Guðjón Þórðarson

This is an Icelandic name. The last name is a patronymic, not a family name; this person is properly referred to by the given name Guðjón.
Guðjón Þórðarson
Personal information
Full name Guðjón Þórðarson
Date of birth (1955-09-14) 14 September 1955
Place of birth Akranes, Iceland
Playing position Defender
Youth career
ÍA Akranes
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1972–1986 ÍA Akranes 400 (22)
1988 KA Akureyri 3 (0)
National team
1985 Iceland 1 (0)
Teams managed
1987 ÍA Akranes
1988–1990 KA Akureyri
1991–1993 ÍA Akranes
1994–1995 KR Reykjavík
1996 ÍA Akranes
1997–1999 Iceland
1999–2002 Stoke City
2002 Start
2003–2004 Barnsley
2005 Keflavík
2005–2006 Notts County
2007–2008 ÍA Akranes
2008–2009 Crewe Alexandra
2010–2011 BÍ/Bolungarvík
2011–2012 Grindavík

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Guðjón Þórðarson (Icelandic pronunciation: [ˈkʏðjoun̥ ˈθourðarsɔn̥]; born 14 September 1955) is an Icelandic former footballer and manager.

He has previously been manager of ÍA, KA, KR, Keflavík, Notts County, Iceland, Stoke City, Barnsley, Start in Norway, Crewe Alexandra and provincial Icelandic club BÍ/Bolungarvík, from which he was sacked in October 2011 after having guided the team to a 6th-place finish in the B division and a semi-finals spot in the league cup, during his year in charge. On 7 November 2011 he was appointed new manager of Grindavík, succeeding Ólafur Örn Bjarnason, that had been manager and player of the club for one year, but resigned as manager so he could fully focus on his performance on the pitch.

Guðjón has three sons who also play professional football, namely: Bjarni, Joey and Þórður Guðjónsson.

Playing career

Guðjón played over 400 matches for his hometown club, ÍA Akranes, scoring 22 goals in the process. In his career, Gudjon won 5 league titles and 5 cup titles. He also played 22 European games for ÍA Akranes.[1] Guðjón played in his only international match in 1985.

Management career

In Iceland

Guðjón's last season as a player was 1986 and his first coaching job was at ÍA Akranes in the 1987 season. Guðjón then left off to Akureyri to become manager of KA Akureyri in 1988. The team won its first and only league title very surprisingly in 1989. That has to be known as a big achievement for Guðjón given the players he had in his squad. After being relegated in 1990, ÍA Akranes appointed Guðjón as manager. The team was promoted at first attempt, and subsequently won the Icelandic league the following year, in 1992. The team dominated Icelandic football the next few years and became league champions of Iceland for five years running, 1992–1996.[2]

KR Reykjavik, Iceland's oldest and most successful club, appointed Guðjón after the 1993 season. The team had not won the Icelandic league for more than 20 years and Guðjón was seen as the right man to win the title. He did not win the league in his two-year stint at the club, but the team did however win the Cup on both occasions 1994 and 1995. Guðjón came back to Akranes after his spell at KR and guided the team to win the Icelandic league and the Cup in 1996. After the season, actually late in November 1996 ÍA Akranes terminated his contract. But Guðjón wasn't out of a job for too long. In June 1997 he took charge of the Icelandic national team. Guðjón was very successful as manager of the Icelandic national team. During the three years he was in charge, the team played 24 games, winning ten of them, drawing four and losing eight. The team scored 35 goals in the process, conceding 23.

The team was close to qualifying to the European Championship in 2000, despite being placed in a very strong qualifying group alongside Ukraine, Russia and current world champions France. The game that took place at Stade de France was one that put Icelandic football to a higher standard. After being 2–0 down at half time, to come back too 2–2, and closely losing in additional time 3–2.

Stoke City

Guðjón became Stoke City manager in November 1999, when he joined the club following the successful acquisition of the club by a group of Icelandic businessmen headed by Gunnar Gíslason.[3] They decided to bring in their own man to replace the existing manager Gary Megson. Guðjón brought in a number of his fellow countrymen to the club with the arrival of Einar Daníelsson, Sigursteinn Gíslason, Brynjar Gunnarsson and his son Bjarni Guðjónsson. He got off to a perfect start as Stoke manager as his side beat Wycombe Wanderers 4–0 on 23 November 1999. Good results continued as more Scandinavian players arrived at the club such as Frode Kippe, Mikael Hansson and Arnar Gunnlaugsson.[3] Stoke also reached the 2000 Football League Trophy Final where they faced Bristol City in front of 75,057 at Wembley. Goals from Graham Kavanagh and Peter Thorne earned Stoke a 2–1 victory. In the league Stoke finished in sixth position reaching the play-offs where they faced Gillingham. Stoke won the first leg 3–2 but two controversial refereeing decisions cost Stoke dearly and they lost the second leg 3–0.[3]

In 2000–01 Guðjón was again busy bringing in Icelandic players with Ríkharður Daðason, Stefán Þórðarson, Birkir Kristinsson and Danish defender Henrik Risom all agreeing to move to Stoke-on-Trent. Results were often inconsistent meaning automatic promotion was not possible and Stoke made it into the play-offs.[3] They faced Walsall who, after a 0–0 draw in the first leg, beat Stoke 4–2, meaning that Stoke faced a fourth season in the third tier. The pressure was on Guðjón to gain automatic promotion in 2001–02 and he tried a different approach. He sold both Graham Kavanagh and Peter Thorne to Cardiff City for a combined fee of £2.7 million and with that money he brought in defender Peter Handyside from Grimsby Town who was made captain, goalkeeper Neil Cutler, Belarusian defender Sergei Shtanyuk, Belgian midfielder Jurgen Vandeurzen, David Rowson from Aberdeen and most impressively former Dutch international Peter Hoekstra.[3] Stoke were again lacking the consistency for automatic promotion and for the third season running they entered the play-offs. The opponents this time were Cardiff and it looked like being another failure as the Bluebirds won the 1st leg at Stoke 2–1.[3] Stoke went into the second leg at the notoriously hostile Ninian Park 2–1 down and with both sides missing chances the match was 0–0 after 90 minutes and in the final minute of injury time James O'Connor scored to send the match into extra time.[3] And Stoke scored again via an O'Connor shot which deflected in of Souleymane Oulare to give Stoke the most dramatic victory.[3] The final against Brentford was not as dramatic, as Stoke won comfortably 2–0 thanks to goals from Deon Burton and an own goal from Ben Burgess.[3] However, despite finally achieving promotion via the play-offs at the third attempt Guðjón's contract was not renewed.[4]

Start

Guðjón signed a contract with Start[5] in Kristiansand just through the end of the season to try to steer the club away from relegation. However relegation was inevitable. But at the time Guðjón spent there 5 of the young players in the squad were called up for the U21 Norway side for the first time.

Barnsley

Barnsley appointed Guðjón as manager in 2003. The club had a great start to the season, but his reign ended after a Peter Ridsdale takeover at the club. Guðjón was fired in 2004.

Keflavík

Guðjón decided to return to Iceland in 2005 and was appointed manager of Keflavik. However, he quit just 3 days before the first game of the season to take charge of Notts County.

Notts County

Guðjón was appointed manager of Notts County in 2005. The team started very well, leading the table early on, but eventually failed to make the playoffs. Guðjón resigned his post at Notts County in May 2006 after Notts County finished in 21st place in League Two and in 89th place overall, the lowest position the club had ever finished. Guðjón became the club's first non-British manager when he arrived at Meadow Lane in May 2005.

ÍA Akranes

ÍA Akranes had a difficult season in 2006, avoiding relegation in the last few weeks of the season. Guðjón was appointed manager ahead of the 2007 season, where the team finished third in the league, with one of the leagues youngest teams and also scoring the third most goals in the league. In June 2008, the media in Scotland repeatedly linked Guðjón with the manager's post of Heart of Midlothian,[6] with Terry Butcher as his assistant, but Akranes officials insisted it was only rumours and he would stay put in Iceland. Guðjón himself did, however, confirm to an Icelandic news-site that discussions with Hearts had indeed taken place[7] and that he was considering his options. On 11 July, Hearts appointed Csaba Laszlo as the new manager.[8] Whether Guðjón had ever been a serious contender for the job is not known.

On 21 July, Guðjón was fired from his post at ÍA.[9] The team's performance had been going straight downhill for weeks, but the final straw was a 1–6 defeat against Breiðablik. Guðjón was replaced by the brothers, Arnar Gunnlaugsson and Bjarki Gunnlaugsson.[10]

Crewe Alexandra

He was announced as new manager of League One side Crewe Alexandra on 24 December 2008, as a permanent replacement for the recently sacked Steve Holland. However, previous caretaker manager Dario Gradi remained in charge of the team for two games during the Christmas period, with Guðjón taking over on 29 December.[11]

Despite improvements on the pitch, which saw him win manager of the month for February[12] he could not prevent the club from being relegated into League Two. The poor form continued in the new season, and Guðjón was sacked as Crewe manager on 2 October 2009.[13]

Career statistics

Team From To Record
G W D L Win %
Stoke City 15 November 1999 15 May 2002 154 77 39 38 50.00
Barnsley 30 June 2003 4 March 2004 42 14 15 13 33.33
Notts County 17 May 2005 12 June 2006 50 13 16 21 26.00
Crewe Alexandra 29 December 2008 2 October 2009 37 12 7 18 32.43
Total[14] 283 116 77 90 40.99

Controversies

Guðjón Þórðarson has been involved in many controversies in his career as a manager. He has often been involved in board difficulties.[15][16][17][18]

On 13 May 2005 he resigned as manager of Keflavík only a few days before the 2005 season began, because of unfulfilled financial and professional obligations.[19] Keflavík disputed those accusations.[20] Guðjón had repeatedly denied being in talks with English League 2 club Notts County at the time.[21] However, one day after leaving his job, on 14 May 2005, he admitted being interested in the Notts County job,[22] and was subsequently appointed manager of Notts County on 17 May 2005.[23]

Honours

As player

As manager

Promotions

Football League Second Division play-off final winner
2002

References

  1. "Guðjón Þóðarson knattspyrnustjóri ÍA (in Icelandic)". Retrieved 1 September 2007.
  2. Íslandsmeistarar meistaraflokks karla
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Stoke City season review 2001–02 third time lucky for Stoke". The Sentinel. 31 May 2002.
  4. "Stoke sack Thordarson". BBC Sport. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  5. http://ikstart.no/article.aspx?m=391&amid=479438
  6. Gudjon Thordarson to boss Hearts with Terry Butcher as No.2 – The Daily Record
  7. Eyjan » Guðjón að taka við Hearts? – staðfestir viðræður
  8. "Hearts appoint Laszlo as manager". BBC News. 11 July 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  9. Vísir – Íþróttir – Fótbolti – Íslenski boltinn
  10. Vísir – Íþróttir – Fótbolti – Íslenski boltinn
  11. "Thordarson appointed Crewe boss". BBC Sport. 24 December 2008. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
  12. "Thordarson Wins Manager of the Month". The Sentinel. 5 March 2009. Retrieved 16 June 2009.
  13. Thordarson sacked as Crewe boss BBC Sport; 2 October 2009
  14. "Gudjon Thordarson". Soccerbase. Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  15. "Thordarson exits Notts County job". BBC News. 25 May 2006. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  16. "Stoke sack Thordarson". BBC News. 16 May 2002. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  17. "Paul Hart named as new Barnsley manager after Thordarson sacked". The America's Intelligence Wire. 4 March 2004.
  18. Fotbolti.net
  19. Guðjón hættur sem þjálfari Keflavíkur – mbl.is
  20. Fotbolti.net
  21. Fotbolti.net
  22. Fotbolti.net
  23. Fotbolti.net
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