Peter Taylor (footballer, born 1928)

Peter Taylor
Personal information
Full name Peter Thomas Taylor[1]
Date of birth (1928-07-02)2 July 1928
Place of birth Nottingham, England
Date of death 4 October 1990(1990-10-04) (aged 62)
Place of death Mallorca, Spain
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[2]
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
Christchurch
Mapperley Methodists
1942–1944 Nottingham Forest
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1944–1945 Nottingham Forest 0 (0)
1945–1955 Coventry City 86 (0)
1955–1961 Middlesbrough 140 (0)
1961–1962 Port Vale 1 (0)
1962–1965 Burton Albion
Total 227 (0)
Managerial career
1962–1965 Burton Albion
1965–1967 Hartlepools United (assistant)
1967–1973 Derby County (assistant)
1973–1974 Brighton & Hove Albion (assistant)
1974–1976 Brighton & Hove Albion
1976–1982 Nottingham Forest (assistant)
1982–1984 Derby County
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Peter Thomas Taylor (2 July 1928 – 4 October 1990) was an English football player and manager. A goalkeeper with a modest playing career, he went on to work in management alongside Brian Clough at Derby County and Nottingham Forest, winning the Football League with both clubs and the European Cup twice with Nottingham Forest.

He joined Coventry City in 1945 and spent the 1953–54 season as Coventry's first-choice goalkeeper but was otherwise mostly used as a reserve player. He was sold on to Middlesbrough for £3,500 in 1955 and kept goal for the Second Division club for four full seasons after being promoted to the first-team in the 1956–57 campaign. He lost his first-team place in 1960 and in June 1961, joined Port Vale for a £750 fee. He took a free transfer to non-League Burton Albion in May 1962, where he ended his playing career. Throughout his playing career, he built for his future management career by learning from Coventry manager Harry Storer and building a close relationship with Middlesbrough striker Brian Clough, six years his junior.

He was appointed as manager of Burton Albion in October 1962 after impressing the chairman with his knowledge of the game. He built a strong team and led the club to victory in the Southern League Cup in 1964. In 1965–66 season, Clough appointed him as his assistant at Hartlepools United, and Taylor helped Clough to rebuild the playing squad with a decent 8th place in the 1966–67 season. The pair moved on to Derby County in May 1967, taking the club to the Second Division title in 1968–69, then the First Division title in 1971–72, and the semi-finals of the European Cup in 1973. The duo resigned in October 1973 after their strained relationship with the club's board of directors became unworkable. Clough and Taylor moved on to Brighton & Hove Albion in November 1973, and Taylor stayed on as manager after Clough left Brighton in July 1974.

In July 1976, Taylor left Brighton to work alongside Clough at Nottingham Forest. Repeating their achievement at Derby by winning promotion into the top-flight in 1976–77 and then winning the league title in 1977–78, they then surpassed their previous accomplishments by winning the European Cup in 1979 and 1980. Forest also lifted the Anglo-Scottish Cup, the FA Charity Shield, the European Super Cup, and twice won the League Cup. Taylor retired in May 1982 but returned to the game in November 1982 to manage Derby County. He retired for the second and final time in April 1984.

Following a dispute over Nottingham Forest player John Robertson's transfer in May 1983, he and Clough had not been on speaking terms, and Taylor's sudden death in October 1990 robbed Clough of the chance of reconciliation, something he greatly regretted. In April 2009, a statue of Clough and Taylor was commissioned at Derby's Pride Park Stadium. In October 2015, Nottingham Forest's main stand at the City Ground was renamed the Peter Taylor Stand.

  1. ^ "Peter Taylor". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  2. ^ Edwards 2010, p. 33