Ronnie McFall

Ronnie McFall
Personal information
Full name Ronald Joseph McFall
Date of birth (1945-07-18) 18 July 1945
Place of birth Portadown, Northern Ireland
Playing position Full back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Portadown
Dundee United 0 (0)
Ards
Portadown
1975–1979 Glentoran 148 (3)
National team
Northern Ireland Youth
1974 Irish League 1 (0)
Teams managed
1979–1984 Glentoran
1986–2016 Portadown
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.

Ronald Joseph "Ronnie" McFall MBE[1] (born 18 July 1945 in Portadown, Northern Ireland) is a former football player and manager, most notably of Portadown for 29 years from December 1986 until his resignation in March 2016.

At the time of his resignation he was the longest-serving manager in European club football, having held the record ever since Alex Ferguson stood down as Manchester United manager in 2013.[2] McFall is amongst the most successful managers in the history of the Irish League having claimed five league titles, four Irish Cups and 20 other trophies.McFall was the first person to be rewarded the freedom of the Armagh Banbridge and Craigavon area for his immense contribution to sport. He is also a five time Manager of the Year award winner, and the uncle of Glentoran defender Ross Redman.

Playing career

Club

As a player Ronnie McFall was a full-back. He played with Dundee United, Portadown, Ards and Glentoran.

McFall played in the 1974–75 UEFA Cup for Portadown. He also played in four 1977–78 European Cup games for the Glens, two of which came against a Giovanni Trappatoni led Juventus .

International

He won Northern Ireland Youth caps and also represented the Irish League against the League of Ireland in 1974.

Playing honours

(with Portadown)

(with Glentoran)

Managerial career

McFall took his first managerial appointment, initially as player-manager, at Glentoran in January 1979.[3] Although he helped the club to an Irish League title in 1981 and an Irish Cup win in 1983 he was sacked in December 1984 after a poor run of results.[4]

In December 1986, McFall was appointed as manager at Portadown.[5] He established the Ports as challengers for major honours, leading them to their first ever Irish League title in 1990 and first Irish Cup the following year. McFall won 23 trophies with Portadown and is the club's most successful manager of all time.

McFall was appointed as the Northern Ireland U23 manager for the International Challenge Trophy Series in 2009. He celebrated 29 years in charge of Portadown in December 2015, and his 1000th league game in November 2013.[6] He resigned as Portadown manager on 5 March 2016, after a shock 3–2 Irish Cup quarter-final defeat at home against second-tier side Lurgan Celtic.[2]

Managerial Honours

(with Glentoran)

(with Portadown)

References

  1. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/northern_ireland/7163309.stm New Year honours for NI quartet
  2. 1 2 "Ronnie McFall: Europe's longest-serving boss resigns after 29 years". BBC Sport. 5 March 2016. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  3. Glentoran: A Complete Record (by Roy France) Page 369
  4. Glentoran: A Complete Record (by Roy France) Page 398
  5. The Northern Ireland Football Yearbook 1996/97 (Edited by Marshall Gillespie) Page 122
  6. McFall reaches 1,000 with Portadown - UEFA
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.