Jump to content

Gary Briggs (footballer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by NewTestLeper79 (talk | contribs) at 13:35, 11 January 2007 (avoided redirects; added cat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Gary Briggs
Personal information
Full name Gareth Briggs
Height 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
Position(s) Centre back (retired)

Gareth "Gary" Briggs (born June 21, 1959 in Leeds, Yorkshire) is a retired English professional football player. He made over 500 league appearances in an 18-year playing career, during which he became known as a no-nonsense, tough-tackling defender.

Career

In 1977, at the age of 18, Briggs signed for Middlesbrough but didn't make any first-team appearances for the club. Later that season, he moved to Oxford United. The fee was settled at the Football League's first-ever transfer tribunal. Briggs spent eleven happy years at the Manor Ground, where he received the nickname "Rambo" and became a cult hero. He formed a successful central-defensive partnership with club captain Malcolm Shotton as United won three trophies between 1984 and 1986 (the Third Division championship in 1983/4, the Second Division championship the following season, and the League Cup in 1986.[1]

In May, 1989, after 418 league games and 18 league goals for Oxford, Briggs moved back north to Blackpool, where he saw out the rest of his career.

His first season in Lancashire was not a successful one: the Seasiders finished second-to-bottom in the Third Division and were relegated to the league's basement division. Manager Jimmy Mullen had left the club with seven league games remaining. Briggs made 17 league appearances and scored two goals. His season was ended by injury in late January.

Graham Carr was installed as the new manager prior to the 1990-91 season, but he too would leave just five months into the job. Carr's assistant, Billy Ayre, was promoted to the hot seat. It was under Ayre's guidance that Briggs' career would once more flourish. After Ayre's appointment (at which point the team lay 18th in the table), Blackpool went on to lose only five of their remaining thirty league games. It was during this period that a new (and still existing) club record was set: thirteen consecutive home wins during an eventual 24-game unbeaten run at Bloomfield Road. Blackpool finished the season in 5th place (missing automatic promotion by a single point) and qualified for the play-offs. After defeating Scunthorpe in the two-legged semi-final, Blackpool were returning to Wembley for the first time in 38 years, where they would face Torquay in the final. Briggs missed out on the crunch match due to an injury sustained in the second leg of the semi-final against Scunthorpe. He made thirty appearances during the league campaign. In said final, Torquay won on penalties (recent signing Dave Bamber put the final spot-kick well wide of the right-hand post), and Blackpool were condemned to another season of fourth-division football.

The 1991-92 season followed along the same lines. After finishing fourth (again missing out on automatic promotion by a point), Blackpool made the play-offs again. After defeating Barnet in the semi-final, the Tangerines met Scunthorpe in the final. Frustratingly for Briggs, he sat out a second Wembley appearance because of injury (this one picked up in a defeat at Rotherham with only two games remaining). Briggs made 26 starts in a start-stop season.

In the final, and in another penalty shoot-out, Blackpool this time came out on top and would be playing the 1992/93 season in the new Division Two.

Briggs' fourth season at the seaside saw Blackpool finish in 18th place, just four points above the relegation zone. Local rivals Preston North End were one of the four teams that made the drop.

The 1993-94 campaign ended in nailbiting fashion. A final-day 4-1 victory over Leyton Orient at Bloomfield Road meant the Seasiders had avoided relegation by one point.

Billy Ayre ended his three-and-a-half-year association with Blackpool in the summer of 1994, to be replaced by Sam Allardyce, and Briggs hung up his playing boots the following May. His league record for Blackpool: 137 games/4 goals.

Miscellanea

Trivia

  • Aside from Rambo, his other nickname is Briggsy.