Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | George Sidney Raynor | ||
Date of birth | 13 January 1907 | ||
Place of birth | Hoyland Common, England | ||
Date of death | 24 November 1985 | (aged 78)||
Height | 5 ft 5 in (1.65 m)[1] | ||
Position(s) | Outside right | ||
Youth career | |||
Elsecar Bible Class | |||
Mexborough Athletic | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1929–1930 | Wombwell | ||
1930–1931 | Sheffield United | ||
1932–1933 | Mansfield Town | ||
1933–1935 | Rotherham United | ||
1935–1938 | Bury | ||
1938–1939 | Aldershot | ||
Managerial career | |||
1943–1945 | Iraq XI | ||
1945–1946 | Aldershot Reserves | ||
1946–1954 | Sweden | ||
1947–1948 | GAIS | ||
1948–1952 | AIK | ||
1952–1954 | Åtvidaberg | ||
1954 | Juventus | ||
1954–1955 | Lazio | ||
1956 | Coventry City | ||
1956–1958 | Sweden | ||
1958–1960 | Skegness Town | ||
1960 | Djurgården | ||
1961 | Sweden | ||
1967–1968 | Doncaster Rovers | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
George Sidney Raynor (13 January 1907 – 24 November 1985) was an English professional footballer and one of the most successful international football managers ever. One of his greatest achievements was taking the Sweden men's national football team to a World Cup final, and he also managed them to an Olympic gold medal.[2][3][4][5] Before the 1966 FIFA World Cup, he was the only Englishman to take a national team to a final of a World Cup.
His World Cup campaign with Sweden is the best result ever for a non-national manager in the history of the tournament, along with Austrian Ernst Happel's second place with Netherlands in 1978, twenty years after Raynor's.[6]