HOME | REACH US  
 



.com .net .org .info .mobi
.biz .us .co.uk .in
.eu .ws .bz .cc .tv Etc.
Domain Names

Website Development
Web Hosting
Email Hosting
Digital Certificate
Etc.

@ Best Prices From

www.DomainsUAE.com
George Allison
   
Google
 
Web libraryoflibrary.com
George Allison
Personal information
Full name George Frederick Allison
Date of birth 24 October 1883
Place of birth    Hurworth-on-Tees, County Durham, England
Date of death    13 March 1957
Place of death    London, England
Teams managed
1934-1947 Arsenal


* Appearances (Goals)

George Frederick Allison (24 October 1883 – 13 March 1957) was an English football journalist, broadcaster and manager.

Contents

Journalism career

Born in Hurworth-on-Tees, Allison started out as a judge's secretary in his native North East, while playing for a local amateur team in Stockton-on-Tees. Allison ran a sideline in writing about his own team's exploits, and he was eventually convinced by his editor to become a full-time journalist. A year in Devonport aside, Allison spent most of his time in the Cleveland and Middlesbrough areas, and was briefly assistant to the secretary-manager of Middlesbrough FC.

Allison moved to London in 1906, as the sports representative of the Hulton group of newspapers. Four years later he became greyhound correspondent for the Sporting Life. After a chance encounter with Lord Kitchener before the 1911 coronation of King George V, Allison became London correspondent for the New York Post and a year later joined the staff of William Randolph Hearst, remaining in this post until 1934.

During World War I Allison worked for the War Office and the Admiralty, producing propaganda and later joined the Royal Flying Corps (later renamed the Royal Air Force). After the war Allison also moved into broadcasting, joining the BBC and becoming the first person to commentate on the radio on events such as the Derby and the Grand National (with the BBC's racing correspondent Meyrick Good), as well as the annual England v. Scotland international, and the FA Cup Final in 1927, between Cardiff City and Arsenal. By this time, he had already formed a strong association with the latter club.

Football career

Having been a keen footballer in his youth (although he failed to make the grade as a professional, the best being a trial with Shildon), after his move to London in 1906, Allison soon became associated with Woolwich Arsenal. He became the club's programme editor and continued his association with the team after they moved to Highbury and renamed themselves "Arsenal". He became a member of the club's board of directors soon after the end of the First World War; he was first club secretary and then managing director.

After the sudden death of legendary Arsenal boss Herbert Chapman earlier in January 1934, Allison was appointed Chapman's full-time successor in the summer of that year. Under Chapman and caretaker manager Joe Shaw, Arsenal had already won the League Championship twice in a row (1932-33 and 1933-34), and Allison made it a hat-trick, winning a third successive title in 1934-35. He also won the FA Cup in 1935-36 and the League again in 1937-38.

Allison famously appeared in a 1939 movie set at Highbury, The Arsenal Stadium Mystery, where he had a speaking part as himself. Amongst his lines included one uttered at half time: "It's one-nil to the Arsenal. That's the way we like it.", a line which had resonance with the team's penchant for 1-0 scorelines many decades later.

Allison took a hands-off approach to managing, unlike his predecessor Chapman; Joe Shaw and Tom Whittaker took charge of training and squad discipline, while Allison concentrated on transfer policy and the club's relationship with the media. Arsenal player Bernard Joy later recounted: "[He was] tactful, friendly and good-hearted. But he fell short in his handling of footballers and lacked the professional's deep knowledge of the game".[1] Allison's proponents have cited the trophies won under his reign, though by the end of the 1930s Arsenal were no longer the all-conquering team that they had once been. Allison was unable to replace many of the stars from the first half of the decade, especially Alex James.

With the advent of the Second World War, official competition in England was suspended; after hostilities had ended, many of the players that had made Arsenal a success (such as Cliff Bastin and Ted Drake) had retired from playing. Arsenal finished a disappointing 13th in 1946-47, and Allison, by now in his mid-sixties and tiring of managerial life, decided to step down and retire from the game. He died in 1957 after several years of illness.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Soar, Phil & Tyler, Martin (2005). The Official Illustrated History of Arsenal, Hamlyn. pp. 69. ISBN 0-600-61344-5. 

External links




Index Of Related Pages




All pages | Previous page (Georg Osterholt) | Next page (George B. Lyle)

George AllisonGeorge Allison HouseGeorge Allison Whiteman
George AllmanGeorge Allsopp
George Aloysius Carrell
George Alsop
George AltmanGeorge Alusik
George AmabileGeorge Ambler Wilson
George Ambrose Pogson
George Amedore
George AmickGeorge AmiroutzesGeorge Amon Webster
George AmyGeorge Ancona
George Anderson
George Anderson (Australian footballer)George Anderson (Canadian soccer player)
George Anderson (MP)George Anderson (Peyton Place)
George Anderson (actor)George Anderson (baseball)
George Anderson (clergyman)George Anderson (cricketer)George Anderson (criminal)
George Anderson (footballer)George Anderson (footballer born 1877)George Anderson (footballer born 1881)
George Anderson (footballer born 1893)George Anderson (footballer born 1904)
George Anderson (soccer executive)George Anderson Black
George Anderson Hopper
George Andreasen
George Andrew BeckGeorge Andrew Davis, Jr.
George Andrew JacobGeorge Andrew OlahGeorge Andrew Reisner
George AndrewsGeorge Andrews (American football)
George Andrews (footballer)George Andrews (mathematician)
George Andrews (rugby player)George Andrie
George Andrι RobertsonGeorge Angus
George AnnasGeorge Anne BellamyGeorge Ansbro
George AnseleviciusGeorge Anselm TouchetGeorge Anson
George Anson's voyage around the worldGeorge Anson, 1st Baron Anson
George Anson (1731-1789)
George Anson (1769–1849)
George Anson (1797–1857)
George Anson Meigs
George Anson StarkweatherGeorge AnthanGeorge Antheil
George Anthony (cricketer)
George Anthony BarberGeorge Anthony Denison
George Anthony DonderoGeorge Anthony Legh KeckGeorge Anthony Morgan Taylor
George Anthony WalkemGeorge Antonio
George Antonius
George AnyonaGeorge AppiahGeorge Appleyard
George Araujo
George ArbuthnotGeorge Arbuthnot (civil servant)
George Arbuthnot (politician)George Archainbaud
George ArcherGeorge Archer-Shee
George ArchibaldGeorge Archibald, 1st Baron ArchibaldGeorge Archibald (ornithologist)
George ArgyrosGeorge Arias
George Arias (boxer)George Aribert of Anhalt-DessauGeorge Ariyoshi
George ArlissGeorge Armand FurseGeorge Armistead
George ArmitageGeorge Armitage Chase
George Armitage MillerGeorge Armitstead, 1st Baron Armitstead
George ArmstrongGeorge Armstrong (Manitoba politician)
George Armstrong (actor)George Armstrong (engineer)George Armstrong (footballer)
George Armstrong (ice hockey)George Armstrong (priest)
George Armstrong Custer
George ArnaldGeorge Arney
George Arney (journalist)George ArnoldGeorge Arnold Escher
George Arnold WoodGeorge Arnott Walker-Arnott
George Arthur
George Arthur (disambiguation)George Arthur Boeckling
George Arthur BrethenGeorge Arthur Crump
George Arthur FrenchGeorge Arthur Fripp
George Arthur Hollis
George Arthur KeartlandGeorge Arthur Knowland
George Arthur Miller
George Arthur Welsh
George ArundaleGeorge Asakura
George AsanidzeGeorge AshallGeorge Ashburnham, 3rd Earl of Ashburnham
George Ashby (MP)George Ashby (martyr)
George Ashdown AudsleyGeorge AsheGeorge Ashley Campbell
George Ashley MaudeGeorge AshlinGeorge Ashmore
George Ashmore FitchGeorge Ashmun
George AstaphanGeorge Athans
George AtheneosGeorge Atkinson
George Atkinson (American football)George Atkinson (cricketer)
George Atkinson (disambiguation)George Atlee Goodling
George Atwell CookeGeorge Atwood
George Atzerodt
George Auckland
George Augustine TaylorGeorge Augustus
George Augustus AddisonGeorge Augustus Auden
George Augustus Dana
George Augustus Eliott, 1st Baron Heathfield
George Augustus Henry Sala
George Augustus La DowGeorge Augustus Robinson
George Augustus SelwynGeorge Augustus Selwyn (MP)
George Augustus SimcoxGeorge Augustus Stallings
George Augustus WalshGeorge Augustus Wetherall
George Augustus Williams
George AultGeorge Austin WelshGeorge Avakian
George AveroffGeorge AveryGeorge Awada
George AxelrodGeorge Ayittey
George Ayscue
George B. AitkenGeorge B. Anderson
George B. CaryGeorge B. ChambersGeorge B. Churchill
George B. ClementsonGeorge B. CooperGeorge B. Cortelyou
George B. CoxGeorge B. Cox House (Cincinnati, Ohio)
George B. CristGeorge B. CrittendenGeorge B. Cronshaw
George B. Daniels
George B. DuncanGeorge B. Dygart
George B. FitchGeorge B. Francis
George B. FrenchGeorge B. Hartzog, Jr.
George B. HitchcockGeorge B. Johnson
George B. Kelley
George B. KellyGeorge B. Lee
George B. LoomisGeorge B. Loring

Previous page (Georg Osterholt) | Next page (George B. Lyle)



BUILD YOUR WEB SITE WITH www.DomainsUAE.com