Gary Rowett

Last updated

Gary Rowett
Gary Rowett.jpg
Pictured with Birmingham City in 2016
Personal information
Full name Gary Rowett [1]
Date of birth (1974-03-06) 6 March 1974 (age 50) [1]
Place of birth Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, England [1]
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) [2]
Position(s) Defender
Team information
Current team
Birmingham City (interim manager)
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1991–1994 Cambridge United 63 (9)
1994–1995 Everton 4 (0)
1995Blackpool (loan) 17 (0)
1995–1998 Derby County 105 (2)
1998–2000 Birmingham City 87 (6)
2000–2002 Leicester City 49 (2)
2002–2004 Charlton Athletic 13 (1)
2005–2007 Burton Albion 43 (1)
Total381(21)
Managerial career
2012–2014 Burton Albion
2014–2016 Birmingham City
2017–2018 Derby County
2018–2019 Stoke City
2019–2023 Millwall
2024– Birmingham City (interim)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Gary Rowett (born 6 March 1974) is an English professional football manager and former player who is interim manager of EFL Championship club Birmingham City.

Contents

As a player, he was a defender, and played in the Premier League for Everton, Derby County, Leicester City and Charlton Athletic. He also played in the Football League for Cambridge United, Blackpool, Birmingham City and Burton Albion. His professional career ended in 2004, through a knee injury.

In May 2009, he was appointed assistant manager to Paul Peschisolido at Burton, and took over as manager in 2012. He was appointed the manager of Birmingham City in October 2014 and served until December 2016. He became Derby County manager in March 2017, and joined Stoke City in May 2018. After failing to mount a promotion challenge, he was sacked in January 2019 and was appointed manager of Millwall that October, before leaving by mutual consent four years later. He rejoined Birmingham City in March 2024.

Playing career

He started his career at Cambridge United as a product of their youth system. He was part of the Cambridge team which achieved fifth place in the 1991–92 Second Division, which remains the club's best league finish to date. They were also play-off semi-finalists that year. He was also part of their best ever League Cup run when they reached the quarter-finals the following season. After three seasons at the Abbey Stadium he earned a move to the Premiership with Everton in March 1994 for £200,000. Everton won the FA Cup in his first full season, but Rowett was not involved in the 1995 FA Cup run or the final against Manchester United. After failing to break into the first team, Rowett went on loan to Blackpool before being sold to Derby County in part-exchange for Craig Short. [3] Rowett spent three seasons at Derby, followed by a two-year spell with Birmingham City, where he helped the club reach the play-offs.

In June 2000, Rowett returned to the Premier League by joining Leicester City. Southampton had been interested in him and bid £2 million, but could not better Leicester's £3 million due to the costs of their new stadium. [4] He competed in the UEFA Cup, where they lost in the first round on penalties to Red Star Belgrade. [5] His first top-flight goal for the club on 3 February 2001 won the game 2–1 against Chelsea at Filbert Street, within seconds of the opposition's goal by Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink. [6]

In May 2002, he switched to Charlton Athletic for £3.5 million. [7] Charlton manager Alan Curbishley had wanted to sign Rowett for years, but he chose Leicester as they were closer to his home and competing in the UEFA Cup. [8] His only goal for them earned a 1–1 home draw against Sunderland on 3 November 2002. [9] He retired from professional football in July 2004 due to a knee injury, weeks after his defensive partner Richard Rufus, having made only 13 league appearances in two years at The Valley. [10] He did return to play for Burton Albion in the Conference National, having been persuaded by manager Nigel Clough in 2005. [11]

Managerial career

Burton Albion

Pictured in 2011 Rowett, Gary.jpg
Pictured in 2011

In May 2009, Rowett was named as assistant to newly appointed manager Paul Peschisolido at Burton Albion. [12] Rowett was put in temporary charge of Burton, assisted by Kevin Poole, following Peschisolido's sacking in March 2012. [11] On 10 May, Rowett was announced as the permanent manager of Burton Albion. [13] In his first season, he led Burton to fourth place in League Two, losing in the play-off semi-final to Bradford City, [14] and followed up with a sixth-place finish in 2013–14 and a 1–0 defeat to Fleetwood in the play-off final. [15]

Whilst in charge of Burton, Rowett oversaw their best ever League Cup performance, as they reached the third round in 2012–13 before being eliminated by Bradford City. They equaled this achievement two years later under his successor Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink. Unfortunately, he was also in charge for their two worst defeats in the Football League, both 7–1. The first was against Bristol Rovers in April 2012, while he was still temporary manager, and the second against Port Vale in April 2013.

In September 2014, with Burton near the top of League Two, Rowett rejected the opportunity to manage Championship strugglers Blackpool; he said he felt it was not the right job for him at the present time. [16]

Birmingham City

On 27 October 2014, Rowett was appointed the manager of his former club, Birmingham City  – one place above Blackpool at the bottom of the Championship table. He was joined at Birmingham by Burton backroom staff members Kevin Summerfield as assistant manager, Mark Sale as first-team coach and Poole as goalkeeping coach. All three are also former Birmingham City players. [17] Rowett guided Birmingham from 21st in the Championship to 10th at the end of his first season, earning many plaudits for the remarkable turnaround in form.

Rowett was sacked by Birmingham on 14 December 2016 upon their change of ownership and boardroom team, despite leading the team to 7th in the Championship table and challenging for a play-off place. [18] [19] The decision was met with surprise and criticism by Birmingham supporters, with the club appointing Gianfranco Zola as his replacement. [20] [21] Zola resigned as Birmingham manager in April 2017, after a sequence of only two wins in 24 games throughout his tenure as manager left the club embroiled in a relegation battle. [22]

Derby County

Rowett was appointed as the new manager of Championship club Derby County, another of his former clubs as a player, on 14 March 2017, and signed a contract until the end of the 2018–19 season. [23] Rowett took over with Derby sat in tenth place, taking fifteen points from their final nine games to guide them to a ninth-placed finish.

Rowett signed five players ahead of the 2017–18 season largely focusing on adding experience to a Derby side which had gained a reputation for post-Christmas slumps in form [24] Players such as Tom Huddlestone (30) and Curtis Davies (32) raised the squad's average age to 28.2 years old, the second-highest in the division. [25] After a slow start of just 3 wins from the opening 10 games left them 15th in the table, 13 wins from the following 20 matches saw the team climb to 2nd place at the turn of the year, with Rowett winning Championship Manager of the Month for October and December 2017. [26] [27] On 9 January 2018, Rowett was linked with the managerial vacancy at Premier League club Stoke City, but instead signed an improved contract, lasting until 2021. [28]

Despite Rowett adding further experience to the squad with the signing of 31-year old Cameron Jerome in the January transfer window, Derby again suffered a post-January slump, winning just 2 out of 13 league matches, a run that included heavy defeats to relegation candidates Sunderland and Burton Albion [29] to briefly fall out of the top 6, before a brief resurgence in their final three games saw them qualify for the playoffs on the final day of the season with a 6th-placed finish and 75 points. [30] The play-off campaign ended in defeat, Derby losing 2–1 on aggregate to Fulham, despite winning the first leg. [31] [32] Soon after the end of the season, Rowett requested permission to talk to Stoke City about their vacant managerial position. [33]

Stoke City

Rowett was appointed Stoke City manager on 22 May 2018, signing a three-year contract, with Stoke paying Derby around £2m in compensation. [34] Stoke, having been relegated from the Premier League the previous season gave Rowett a large transfer budget. The players he brought in were goalkeeper Adam Federici, experienced centre back Ashley Williams, full-back Cuco Martina, midfielders Sam Clucas, Peter Etebo and Ryan Woods, wingers Tom Ince and James McClean and forward Benik Afobe. [35] The team made a poor start to the campaign winning only two of their opening ten matches. [36] Stoke won back-to-back games at the beginning of October against Bolton Wanderers and Norwich City before losing to Rowett's old club Birmingham. [37] [38] [39] City then went ten games unbeaten through November and December but made little progress up the table as Stoke drew six of them, conceding late equalisers on three occasions. [40] [41] [42] Stoke's run was ended by another defeat to Birmingham on Boxing Day. [43] After poor results against Bolton Wanderers and Bristol City supporters began to call for Rowett's departure. [44] [45] [46] Rowett's contract with Stoke was terminated by the club on 8 January 2019. [47] [48]

Millwall

On 21 October 2019, Rowett was appointed as the new Millwall manager, succeeding Neil Harris, who left after more than four years in the post. [49] On his debut five days later, the team won 2–0 at home to his previous club Stoke. [50] After finishing 8th, 11th and 9th in his first three seasons, he signed a new contract of undisclosed length in July 2022. [51] In October 2023, Rowett left Millwall by mutual consent. [52]

Return to Birmingham

Rowett rejoined Birmingham City as interim manager on 19 March 2024 after incumbent Tony Mowbray took medical leave for the remainder of the season. [53]

Media career

Rowett reviewed Birmingham City matches with Tom Ross on radio station BRMB, and for the 2008–09 season, summarised matches involving Derby County for BBC Radio Derby. [54]

Career statistics

As a player

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition [55]
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Cambridge United 1991–92 Second Division 13230101 [lower-alpha 1] 1183
1992–93 First Division 21210511 [lower-alpha 2] 0283
1993–94 Second Division29530103 [lower-alpha 3] 2367
Total6397071538213
Everton 1993–94 Premier League 2000000020
1994–95 Premier League2000000020
Total4000000040
Blackpool (loan) 1994–95 Second Division170000000170
Derby County 1995–96 First Division350102000380
1996–97 Premier League351402000411
1997–98 Premier League351204200413
Total10527082001204
Birmingham City 1998–99 First Division42510422 [lower-alpha 4] 0497
1999–2000 First Division45121512 [lower-alpha 4] 1544
Total87631934110311
Leicester City 2000–01 Premier League38241102 [lower-alpha 5] 0453
2001–02 Premier League110001000120
Total492412020573
Charlton Athletic 2002–03 Premier League121000000121
2003–04 Premier League1000000010
Total131000000131
Burton Albion 2005–06 Conference Premier 170100000180
2006–07 Conference Premier261100000271
Total431200000451
Career total3812123226611444133
  1. Appearances in Full Members' Cup
  2. Appearances in Anglo-Italian Cup
  3. Appearances in Football League Trophy
  4. 1 2 Appearances in Football League play-offs
  5. Appearances in UEFA Cup

As a manager

As of match played 20 April 2024
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecordRef.
PWDLWin %
Burton Albion 17 March 201227 October 2014142633445044.37 [56]
Birmingham City 27 October 201414 December 2016106423232039.62 [56]
Derby County 14 March 201722 May 201860261816043.33 [56]
Stoke City 22 May 20188 January 2019299128031.03 [56]
Millwall 26 October 2019 [lower-alpha 1] 18 October 2023196765763038.78 [56]
Birmingham City (interim)25 March 2024Present6213033.33 [56]
Total538217154167040.33
  1. Rowett was appointed on 21 October 2019, but did not take charge of the next day's match. [49] Soccerbase figures incorrectly include that match, which was drawn. [56] [57]

Honours

Player

Individual

Manager

Individual

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