Andrew Edward King (born 14
August 1956) is an English
former
professional footballer. He was capped twice by
England at Under-21
level.
Playing career
King was
born in Luton
, Bedfordshire, and began his career as an
apprentice with his home town side, Luton Town, turning professional in July
1974. He left to join
Everton in
April 1976 for a fee of £35,000 and became a crowd favourite with
his tremendous skills in midfield and a knack for scoring goals.
Most notably he scored a spectacular goal to win Everton's first
Merseyside Derby for seven years in 1978.
It was during this period that he was regularly mooted as deserving
a full England international call-up in an attacking midfielder
role, but he was surprisingly overlooked when several players of
arguably lesser quality were making the team. It was judged that he
was too much of an individual (though he was an excellent,
unselfish team player) when what England required at the time was
precisely that kind of exciting and unpredictable player.
He joined
Queens Park
Rangers in September 1980 and made his debut against
Sheffield Wednesday. King was the
first QPR player to score on the famous 'plastic pitch' in the
opening game, although Rangers lost 1-2 to Luton Town. In all King
played 30 league games for QPR scoring 9 goals before a transfer to
West Bromwich Albion in
September 1981.
King
returned to Everton in July 1982, subsequently playing for Dutch
side Cambuur
Leeuwarden before joining Wolverhampton Wanderers in
January 1985. He returned to Luton Town in December the same
year, but made just three league appearances before moving to
Aldershot in August 1986, retiring at
the end of the following season.
Overall his league playing career spanned 14 years, in which he
scored more than 80 goals across more than 310 league
appearances.
Coaching and Managerial Career
King was appointed player/manager of Irish top division team
Waterford United in January
1989. after
Peter Thomas resigned.
However, after playing only two league appearances he left the club
by mutual consent only seven weeks later.
He then signed for
Cobh Ramblers as a
player.
He was appointed as manager of
Mansfield Town in August 1993. He led
Mansfield to the
Third
Division play-offs in the
1994–95 season, losing in the
semi-finals to
Chesterfield. They
failed to build on this the following season and King left in July
1996 after Mansfield had finished in 19th place.
He later worked as a coach and a scout, and was scouting for
Sunderland when, in the 2000 close
season, he joined
Swindon Town as
assistant manager under his former Everton team-mate
Colin Todd. In November 2000, after Todd had left
to become assistant manager of
Derby
County, King took over as manager. He maintained Swindon's
Second Division status
that season, but was replaced by former
Liverpool manager
Roy
Evans in June 2001. Evans remained in charge for just a few
months and King was re-appointed as Swindon manager on 20 December
2001 after the arrival of new owners of the club (including the
former
jockey Willie
Carson).
The peak of his Swindon career came in the
2003–04 season, when Swindon
qualified for the Division Two playoffs, only to lose on penalties
to
Brighton and Hove Albion
in the semi-finals.
King was eventually dismissed by Swindon on 26 September 2005,
after five successive defeats had left Swindon second from bottom
in
Football League One.
He then worked as a scout until being appointed as manager of
Conference National side
Grays Athletic on 23 November
2006. However, he surprisingly resigned for personal reasons on 4
January 2007.
He was a scout for former team
Everton,
but on 3 December 2007 King was appointed Chief Scout at
Championship side
Plymouth
Argyle.
References
-
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/archive/1989/0106/Pg002.html#Ar00204:43C61E45D63344B66F46C68444B70746B71C56C75658C76B63457165658664061066162753E75656276B6F956271557771656371D57964268764969C64968766E69C
-
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/archive/1989/0223/Pg002.html#Ar00204:5D07956017B66097B56247C85DE7B55FE7C8
-
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/archive/1989/0227/Pg004.html
- King assessing the market
- King parts company with Swindon
- Grays appoint King as new manager
- Edinburgh replaces King at Grays
External links