Micky Adams

Micky Adams
Adams as Port Vale manager in September 2010
Personal information
Full name Michael Richard Adams[1]
Date of birth (1961-11-08) 8 November 1961 (age 62)[2]
Place of birth Sheffield, England[3]
Height 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)[4]
Position(s) Full back
Youth career
1974–1978 Sheffield United
1978–1979 Gillingham
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1979–1983 Gillingham 92 (5)
1983–1987 Coventry City 90 (9)
1987–1989 Leeds United 73 (2)
1989–1994 Southampton 144 (7)
1994Stoke City (loan) 10 (3)
1994–1997 Fulham 29 (8)
1997 Swansea City 0 (0)
1997–1998 Brentford 0 (0)
Total 438 (34)
International career
1978–1979 England Youth 4 (0)
Managerial career
1996–1997 Fulham (player-manager)
1997 Swansea City (player-manager)
1997–1998 Brentford (player-manager)
1999 Nottingham Forest (caretaker)
1999–2001 Brighton & Hove Albion
2002–2004 Leicester City
2005–2007 Coventry City
2008–2009 Brighton & Hove Albion
2009–2010 Port Vale
2010–2011 Sheffield United
2011–2014 Port Vale
2014–2015 Tranmere Rovers
2015 Sligo Rovers
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Michael Richard Adams (born 8 November 1961) is an English former professional footballer and football manager. As a player, he was a full back, and made a total of 438 league appearances in a nineteen-year professional career in the English Football League, including five years with Southampton at the highest level. He began his managerial career as player-manager for Fulham in 1996 and has led several teams at varying levels with mixed success, being named Manager of the Season twice, and earning four promotions for the teams he has managed.

Born in Sheffield, Adams was part of the youth team at Sheffield United from the age of twelve until released in 1977. He turned professional at the Third Division team Gillingham in 1979, where he established himself in the first team, winning a move in 1983 to Coventry City who were in the First Division. He spent four years at Coventry before being sold on to Leeds United in 1987. Southampton bought him for £250,000 in 1989, where he enjoyed five years of top-flight football. He was loaned out to Stoke City in 1994 before he signed with Fulham later in the year. Appointed as Fulham's player-manager in March 1996, he led the club out of the Third Division in 1996–97 and was named as the Third Division Manager of the Season. Sacked by Fulham despite his success, he walked out on Swansea City after less than two weeks in charge and instead took charge at Brentford in November 1997. He was sacked after the club were relegated at the end of the season. At this point, he ended his playing career.

He joined Nottingham Forest as assistant manager, taking charge for one Premier League game in a caretaker capacity. He returned to management with Brighton & Hove Albion in April 1999. He led the club to the Third Division title in 2000–01, winning the division's Manager of the Season award for a second time. He then moved to Leicester City as an assistant before finally being named the club's manager in April 2002. He took the club to the Premier League as First Division runners-up in 2002–03. However, he tendered his resignation in October 2004, failing to keep the club in the top flight. He took charge at former club Coventry City in January 2005, though he lost his job in January 2007. He returned to Brighton in May 2008, though his second spell in charge would only last nine months. He was appointed manager of Port Vale in June 2009 before departing for Sheffield United in December 2010. He failed to prevent United from being relegated into League One and was sacked in May 2011; this enabled him to return to Port Vale as manager. Despite starting the season in administration, he led Vale to promotion into League One in 2012–13. He resigned as Vale manager in September 2014 and took charge at Tranmere Rovers the following month. He left Tranmere with the club bottom of the Football League in April 2015. He managed Irish side Sligo Rovers for three months starting in August 2015. After leaving management in 2015, he started his football consultancy business.

  1. ^ "Micky Adams". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Micky Adams". LMA. Retrieved 11 September 2011.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference cn was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Micky Adams at Soccerbase