BRIAN HORTON

'Brian Horton' (born February 4, 1949 in Hednesford) is an English football manager, currently working as the assistant manager at Hull City. Horton is one of the few managers in English football to have taken charge of teams in more than a thousand games.
Horton was a respected journeyman midfield player who started his career with Walsall and his home town Hednesford before signing for Port Vale in July 1970. Legend has it that his transfer fee was a pint of shandy, as the cash-strapped potteries club haggled with the Hednesford Town chairman by plying him with alcohol. Vale sold Horton (much to the disappointment of their fans) to Brighton and Hove Albion in March 1976 for a fee of £30,000
Horton later moved to Luton Town and his most famous moment as a player was Luton's last-day relegation escape at Manchester City in 1983, in which manager David Pleat danced across the pitch in infamous jubilation. Horton became player-manager of Hull City a year later.
At Hull, Horton's reputation as a strong-minded, tactically-aware manager quickly built and he came very close to earning the club promotion to the First Division. He quit playing in 1986 to concentrate on full-time management but was sacked, to the dismay of some fans and most of the players, in 1988 after a short run of games without a win. He then became assistant manager to Mark Lawrenson at Oxford United and took over the main job after Lawrenson was dismissed following the sale of star player Dean Saunders.
Horton's own tenure at the Manor Ground lasted five seasons and although Oxford stayed clear of the drop from the Second Division, they never looked like gaining promotion and Horton's tenure at the club was uneventful.
In August 1993, four games after the start of the 1993-94 FA Premier League campaign, Horton resigned as Oxford manager to replace Peter Reid as manager of Manchester City, to the surprise of many supporters and commentators, who were expecting the appointment of someone more high profile. City's previous three seasons in the top flight had yielded top-ten finishes, but their fortunes declined under Horton. With Niall Quinn missing through a cruciate ligament injury, they were 20th and bottom in mid-February. But then Horton transformed his attack by signing Uwe Rösler, Paul Walsh and Peter Beagrie, and City escaped relegation after losing only 2 of the last 14 games of the season.
Horton played with two out and out wingers in 1994-95, Beagrie and Nicky Summerbee. This led to Rösler, Walsh and Quinn scoring 47 goals between them, but also to some heavy defeats, such as the 5-0 loss to Manchester United F.C. City were 6th on 3 December but won only 4 of their remaining 25 league games, finishing four points away from relegation, and Horton was sacked.
He made a swift return to management with Huddersfield Town, who had just won promotion to Division One via the Division Two playoffs under Neil Warnock, who had then quit. 1995-96 was a promising season for the Terriers. Horton seemed to have breathed new life into the club and they reached the fifth round of the FA Cup, narrowly suffering a replay defeat at home to Wimbledon. But the season ended in disappointment when Huddersfield's league form slumped and they finished eighth, just missing out on a playoff place. Despite the club record £1.2million signing of Bristol Rovers striker Marcus Stewart, Huddersfield were unable to make a mark on Division One in 1996-97 and they finished 20th - just two places ahead of the relegation zone. Horton was sacked in September 1997 after a poor start to the season.
In February 1998, Horton returned to one of his old clubs as a player when he became manager of Brighton and Hove Albion who were enduring the blackest spell in their history. The previous season they had come minutes away from suffering relegation to the Conference, and things were little better this time round. They were second from bottom in Division Three but a large gap separated them from bottom club Doncaster Rovers. Horton kept the Seagulls flying clear of relegation and their league form was better in 1998-99, but in January 1999 Horton left to take charge of another of his old clubs, Port Vale after the sacking of John Rudge.
He remained in charge at Port Vale until February 2004. Although Vale survived relegation in 1999, it only postponed the inevitable as in the following season Vale finished second from bottom in Division One and were relegated in his first full season as manager. He remained at the helm for the next three-and-a-half years but promotion back to Division One never looked a real possibility and he was succeeded by Martin Foyle three months before the end of the 2003-04 season.
Within a few weeks of leaving Port Vale, Brian Horton landed the manager's job at Division Three strugglers Macclesfield Town. He rejuvenated a demoralised side and kept them in the Football League, but many pundits were tipping the Silkmen to slip out of the newly-named Coca-Cola League Two at the end of the 2004-05 season. Horton proved all the observers wrong as his side were in the top-seven of the division virtually all season long before they qualified for the playoffs in sixth place. Their promotion challenge was finally ended by Lincoln City in the semi finals. They were not to challenge again in 2005-06, finishing 17th.
Horton was relieved of his duties at Macclesfield Town in late September 2006 after his team failed to win any of their opening twelve League games, leaving them bottom of the Football League.
On May 23 2007 Horton returned to one of his previous clubs Hull City as assistant manager to Phil Brown.[1]
Horton lives in Cheadle Hulme, near Stockport with his family.

Contents
Notes
Managerial stats
External links

Notes



1. Horton will assist Brown at Hull


Managerial stats


TeamNatFromToRecord
GWLDWin %
Hull CityJune 1 1984April 13 198819577605839.48
Oxford UnitedOctober 25 1988August 27 1993243771016531.68
Manchester CityAugust 28 1993May 16 19959629343330.20
Huddersfield TownJune 21 1995October 6 199712039463532.50
Brighton & Hove AlbionFebruary 26 1998January 22 19994314191032.55
Port ValeJanuary 22 1999February 12 2004262841116732.06
Macclesfield TownApril 1 2004October 1 200613147493535.87

External links





Brian Horton article at Amber Nectar

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