Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Derek William Fazackerley | ||
Date of birth | 5 November 1951 | ||
Place of birth | Preston, England | ||
Height | 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) [1] | ||
Position(s) | Central defender | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Oxford United (Assistant Manager) | ||
Youth career | |||
Blackburn Rovers | |||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1969–1987 | Blackburn Rovers | 596 | (23) |
1987–1988 | Chester City | 66 | (0) |
1988 | York City | 16 | (0) |
1988 | Bury | 14 | (0) |
1990 | Kumu | 17 | (0) |
Total | 709 | (23) | |
Managerial career | |||
2018 | Oxford United (caretaker) | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Derek William Fazackerley (born 5 November 1951) is an English former footballer who was previously assistant manager at Oxford United, and managed the club on a caretaker basis for two months in 2018. He spent the majority of his career playing for Blackburn Rovers.
Fazackerley made a record 671 appearances for Blackburn in an 18-year career. [2] In February 2019 he was one of the first seven players to be inducted into the club's Hall of Fame. [3]
In January 1987, he joined Chester City as a player and assistant manager. The long-term plan was for qualified coach Fazackerley to succeed Harry McNally as manager, [4] but he grew unhappy at the lack of progress at the club. [5] He moved on in the summer of 1988 to York City to assist ex-Rovers manager Bobby Saxton. In February 1989, he joined Bury where Martin Dobson was manager and ended the season helping run the side after Dobson departed. This was his final playing season in professional football.
In May 1990, he became player-manager of Kumu in Finland [6] before moving to Newcastle United as first team coach. He was involved in the England setup as assistant manager under Kevin Keegan, working alongside Les Reed.
He has since coached at other clubs, including Blackburn, Bolton Wanderers and Barnsley.
He was a scout for Manchester City and sat alongside Sven-Göran Eriksson on the bench at City's matches during his only season in charge. His position at the club was placed under review following Eriksson's departure, [7] and left in July after Mark Hughes was appointed as manager. [8]
On 11 December 2008, he was made the new first team coach at Football League One side Huddersfield Town, following the appointment of Lee Clark as manager.
On 4 October 2010, he was made the new assistant manager at Football League Championship side Leicester City, following the appointment of Sven-Göran Eriksson as manager. He left the club in October 2011.
When Clark took over as manager of Birmingham City in June 2012, he appointed Fazackerley to the role of first-team coach. [9] On 17 February 2014, it was widely reported that he and assistant manager Terry McDermott had left Birmingham; [10] the club stated they had "no comment to issue on the matter at this moment in time." [11]
Fazackerley joined Oxford United as assistant manager under Michael Appleton on 21 July 2014. [12] He remained at the club when Appleton joined Leicester City as assistant manager at the end of the 2016–17 season, and when Appleton's successor Pep Clotet was sacked in January 2018, Fazackerley took over as caretaker manager. [13] He was in charge for two months, during which time the team won twice in eight games, [14] before the appointment of Karl Robinson on 22 March 2018. [15] He left his coaching position in 2020, though he retained an advisory position at the club [16] and was involved in the recruitment of Robinson's successor, Liam Manning, in 2023. [17]
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During the 1996–97 English football season, Blackburn Rovers F.C. competed in the FA Premier League.
The 2011–12 Football League was the 113th season of the Football League. It began in August 2011 and concluded in May 2012, with the promotion play-off finals. The Football League is contested through three Divisions. The divisions are the Championship, League One and League Two. The winner and the runner up of the League Championship are automatically promoted to the Premier League and they are joined by the winner of the Championship playoff. The bottom two teams in League Two are relegated to the Conference Premier.
The 2012–13 Football League was the 114th season of the Football League. It began in August 2012 and concluded in May 2013, with the promotion play-off finals. The Football League is contested through three Divisions: the Championship, League One and League Two. The winner and the runner up of the League Championship are automatically promoted to the Premier League and they will are joined by the winner of the Championship playoff. The bottom two teams in League Two are relegated to the Conference Premier.
The 2012–13 season was Blackburn Rovers' 125th season as a professional football club. It was their first season back in the Football League Championship after an 11-year run in the Premier league English football.
The 2017–18 EFL League One was the 14th season of the Football League One under its current title, and the 25th season under its current league division format.
The 2017–18 season was Oxford United's second consecutive season in League One and their 124th year in existence. As well as competing in League One, the club participated in the FA Cup, EFL Cup and EFL Trophy.
The 2019–20 EFL Championship was the 4th season of the EFL Championship under its current title and the 28th season under its current league division format. Leeds United won the title, with West Bromwich Albion following in second. Brentford finished closely in third, only to be beaten in the playoff final to 4th placed Fulham by a narrow 2–1 victory at Wembley.
The 2022–23 season is the 124th season of the English Football League (EFL) and the seventh season under that name after it was renamed from The Football League in 2016. For the tenth season running, the league is sponsored by Sky Betting & Gaming and is therefore known as the Sky Bet EFL.
What was really important to us was that we got the best of a sporting recruitment process – we had Ed Waldron and Derek Fazackerley involved – and then we also put in some what I'd say corporate discipline in that.