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Walter Winterbottom
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==England team manager== Walter Winterbottom has the distinction of being England's first, youngest and longest serving England team manager; he is also the only England manager to have had no previous professional managerial experience. In all matches in which he was in charge, England played 139, won 78, drew 33, and lost 28, scoring 383 and conceding 196. At home England lost six matches in sixteen years. England won the [[Home International Championship|British Home Championship]] in thirteen out of his sixteen seasons (seven times outright and six times sharing top place). In the [[FIFA World Cup|World Cup]] tournament England qualified on all four occasions, reaching the quarter-finals twice, playing 28 matches, winning 15, drawing 7 and losing 6; goals for 75 against 35 (including World Cup qualifying matches).<ref>{{cite web|title=englandfootballonline.com|url=https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=englandfootballonline|access-date=23 March 2021|archive-date=7 October 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221007130311/https://www.google.com/search?hl=en&site=&q=englandfootballonline&google_abuse=GOOGLE_ABUSE_EXEMPTION%3DID%3D0a3441ec14d8ef88:TM%3D1665147791:C%3D%3E:IP%3D207.241.225.158-:S%3DjpYptG8nmMVEjzDMKice_A%3B+path%3D/%3B+domain%3Dgoogle.com%3B+expires%3DFri,+07-Oct-2022+16:03:11+GMT|url-status=live}}</ref> Although he had coaching and managerial responsibilities, Winterbottom never had the power to pick his own team and it was instead chosen by a selection committee.<ref name="Anthony 2008"/> Over time his technical knowledge increasingly influenced selectors. Finally, prior to [[Alf Ramsey]]'s arrival in 1962, he convinced the FA that the team manager must have sole control of selection.<ref>{{cite book|last=Dave|first=Bowler|title=Alf Ramsey:Winning isn't Everything|year=1999}}</ref> During his time Winterbottom repeatedly warned the English football establishment that countries in Continental Europe and South America were overtaking England and that English football had to change. His sixteen years as England team manager helped greatly in creating a modern and competitive national team and four years after his departure in 1966 England won the World Cup. His innovations included the introduction of England B, Under 23, youth and schoolboy teams<ref name="Mason 2008">{{cite book|last=Mason|first=Anthony|title=New Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|year=2008}}</ref> providing players with continuity and experience in international football before being selected for the full England team. Notable victories during his tenure were 10β0 away to Portugal in 1947, 4β0 away to Italy in 1948, 3β1 at home to recently crowned World Champions West Germany in 1954, 4β2 at home to Brazil in 1956 and 9β3 at home to Scotland in 1961. Notable defeats were [[1949 England v Ireland football match|losing 2β0 to the Republic of Ireland at Goodison Park]], [[United States v England (1950 FIFA World Cup)|losing 1β0 to the USA]] in the [[1950 FIFA World Cup|1950 World Cup]] and [[Match of the Century (1953 England v Hungary football match)|6β3 at home to Hungary in 1953]], when England lost their unbeaten home record to a foreign team at Wembley, followed by a [[Hungary 7β1 England (1954 association football friendly)|7β1 away defeat to the same team]] in 1954. Also while he was manager, England visited Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Denmark, Mexico, Peru, Portugal, the Soviet Union, United States and Uruguay for the first time. ===FIFA World Cup record=== Winterbottom led England to four consecutive World Cup finals, a record subsequently equalled only by [[Helmut SchΓΆn]] of West Germany. England entered the World Cup for the first time in 1950, qualifying for the [[1950 FIFA World Cup|tournament in Brazil]] by winning the British Home Championship. England had never before played in South America. They beat Chile by 2β0 but [[United States 1β0 England (1950 FIFA World Cup)|lost 1β0 to the USA]] and 1β0 to Spain to be eliminated in the first round. Winterbottom again led England to qualification in [[1954 FIFA World Cup|Switzerland in 1954]] by winning the British Home championship. A 4β4 draw against Belgium and a 2β0 victory against Switzerland took them to the quarter-finals where they were beaten 4β2 by the defending champions, Uruguay. England qualified for the [[1958 FIFA World Cup]] in Sweden with wins over the Republic of Ireland and Denmark, with a team that had lost only once in 17 games. Three months before the tournament began the [[Munich air disaster]] robbed the team of key players from Manchester United: [[Roger Byrne]], [[Tommy Taylor]] and [[Duncan Edwards]] died. England drew against the USSR, Brazil and Austria but lost to the Soviet Union in a playoff for a quarter-final place. Winterbottom again led his team to qualification for the [[1962 FIFA World Cup|1962 World Cup]] in Chile with wins over Portugal and Luxembourg. After progressing from their group on [[goal average]], England reached the quarter-finals but were beaten 3β1 by the eventual winners, Brazil. ===FA Director of Coaching=== Although Winterbottom is best known as the England team manager, it is in coaching that he made important contributions to the development of English football. He made no secret of his belief that his job as Director of Coaching was the more important of his two roles at the FA.<ref>{{cite news|title=BBC Radio, 1963, People Today|year=1963}}</ref> When he joined the FA in 1946, club directors, managers and players were cynical about the need for coaching<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason|first=Anthony|title=New Oxford Dictionary Biography|year=2008}}</ref> but Winterbottom had a passion for coaching and a vision of how it should develop. He soon created a national coaching scheme with summer residential courses at Lilleshall, Shropshire, and persuaded some of his international players to take the courses that led to exams for the FA preliminary and full coaching badges. This gave the scheme credibility. They developed their teaching skills by coaching in schools and then moved into part-time coaching positions in junior clubs. He gathered around him a cadre of young FA staff coaches: men like [[Bill Nicholson (footballer)|Bill Nicholson]], [[Don Howe]], [[Alan Brown (English footballer)|Alan Brown]], [[Ron Greenwood]], [[Dave Sexton]], [[Malcolm Allison]], [[Joe Mercer]], [[Vic Buckingham]], [[Jimmy Hill]] and [[Bobby Robson]]. Over time a new breed of managers emerged in the League clubs and began to change attitudes to coaching. Winterbottom's courses were expanded to include professional players, referees, schoolmasters, club trainers, schoolboys and youth leaders. In addition to [[Lilleshall Hall|Lilleshall]] they were held at [[Loughborough College]], Carnegie College, [[Bisham Abbey]] and [[Birmingham University]]. In 1947 three hundred had taken the full coaching award and the numbers of qualified coaches grew each year. The courses attracted international participation and praise. Winterbottom was regarded by many as a leading technical thinker and exponent of association football, of his generation, in the world and lectured internationally. He inspired a new generation of managers, most notably [[Ron Greenwood]] and [[Bobby Robson]], who graduated through every level of coaching, both eventually becoming England team manager. ===Criticism=== In assessing Winterbottom's tenure as England manager, Goldblatt writes that "[Winterbottom] introduced a measure of tactical thinking and discussion to the England squad, though his inability to anticipate or learn significantly from the Hungarian debacle suggests that his grasp of tactics and communication with the players was limited."<ref name="goldblatt">{{cite book |title=The Ball Is Round: A Global History of Soccer |first=David |last=Goldblatt |publisher=Penguin |year=2008 |isbn=978-1-59448-296-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=i1158WHUTvwC |page=443 |access-date=19 June 2018 |archive-date=7 October 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221007130300/https://books.google.com/books?id=i1158WHUTvwC |url-status=live }}</ref> William Baker writes that Winterbottom, because of his "upper-class origins [sic]", could not "effectively instruct, much less inspire, working-class footballers."<ref name="baker">{{cite book |title=Sports in the Western world |first=William Joseph |last=Baker|publisher=University of Illinois Press|year=1988|isbn=0-252-06042-3|url=https://archive.org/details/sportsinwesternw00bake|url-access=registration |page=[https://archive.org/details/sportsinwesternw00bake/page/308 308]}}</ref> Football journalist [[Brian Glanville]] said in an interview: "I got on very well with Walter Winterbottom, but he was a rotten manager."<ref>{{cite web | url= http://thesetpieces.com/interviews/vox-box-brian-glanville/ | title= Vox in the Box: Brian Glanville | work=The Set Pieces | access-date=15 April 2019 | first=Iain | last=MacIntosh| date= 7 January 2015 }}</ref> ===Publishing=== Winterbottom was also responsible for the publishing at the FA. The first coaching bulletin was launched in 1946 and this became the ''FA Bulletin'' and then the ''FA News''. The ''FA Year Book'' was introduced in 1948, along with the ''FA Book for Boys'' annual.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mason, Tony|first=Holt, Richard|title=Sport in Britain 1945β2000}}</ref> The first coaching films and film strips followed in 1950. An important landmark was the publication of Winterbottom's book, ''Soccer Coaching'', the first modern soccer coaching manual. This was followed by three more books, ''Skilful Soccer'', ''Modern Soccer'' and ''Training for Soccer''.
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