Personal information | |||||||||||||||||
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Full name | Terence Percival Hanney[1] | ||||||||||||||||
Date of birth | 19 January 1889 | ||||||||||||||||
Place of birth | Bradfield, England | ||||||||||||||||
Date of death | 30 November 1964[2] | (aged 75)||||||||||||||||
Place of death | Reading, England | ||||||||||||||||
Position(s) | Centre half | ||||||||||||||||
Senior career* | |||||||||||||||||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) | ||||||||||||||
Wokingham Town | |||||||||||||||||
–1913 | Reading | ||||||||||||||||
1913–1919 | Manchester City | 68 | (1) | ||||||||||||||
1917–1919 | → Brentford (guest) | 34 | (1) | ||||||||||||||
→ Clapton Orient (guest) | |||||||||||||||||
1919–1921 | Coventry City | 32 | (0) | ||||||||||||||
1921–1922 | Reading | 41 | (2) | ||||||||||||||
Northfleet | |||||||||||||||||
International career | |||||||||||||||||
1912 | Great Britain | 1 | (0) | ||||||||||||||
Managerial career | |||||||||||||||||
1924–1927 | VfB Stuttgart | ||||||||||||||||
1927–1928 | FC Wacker Munich | ||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Terence Percival Hanney (19 January 1889 – 30 November 1964) was an English football player and manager.[3]
Hanney was part of the gold medal-winning Great Britain team in the 1912 Olympic football competition in Stockholm.[2] Due to an injury he suffered in the quarter-final match (which Britain won 7–0 against Hungary), Hanney he missed the 4–2 victory over Denmark in the final.
He commenced his career with Wokingham Town before moving to Reading. In 1913 he turned professional and switched for a fee of £1,250 to Manchester City, for whom he played 78 matches.[2] Hanney guested for Brentford in the London Combination during the First World War.[4] Having served in the Royal Berkshires before the war,[2] Hanney held the rank of sergeant in the Football Battalion and was wounded in the face and neck by shrapnel at Delville Wood in July 1916.[5] Later he played two seasons for Coventry City.[6] After this he returned to Reading,[2] where he finished his Football League career in the Third Division and then moved back into non-league football with Northfleet.[1]
From 1924 later he coached VfB Stuttgart, winning the regional championship of Württemberg-Baden in 1927, the first title for the club. In 1927-28 he coached FC Wacker München, taking the club to the semi-finals of the German Championship.[7][8]
After returning to England he became a publican.[9]