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Lennie Lawrence

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Full name
  
Robin Michael Lawrence

Name
  
Lennie Lawrence

Place of birth
  
Brighton, England

Role
  
Football player

Years
  
Team

1982–1991
  
Charlton Athletic


Lennie Lawrence BBC Sport Crystal Palace Lennie Lawrence admits

Date of birth
  
(1947-12-12) 12 December 1947 (age 68)

1978
  
Plymouth Argyle (caretaker)

Current team
  
Nottingham Forest F.C.

Lennie Lawrence leaves Middlesbrough FC May 1994


Robin Michael Lawrence (born 12 December 1947 in Brighton, England) commonly known as Lennie Lawrence, is an English football manager whose most recent post was as assistant manager of Cardiff City. He has managed a number of English clubs and one Welsh club in a coaching career spanning over 30 years. His most recent managerial post was at Cardiff City, from 2002 until 2005. He is one of a select few managers to have managed over 1,000 games.

Contents

Lennie Lawrence BBC Sport Crystal Palace Lennie Lawrence admits

Career

Lennie Lawrence Lennie Lawrence joins Dougie Freedman as assistant boss at

Lawrence never played league football. He turned out at non-league level for Croydon, Carshalton Athletic and Sutton United. He came to Plymouth as Assistant Manager to Mike Kelly and when Kelly was sacked he got his first managerial appointment at Plymouth Argyle as caretaker and then worked alongside Malcolm Allison as Assistant. He later worked as a coach at Lincoln City, helping them win promotion from Division Four in the 1980–81 season.

1980s

Lennie Lawrence cdnimagesexpresscoukimgdynamic67285x21435

Lawrence moved to Charlton Athletic as reserve-team manager, and was later promoted to full-time manager in 1982. appointing Leicester City first team coach Eddie May, as his assistant. During his first few years in charge, the club was in a poor financial situation and came close to going out of business in 1984, and even left its home ground, The Valley, in 1985. Despite this, Lawrence and May, not only kept Charlton in the Second Division but gained promotion to the First Division in 1986, ending Charlton's 29-year absence from the top-flight. With limited resources, he kept Charlton at this level for four years, before being relegated in 1990. He remained in charge for a further season.

1990s

Lennie Lawrence Gordon Strachan is right for Middlesbrough says Lennie

Before the start of the 1991–92 season, Lawrence moved on to manage Middlesbrough. Under his stewardship, Middlesbrough finished Second Division runners-up in his first season as manager and gained promotion to the new Premier League but they struggled in 1992–93 and were relegated at the end of the season. Lawrence remained in charge until the end of the following season, his departure being confirmed on 2 May 1994. Upon leaving he helped young chairman Steve Gibson contact his replacement Bryan Robson.

Lawrence joined Bradford City at the beginning of the 1994–95 season. After a mid-table finish in his first season, Bradford were challenging for promotion in his second season in charge before he left to manage struggling Luton Town in the division above. Lawrence was unable to save Luton from relegation to Division Two at the end of the 1995–96 season, which saw them replaced by former club Bradford. He remained in charge at Kenilworth Road until 2000 when he was sacked by the new incoming Luton chairman, Mike Watson Challis, and replaced with former Luton fans favourite, Ricky Hill. His time at Luton is not fondly remembered by Luton fans, who didn't agree with Lawrence's assertion that the club should be happy to be playing Division Two (now League One) football. Luton subsequently played non-league football in the Conference National primarily as a result of being docked points in relation to the actions of previous directors of the club.

2000s

He made a quick return to management shortly after the beginning of the 2000–01 season with Division One side Grimsby Town. They avoided relegation and made a reasonable start to the 2001–02 season, and caused an upset in the League Cup third round by knocking out holders Liverpool 2–1 after extra time at Anfield, scoring with a Phil Jevons wonder-goal in the last minute. However, he was sacked later in the season after Grimsby dropped to the bottom of the table.

During the opening weeks of the 2001-02 season, his Grimsby side had briefly led Division One, sparking hopes that he could repeat the promotion success he achieved at Charlton Athletic and Middlesbrough with a much smaller club. However, these hopes were quickly extinguished as Grimsby's form plunged.

After a short while out of the game he joined Division Two side Cardiff City as a consultant. Owner Sam Hammam had made it clear to manager Alan Cork that he expected back-to-back promotions, which it did not look like Cork was going to deliver. Eventually Cork was sacked, and Lawrence took over the manager's chair. In his first full season in charge, Lawrence took Cardiff to promotion after beating Queens Park Rangers in the 2003 Football League Second Division play-off final. He remained at Ninian Park for a further two years before being shunted aside in May 2005.

After acting as a consultant at Cardiff for a while, he was appointed Director of Football at Bristol Rovers, working alongside coach Paul Trollope in a two-tier managerial structure. In the pair's first full season in charge, Bristol Rovers won promotion into League One after winning the League Two play-offs. He remained in this position until leaving the club on 12 May 2010, with their League One status still intact.

2010s

In August 2010 Lawrence joined non-league Carshalton Athletic in a football consultancy role, assisting manager Mark Butler. Four months later he was appointed technical director at Hereford United in League Two, to assist new manager Jamie Pitman.

On 20 January 2011, he was appointed assistant manager at Crystal Palace, to support new rookie manager, Dougie Freedman. In October 2012 Freedman became manager at Bolton Wanderers, and Lawrence was named as a joint-caretaker manager at Crystal Palace with Curtis Fleming, but within a week Lawrence rejoined Freedman at Bolton.

Lawrence's first game at Bolton was a victory over former club Cardiff at the Reebok Stadium, in which a Martin Petrov penalty and a further goal from David N'Gog gave Wanderers a 2-1 victory.

At the end of the season, Bolton missed out on a Play Off place to Leicester City

On 3 October 2014, he left Bolton along with fellow coach Curtis Fleming following the sacking of Dougie Freedman as manager. He later joined Freedman as assistant manager at Nottingham Forest in early 2015.

During the Summer of 2016 Lawrence became assistant manager to Paul Trollope at Cardiff City. However, a poor start to the 2016/2017 season saw Paul Trollope sacked in the October at which time Lawrence also departed from the club.

On 21 March 2017 Lawrence joined Newport County as First Team Management Consultant to new manager Mike Flynn with Newport 11 points adrift at the bottom of League Two. A remarkable turnaround in the remaining 12 league games saw Newport complete the Great Escape and avoid relegation with a win against Notts County on the final day of the 2016-17 season.

Managerial statistics

§: Joint caretaker manager with Curtis Fleming

Individual

  • Nationwide Division One Manager of the Month (1): August 2001
  • Football League Championship Manager of the Month (1): January 2005
  • References

    Lennie Lawrence Wikipedia