 18 Hunter • 19 Paine • 20 Callaghan • 21 Hunt • 22 Eastham • Coach: Ramsey | ||
England squad - 1970 FIFA World Cup | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 Banks • 2 Newton • 3 Cooper • 4 Mullery • 5 Labone • 6 Moore • 7 Lee • 8 Ball • 9 B. Charlton • 10 Hurst • 11 Peters • 12 Bonetti • 13 Stepney • 14 Wright • 15 Stiles • 16 Hughes • 17 J. Charlton • 18 Hunter • 19 Bell • 20 Osgood • 21 Clarke • 22 Astle • Coach: Ramsey | ||
| England national football team managers |
|---|
| Winterbottom (1946–62) | Ramsey (1963–74) | Mercer (1974) | Revie (1974–77) | Greenwood (1977–82) | Robson (1982–90) | G. Taylor (1990–93) | Venables (1994–96) | Hoddle (1996–99) | Wilkinson (1999) | Keegan (1999–2000) | Wilkinson (2000) | P. Taylor (2000) | Eriksson (2001–06) | McClaren (2006–) |
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Dieu et mon droit (French)
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Suffolk (pronounced /'sʌfək/) is a historic and non-metropolitan county in East Anglia, England. It has borders with Norfolk to the north, Cambridgeshire to the west and Essex to the south.
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Motto
Dieu et mon droit (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
No official anthem specific to England — the anthem of the United Kingdom is "God Save the Queen".
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Portsmouth F.C.
Full name Portsmouth Football Club
Nickname(s) Pompey, The Blues
Founded 1898
Ground Fratton Park
Portsmouth
Hampshire, England
Capacity 20,688
Manager Harry Redknapp
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Full name Portsmouth Football Club
Nickname(s) Pompey, The Blues
Founded 1898
Ground Fratton Park
Portsmouth
Hampshire, England
Capacity 20,688
Manager Harry Redknapp
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Southampton
Full name Southampton Football Club
Nickname(s) Saints
Founded 1885, as St. Mary's YMA
Ground St Mary's Stadium
Southampton
England
Capacity 32,689
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Full name Southampton Football Club
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Southampton
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Tottenham Hotspur
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Tottenham Hotspur
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ENGLAND
Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Ipswich Town
Full name Ipswich Town Football Club
Nickname(s) Blues, Town or
The Tractor Boys
Founded 1878
Ground Portman Road
Ipswich
Capacity 30,311[1]
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Full name Ipswich Town Football Club
Nickname(s) Blues, Town or
The Tractor Boys
Founded 1878
Ground Portman Road
Ipswich
Capacity 30,311[1]
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ENGLAND
Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Birmingham City
Full name Birmingham City Football Club
Nickname(s) Blues
Founded 1875 as Small Heath Alliance
Ground St Andrew's Stadium
Bordesley Green
Birmingham
Capacity 30,009
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Full name Birmingham City Football Club
Nickname(s) Blues
Founded 1875 as Small Heath Alliance
Ground St Andrew's Stadium
Bordesley Green
Birmingham
Capacity 30,009
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January 22 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Events
- 565 - Eutychius is deposed as Patriarch of Constantinople by John Scholasticus.
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1890s 1900s 1910s - 1920s - 1930s 1940s 1950s
1917 1918 1919 - 1920 - 1921 1922 1923
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Dagenham
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Motto
Dieu et mon droit (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
No official anthem specific to England — the anthem of the United Kingdom is "God Save the Queen".
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Dieu et mon droit (French)
"God and my right"
Anthem
No official anthem specific to England — the anthem of the United Kingdom is "God Save the Queen".
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April 28 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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ENGLAND
Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Nickname(s) The Three Lions
Association The Football Association
Confederation UEFA (Europe)
Head coach Steve McClaren
Asst coach
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Teams 16 (from 74 entrants)
Host England
Matches played 32
Goals scored 89 (average 0 per match)
Attendance 1,635,000 (average 0 per match)
Top scorer(s) Eusébio
9 goals
The
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Host England
Matches played 32
Goals scored 89 (average 0 per match)
Attendance 1,635,000 (average 0 per match)
Top scorer(s) Eusébio
9 goals
The
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Tournament details
Host nation Italy
Dates June 5 – June 10
Teams 4 (from 31 associations)
Venues 3 (in 3 host cities)
Champions Italy (1 title)
Tournament statistics
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Host nation Italy
Dates June 5 – June 10
Teams 4 (from 31 associations)
Venues 3 (in 3 host cities)
Champions Italy (1 title)
Tournament statistics
Matches
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Teams 16 (from 75 entrants)
Host Mexico
Matches played 32
Goals scored 95 (average 0 per match)
Attendance 1,603,975 (average 0 per match)
Top scorer(s) Gerd Müller
10 goals
The
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Host Mexico
Matches played 32
Goals scored 95 (average 0 per match)
Attendance 1,603,975 (average 0 per match)
Top scorer(s) Gerd Müller
10 goals
The
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Portsmouth F.C.
Full name Portsmouth Football Club
Nickname(s) Pompey, The Blues
Founded 1898
Ground Fratton Park
Portsmouth
Hampshire, England
Capacity 20,688
Manager Harry Redknapp
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Full name Portsmouth Football Club
Nickname(s) Pompey, The Blues
Founded 1898
Ground Fratton Park
Portsmouth
Hampshire, England
Capacity 20,688
Manager Harry Redknapp
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Southampton
Full name Southampton Football Club
Nickname(s) Saints
Founded 1885, as St. Mary's YMA
Ground St Mary's Stadium
Southampton
England
Capacity 32,689
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Full name Southampton Football Club
Nickname(s) Saints
Founded 1885, as St. Mary's YMA
Ground St Mary's Stadium
Southampton
England
Capacity 32,689
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