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===Return to club football===
===Return to club football===
Gould was appointed as manager of [[Weymouth F.C.|Weymouth]] in the [[Conference National]] on 12 April 2009 for the final five games of the season.<ref>{{Cite news
Gould was appointed as manager of [[Weymouth F.C.|Weymouth]] in the [[Conference National]] on 12 April 2009 for the final five games of the season.<ref name="TIBWey"/><ref>{{Cite news
| title = Gould appointed Weymouth manager
| title = Gould appointed Weymouth manager
| url = http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/w/weymouth/7995763.stm
| url = http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/w/weymouth/7995763.stm
Line 95: Line 95:
| date = 2009-04-12
| date = 2009-04-12
| accessdate = 2009-04-12}}</ref> In his first game in charge Gould lead Weymouth to a 1-1 draw with [[Forest Green Rovers F.C.|Forest Green Rovers]] which ended an 11 game losing streak. But it was not good enough to save them from relegation to the [[Conference South]].
| accessdate = 2009-04-12}}</ref> In his first game in charge Gould lead Weymouth to a 1-1 draw with [[Forest Green Rovers F.C.|Forest Green Rovers]] which ended an 11 game losing streak. But it was not good enough to save them from relegation to the [[Conference South]].

===Personal life===
Married to Marjorie for 42 years,<ref name="TIBWey">{{citeweb|url=http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/Gould-s-wife-s-fault/article-914680-detail/article.html|title=Gould: It's the wife's fault|publisher=This is Bristol|date=2009-04-18|accessdate=2009-10-10}}</ref> the couple's son Richard is presently Chief Executive of [[Somerset County Cricket Club]].<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://www.somersetcountycc.premiumtv.co.uk/page/Whoarewe/0,,11333,00.html|title=Chief Executive|publisher=[[Somerset County Cricket Club]]|accessdate=2009-10-10}}</ref>


==Honours==
==Honours==

Revision as of 15:30, 11 October 2009

Bobby Gould
Personal information
Full name Robert Anthony Gould
Position(s) Striker

Robert Anthony "Bobby" Gould (born 12 June 1946) is an English former footballer and manager.

Playing career

Born in Coventry, Gould started his career at Coventry City, making his debut for the club whilst still an apprentice at the age of 16. He didn't sign professional until June 1964. A striker, he scored 40 goals in 82 league games for the Sky Blues, helping them to win the Second Division title in 1966–67.

He moved to Arsenal in February 1968 for £90,000.[1] He could not hold down a regular place in the Arsenal first team, although he did score a headed goal in the 1969 League Cup Final against Swindon Town, to send the game into extra time; Arsenal went on to lose 3–1.[2] Gould played no part in Arsenal's European Fairs Cup 1969-70 final win and by the end of 1969-70 was on the sidelines at Arsenal.

In June 1970 Gould was transferred to Wolves for a fee of £55,000, and made his debut against Newcastle United in August 1970, but after just 15 months he was signed by West Bromwich Albion manager Don Howe for £66,666.[1] He made his Albion debut at home to Ipswich Town in the same month, and partnering Jeff Astle in attack, went on to score 12 goals in his first season at the Hawthorns. In all he scored 19 goals in 60 appearances for Albion, but when his form began to wane he was sold to Bristol City for £68,888 in December 1972.[1]

Gould joined West Ham United in November 1973 for an £80,000 fee, and picked up a winners' medal in the 1975 FA Cup Final as a non-playing substitute.[1] He re-joined Wolves for £30,000 in December 1975 and helped them to win the Second Division title in 1976–77.[1] He moved on to Bristol Rovers for £10,000 in October 1977, assuming the role of player-coach.[1] Between January and April of 1978 Gould coached the Norwegian side FC Aaslund, and joined Hereford United as player-coach for £10,000 in September of the same year.[1]

Management and coaching career

Club management (1979-1993)

Gould joined Chelsea as assistant manager to Geoff Hurst in 1979. When Hurst was sacked in April 1981, Gould took charge of first team affairs for the final two games of the season, before leaving the club shortly afterwards.

Gould began his managerial career with Bristol Rovers in October 1981 before returning to Coventry City as boss in May 1983. He remained there until December 1984. The highlight of this spell at Coventry came on 10 December 1983 when his unfancied Coventry side achieved a 4-0 win over Liverpool, the top English club side of the time who went on to win the league title, League Cup and European Cup that season.

He made a swift return to management after accepting an offer to return to Bristol Rovers.

Gould is most famous for his achievements with Wimbledon. He moved to the South Londoners in the summer of 1987 after their first season as a First Division club, in which they had finished sixth. His first season brought one of the most famous FA Cup victories in history, when his unfancied Wimbledon side beat Liverpool to clinch the 1988 FA Cup Final at Wembley. They also finished seventh in the league.

Gould remained with the Dons for two more seasons before quitting to make way for his assistant Ray Harford.

In December 1990, Gould returned to the football as assistant manager to Don Howe at Queen's Park Rangers - a role reversal of the management team that they had formed at Wimbledon. Gould lasted just two months at Loftus Road before accepting an offer to become manager of West Bromwich Albion. [1]

But he was unable to prevent them from suffering relegation to the old Third Division at the end of the 1990–91 season - the first time that Albion had slipped to such depths.

In 1991–92, Albion just missed out on the playoffs in their first season as a Third Division club and Gould left in June 1992 to join Coventry, his former club. Ironically, Howe was working at Coventry by this time and the pair were joint managers, but Howe stepped down before the season began to leave Gould in sole charge.

He remained at Coventry City until December 1993, when he resigned despite defying all the odds and keeping them clear of relegation from the Premiership. In his first season, they had been fourth in the league as late as January before a late season dip in form saw them finish 15th. Earlier in the season he had paid Newcastle United £250,000 for striker Mick Quinn, who was among the top scorers in the first-ever Premier League season with 17 goals. He also oversaw a thrilling 5-1 victory in the league over Liverpool, and the following season they began with a similarly impressive 3-0 win over Arsenal at Highbury.

International management (1995-1999)

His next stop was with the Welsh national team. He became national coach in June 1995 but quit four years later after their failure to qualify for the 1998 FIFA World Cup. Gould was not highly regarded by the Welsh fans, following questionable tactics and major fallings out with players such as Nathan Blake, when Blake refused to play after accusing Gould of making a racist remark in training,[3][4] as well as Mark Hughes. A comical incident occurred early in the career of Robbie Savage when Savage jokingly threw a replica of Paolo Maldini's shirt away on Sky Sports before a match against Italy.[5] Gould initially dropped Savage from the squad for disrespecting Maldini, only to reinstate him the next day. Gould's final match was a 4-0 defeat to Italy in which he allegedly instructed Mark Hughes "not to tackle the Italians as they'll only dive".

Back to club football (2000-2003)

In August 2000, Bobby Gould was named as manager of Division Three side Cardiff City. But two months later he handed over his duties to Alan Cork and was promoted to the role of general manager. After seeing the Bluebirds win promotion at the end of 2000–01 he left Ninian Park to seek a return to management.[6]

Bobby Gould's final full time managerial post came in February 2003 when he took over at Division Two strugglers Cheltenham Town.[7] Despite his efforts, Cheltenham were unable to avoid relegation back to Division Three and Gould resigned soon after the 2003–04 campaign was underway, following a run of six defeats in seven games.[8] Gould was unpopular with the fans throughout the start of 2003–04, resulting in a demonstration after the home match with Rochdale during which he came out to announce that he had resigned.

Other roles in football (Since 2004)

In season 2004–05 Gould was employed to coach Peterborough United by owner Barry Fry but quit at half time during an LDV Trophy match with Bristol City after a disagreement with Fry over player selection. Bobby's son Jonathan Gould was also a professional footballer, who kept goal for clubs including Coventry City and Celtic and became a full Scotland international.

In September 2006 it was announced that Bobby would be employed in assisting his son Jonathan who is head coach with Hawke's Bay United in New Zealand and now coaches the under 15's squad during the summer. Another son Richard is currently the Chief Executive of Somerset County Cricket Club. Jonathan once played under his father at Coventry City.

Bobby appears periodically on BBC Five Live's Fighting Talk in which he has become most notorious for his dislike of being in the final or "Defend the Indefenceable".

Return to club football

Gould was appointed as manager of Weymouth in the Conference National on 12 April 2009 for the final five games of the season.[9][10] In his first game in charge Gould lead Weymouth to a 1-1 draw with Forest Green Rovers which ended an 11 game losing streak. But it was not good enough to save them from relegation to the Conference South.

Personal life

Married to Marjorie for 42 years,[9] the couple's son Richard is presently Chief Executive of Somerset County Cricket Club.[11]

Honours

As a manager

Wimbledon

  • F.A. Cup winner - 1988

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Matthews, Tony (2005). The Who's Who of West Bromwich Albion. Breedon Books. p. 96. ISBN 1-85983-474-4.
  2. ^ "League Cup Final, March 15, 1969". football-england.com. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  3. ^ Football Unites, Racism Divides • Racist incidents
  4. ^ BBC News | Football | An Englishman over the border
  5. ^ Savage dismissal shocks team-mates | Sunday Mirror | Find Articles at BNET.com
  6. ^ "Gould leaves Cardiff". BBC Sport. 2001-07-02. Retrieved 2008-04-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "Robins appoint Gould". BBC Sport. 2003-02-11. Retrieved 2008-04-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ "Gould quits Cheltenham". BBC Sport. 2003-10-19. Retrieved 2008-04-13. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ a b "Gould: It's the wife's fault". This is Bristol. 2009-04-18. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  10. ^ "Gould appointed Weymouth manager". BBC Sport. 2009-04-12. Retrieved 2009-04-12.
  11. ^ "Chief Executive". Somerset County Cricket Club. Retrieved 2009-10-10.

External links