Roy McDonough

Roy McDonough (born 16 October 1958) is an English former professional football player and manager in the English football league.

Roy McDonough
Personal information
Date of birth (1958-10-16) 16 October 1958
Place of birth Solihull, England
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[1]
Position(s) Forward
Youth career
Aston Villa
1975–1976 Birmingham City
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1976–1978 Birmingham City 2 (1)
1978–1980 Walsall 82 (15)
1980–1981 Chelsea 0 (0)
1981–1983 Colchester United 93 (24)
1983–1984 Southend United 22 (4)
1984 Exeter City 20 (1)
1984–1985 Cambridge United 32 (5)
1985–1990 Southend United 186 (30)
1990–1994 Colchester United 127 (50)
Total 564 (130)
Teams managed
1991–1994 Colchester United
1996 Chelmsford City
1998 Heybridge Swifts
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Playing career

Roy McDonough was born in Solihull, he was one of four brothers and a twin to Gaz McDonough.[2] He came from a sporting family, and had an uncle Fred Harris, who captained Birmingham City.[3] His father, James, played for Bath City and owned a dress shop.[3] His mother, Iris, ran a boutique.[4] McDonough signed schoolboy forms with Aston Villa, along with his twin, after becoming top-scorer for the Birmingham schools and Warwickshire county school teams.[5] However, in March 1975, at the age of 16, he was handed a six-month suspension from competitive football for throttling a referee in the final of the Birmingham School's Cup.[6] He was not offered professional terms by manager Ron Saunders.[7]

He used his family connections to win a trial at First Division club Birmingham City, and was signed to an 18-month apprenticeship after he scored four goals in two trial games.[8] He went on to sign professional forms with the club, and made his debut in the Football League in a 1–0 defeat to Sunderland at Roker Park on 7 May 1977.[9]

He went on to Colchester to make some 88 appearances, scoring 24 goals in his first spell at Layer Road before moving to local rivals Southend United in 1983. In 22 appearances for the "Shrimpers" between 1984 and 1985 he scored 4 times.

Between 1985 and 1986 Roy moved first to Exeter City(21 appearances, 1 goal) and then Cambridge United (32 appearances, 5 goals) before returning to Roots Hall and Southend. In his second spell at Southend, Roy became to some fans a cult hero.[10] In around 186 appearances he scored 30 times, however certain sections of the crowd were not always enamoured with his playing style.

In September 1990 he returned to Colchester United, who had been relegated to the GM Vauxhall Conference, as a player. In his second season, he top scored with 29 goals in a Conference and FA Trophy Double-winning campaign as player-manager (see below), before making another 63 Football League appearances and scoring 16 times. He was sacked as manager in 1994 and joined Dagenham & Redbridge, moving on to Chelmsford City amongst others.

Managerial career

Roy took the managerial position at Colchester United for the 1991–92 season, following Ian Atkins' departure in the Summer of 1991 and achieved legendary status at the North Essex club by guiding them to a Football Conference and FA Trophy 'double', promoting them back into the full Football League.

During his period in charge, McDonough stoked the bitter rivalry with Martin O'Neill's Wycombe Wanderers that had developed during both clubs' time in non-league's 'top flight', culminating in the dramatic promotion season of 1991–92 when Colchester advanced into Division Four on the last day via a superior goal difference. While Wycombe and Colchester played out a mini-league of their own (both clubs finished some 21 points ahead of their nearest rivals) Big Roy had on occasions taunted the Wycombe players and staff and antagonised them by un-sportsmanlike tactics.[11]

Commenting on an incident where Colchester United hooligans attacked home supporters during a Conference championship deciding match in 1992 at Adams Park, he was quoted as saying, "It takes two to fight, one to punch, the other to stand there and be punched."

Arguably it was his confrontational style, carried over from his playing days, that ultimately saw him leave Colchester and move through the non-league ranks with Dagenham & Redbridge, Chelmsford, Canvey Island, Heybridge Swifts, Bishop's Stortford, Braintree Town and Harwich and Parkeston amongst others.

Style of play

A tall, imposing forward (though he played as an orthodox centre-half on a number of occasions) he had a reputation as one of football's "hard men" and rarely shied away from the physical aspects of the game. As a result, he is the record holder for the most dismissals in a career, 22, and for red cards in the Football League, 13, an unenviable mark that he holds jointly with Steve Walsh.[12][13]

Later life

In August 2012 he published his autobiography, Red Card Roy, which was ghost-written by Bernie Friend.[14]

Career statistics

Playing statistics

Source:[15]

Club Season Division League FA Cup Other Total
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Birmingham City 1976–77First Division21000021
Walsall 1978–79Third Division3471000357
1979–80Fourth Division4274020487
1980–81Third Division61002182
Total 821550419116
Chelsea 1980–81Second Division00000000
Colchester United 1980–81Third Division1220000122
1981–82Fourth Division401450525016
1982–83Fourth Division4181070498
Total 93246012211126
Southend United 1983–84Third Division2242020264
Exeter City 1983–84Third Division1600030190
1984–85Fourth Division41002061
Total 2010050251
Cambridge United 1984–85Third Division3253110366
Southend United 1985–86Fourth Division3871040437
1986–87Fourth Division3343320387
1987–88Third Division42930825311
1988–89Third Division4050060465
1989–90Fourth Division3351050395
Total 186308325221935
Colchester United 1990–91[16]Conference2480051299
1991–92[17]Conference4026001135129
1992–93Third Division2593030319
1993–94Third Division3871062459
Total 127504025615656
Career total 5641302337411661144

Honours

Walsall[18]
Southend United[18]
Colchester United[19][20]

References

General

  • McDonough, Roy; Friend, Bernie (2012), Red Card Roy: Sex, Booze, and early Baths. The Life of Britain's Wildest-Ever Footballer, Vision Sports, ISBN 978-1-907637-56-8

Specific

  1. McDonough 2012, p. 12
  2. McDonough 2012, p. 7
  3. McDonough 2012, p. 11
  4. McDonough 2012, p. 13
  5. McDonough 2012, p. 3
  6. McDonough 2012, p. 4
  7. McDonough 2012, p. 9
  8. McDonough 2012, p. 14
  9. McDonough 2012, p. 23
  10. "Southend's cult heroes". BBC Sport. 6 November 2004. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  11. "O'Neill will lose out again, says old sparring partner". The Scotsman. 8 May 2003. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  12. Smyth, Rob; Dart, James (20 April 2005). "Top-flight champions as both player and manager". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  13. Cunningham, Matt; Glendenning, Barry; Ingle, Sean (26 June 2003). "Away penalties at Old Trafford". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
  14. McDonough 2012, p. 1
  15. Roy McDonough at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
  16. "1990–91 stats". www.coludata.co.uk. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  17. "1991–92 stats". www.coludata.co.uk. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  18. "Tier Four (League Two) Honours". Coludaybyday.co.uk.
  19. "Conference Honours". Coludaybyday.co.uk.
  20. "FA Trophy Honours". Coludaybyday.co.uk.
  21. Marston, Carl (13 May 2012). "Roy McDonough inducted into U's Hall of Fame". East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved 13 May 2012.
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